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Authors: Margaret George

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical

The Memoirs of Cleopatra (89 page)

BOOK: The Memoirs of Cleopatra
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“I thank you,” I said, and now at last I felt hostility around me.

It was time to depart for our chamber. We were conducted there by a large company, then escorted inside. The doors were closed, but just outside them the last part of the ceremony must be enacted. A chorus sang the bridal song, and we stood and listened.

Happy groom, the wedding took place

and the woman you prayed for is yours
.

Now her charming face is warm with love
.

My bride, your body is a joy
,

Your eyes as soft as honey
,

And love pours its light

on your perfect features
.

Using all her skill, Aphrodite

honored you
.

No woman who ever was
,

O groom, was like her
.

The voices faded away, and I could hear the footsteps departing. We were truly alone.

Now Antony lifted off the veil, freeing my face.

“Yes, it is true,” he said, “No woman who ever was, is like you.” He finally kissed me, and I let him.

 

Later, standing before the bed, I spoke. “I am scarred. I am not what I was.” The birth of the twins had left its mark on me. He would find me changed.

He took my face in his wide hands. “You earned them for me, and they are precious to me.”

I thought I would have forgotten his body, but I had not. The body has a memory of its own and mine remembered his, every aspect of it.

How had I passed those four years without it?

Time and again all night, in between our times together, I would get up and look out at the dark plain stretching beyond the palace, at the starry sky, its constellations moved ever so slightly from Alexandria. That night sky of Antioch, as it holds itself in late autumn, will always be a consecrated memory for me. I cannot separate it from the joy of my reunion with Antony, and of our daring to do what we did.

55

For the first few days I found myself walking about in a peculiar state of mind, bringing myself up short and saying in disbelief,
I am married
. It was hard to fathom the subtle change it entailed. I was almost thirty-three, and had been alone—fiercely alone—all my life. Living with Caesar in Alexandria with the palace under fire, living with Antony when he came on holiday, was not the same. And altogether those had only added up to a year—one year out of thirty-three. I had borne children and raised them alone, had governed alone, using Mardian and Epaphroditus for advice and guidance only, but having no conflict between their wishes and mine.

Now I had a partner, politically and personally, and it felt as odd and cumbersome as the gold wedding necklace on my neck. It was beautiful, it was valuable, it was enviable—but it felt unnatural.

Not that Antony was difficult to live with. I knew already how accommodating he was, how his high spirits could turn any ordinary day into a celebration. That was part of his charm. But now our plans must meld, our aims must be the same; there was no way we could extricate ourselves from each other, no way to say,
You do this; it is of no consequence to me
. We were now of immense consequence to each other.

It was what I wanted, had thought I wanted. And his magic always was that when I was actually with him, these doubts and reservations vanished.

 

Winter closed in on Antioch. What was a delightful summer spot was dismal in winter—fogs and chilling, torrential rains. I wished to return to Alexandria, but Antony needed to stay where he was to ready his army. Reluctant to leave him so soon, I stayed. There were, of course, the usual festivities that abound wherever soldiers gather, especially in the winter.

And there were the nights we spent together—some of them placid, with Antony reading reports and maps, planning battle strategies, while I allowed myself the luxury of reading poetry and philosophical essays—and others passionate, fueled by our long separation, both past and future, heightened by the wonder that we actually possessed one another.

And, inevitably, there were quarrels. A letter came from Octavia, written before the news of our marriage could have reached her. Antony read it aloud, making it sound almost comically dull.

“ ‘…and you would certainly have enjoyed the reading by Horace, which he presented at the gathering at the home of Maecenas.’ Oh yes, I’m devastated to have missed it—I wonder what we were doing then?” he mused. “Horace always bored my toga off.”

“Oh, is that what got it off? No wonder Octavia staged Horace readings regularly.”

He shrugged. “I should have kept it on. Making love to Octavia was like—was like—”

“I don’t want to hear what it was like.” Whatever it was like, I had been sleeping alone. It must have been more satisfactory than that.

“It was like—nothing at all.”

“Oh, not nothing. Surely.” The whole subject made me angry.

“As near to nothing as possible.”

“Well, you must have done this nothing often enough to bring forth two children. Strange that you would keep at it so doggedly.”

“She was my wife! She expected—”

“I don’t want to hear about that, either! I suppose you were about to say Octavian was patrolling underneath the windows to make sure you were performing your duty.”

He just laughed, finding it amusing. “No, it was more like having Octavian right there in the room already.”

“How appetizing.”

“Why do you keep talking about it?”


You
brought it up! Reading that letter—” I pointed to it, still hanging limply from Antony’s hand. He had been about to drop it into a basket of correspondence.

“Then I won’t anymore! I thought if I
didn’t
read it, you would take it amiss.” He waved it up and down. “I don’t care about it! Forget it! Why does it bother you so?”

“Why does Caesar bother
you
so?” The sight of the pendant sent him into fits, so I had reluctantly stopped wearing it. I would save it for Caesarion.

“Because he—because he was Caesar! Who wants to follow Caesar? But Octavia—there’s nothing extraordinary about her.” He kneaded his forearms. “You are right. It’s equally foolish. Anyone who poisons the present with the past is a fool.” He got off the bench and came over to me, an intent look on his face. “Let us enjoy this honeyed present which the gods have granted us.” He put his hands in my hair and pulled my face toward his.

“Not now!” I said, alarmed. “The envoys from Cappadocia expect to have an audience any moment.” It never failed to surprise me how Antony could become aroused at the most inconvenient times.

“They will have to amuse themselves while we amuse ourselves,” he said, picking me up and carrying me off into the bedchamber. “This is a wedding custom in Rome—the man has to carry the woman across the threshold. It’s bad luck if I stumble. Oops.” He dropped to one knee just outside the door, swooping down. “Just missed it.” He stepped over the sill and put me down on the bed. “There. Bad luck averted.” He leaned over me, lowering his face to mine as he bent his arms. He kissed me, first on my eyelids, then gently on both cheeks, before finally seeking my mouth.

“Now I can pretend that you are war booty,” he murmured. “Captured in your palace, tied up and brought here as a captive.”

“Why do you make everything into a game?” I whispered. Now he had got me aroused, too.

“Isn’t Dionysus the god of actors?” he said, his mouth traveling down to my neck, the hollow of my throat. He moved over closer against me, his strong shoulder taking most of his weight. It bore down on me, pushing me into the mattress. I did feel like a captive, but had no desire to escape. I brought my arms around him, running my hands down his shoulders and over his back. The very feel of the muscles and flesh drove everything else out of my mind. His mouth on me made something inside draw together and then expand. An edge of a shudder ran through me.

“Lord, the envoys—” I heard a forlorn voice in the outer chamber dying away.

“The envoys…let them wait…a little.” I could barely hear his words, they were so muffled against my flesh.

This sudden onslaught of desire did not leave him time to take off most of his clothes, so he had little to do later to ready himself to meet the envoys, besides smoothing down his hair, which he did as he rushed out the door. I lay there, dazed, as if I had just been assaulted by a force of nature, which is what Antony in full vigor was like.

I looked at a cloud formation that had been moving across the sky. It had not gone very far. Antony was right; he did not keep the envoys waiting very long. He had not exceeded the bounds of politeness.

Like an earth tremor, Antony’s forthcoming campaign made the ground tingle all over the east, sending out alarm signals. It had been almost twenty years since the catastrophic Roman defeat at Carrhae, and yet the Romans were known always to avenge defeats. Ten years later Caesar was departing to do so when he was felled; now once again an army was being readied for the mission. Vengeance had been delayed but it would be certain.

Rumors about the size and scope of the army went before it like trumpeters, magnifying what was already an enormous host. There were a half a million men, an Armenian merchant reported hearing; no, a million, a trader from the Black Sea had been told by reliable sources. The equipment was secret, made by Egyptian black arts combined with Roman engineering: siege towers that were fireproof, arrows that had a range of a mile and could be accurately aimed at night, catapult stones that exploded, and food supplies that were imperishable and lightweight, so soldiers could live in the field for months at a time.

Antony told me about these marvels as he lay back one night after dinner, almost lost in the forest of pillows he had arranged for himself. I remembered, fleetingly, the time I had amused Caesar with the eastern den of pillows, but that had been downright austere compared to this.

“Yes,” he said dreamily, his hands behind his head, “it seems that I command a supernatural force. Rations that never grow stale!” His voice rose in wonder. “An army that can carry all its own supplies, and not have to live off the land. Now that would be a miracle. Ah, well, such rumors may help turn my enemies to jelly before I ever arrive, may do half my work for me.”

I looked down at him, where he lay in pure contentment. It was time he went back into the field; it had been five years since Philippi. Five years was a long time for a soldier to sit feasting and dreaming and relaxing. Had Caesar ever taken five years off?

Stop comparing him with Caesar
, I told myself.

But the whole world is comparing him with Caesar. This campaign is meant to compare him with Caesar, to carry out Caesar’s design, to show who is Caesar’s true military heir and successor
. That was the truth of it.

Yes, five years was a long time for anything to lie fallow. He must bestir himself.

“Unfortunately, you and I know it is just a myth. This war will have to be fought and won the old-fashioned way,” I said. “What is your tally for the troops so far?”

“When Canidius brings his legions back from Armenia, where he has been wintering, our strength will stand at sixteen legions—sixteen somewhat under-strength legions. But they’re good soldiers, good seasoned Roman legionaries, of the sort—the sort that will be in short supply for me from now on.”

The last thought caused him pain.

“Because Octavian prevents you from recruiting any more in Italy, in spite of his agreements!” I snapped. “And where are the twenty thousand he promised you, in exchange for the ships he borrowed from you last year? You need not answer, we know well enough!” It had been this, finally, that had opened Antony’s eyes to his devious colleague.

“Under his command, never to be released,” Antony said grimly. “But after Parthia, I—”

“After Parthia is
won
,” I corrected him.

“After Parthia is won, I will have no need of favors from him,” said Antony. “As I was saying, I take sixty thousand Roman legionaries into the field, aided by thirty thousand auxiliaries. Half of those auxiliaries are under the kings of Armenia and Pontus.”

“Can you trust them?” I asked.

“If I were to trust no foreign allies, how could I trust you?” He smiled.

“You are not married to King Artavasdes of Armenia, nor to Polemo of Pontus.”

Now he laughed. “By Hercules, no!”

“Armenia is Parthian by culture and sympathy,” I said. “How can you trust them to support Rome? It seems very risky to march into Parthia and leave them unguarded at your back.”

He sighed. “You are a wise general. We should have garrisoned Armenia after Canidius’s victories there, but we cannot spare the troops. The King seems honest in his support, and he is contributing a small army to our cause, commanding it in person.”

“I like it not,” I said.

“You have trained yourself to be suspicious of everyone and everybody,” he said.

“If I had not, I would not be alive now to be sitting beside you.” All my siblings were dead, and none—except little Ptolemy—by natural causes.

He reached out and touched my hair. “For which I am profoundly grateful,” he said. “But stop sitting, and lie here beside me. You look down upon me too sternly from those heights.”

“I cannot think clearly when I am lying down amidst a field of pillows, especially with you beside me. Tell me—where are the papers of Caesar’s from which you have planned this campaign? I would like to see them.”

“Do you not believe me?”

“Yes, of course I do.” But I also knew he had altered and outright forged many papers that he claimed to have “found” in Caesar’s house—papers relating to appointments and legacies. He had confessed it to me himself. That was forgivable, since it wielded him a counterpower to the assassins, and even brought them to him, hats in hand. But this was different. I was deeply worried because Antony had never planned a campaign of this scope; his successes as a general had been achieved in much smaller arenas. This venture required not only a vision of the entire campaign, but a genius for long-range planning and details that even Caesar would have been taxed to provide.

“I will show them to you later this evening,” he said. “They are in another part of the palace. For now, I want to lie here and enjoy digesting my food. I want to feel the heat from this well-placed brazier”—he indicated the ornate, footed brass brazier emitting welcome warmth—“and be thankful I am not outside.”

It was nasty that night, with a driving, cold rain that seemed to penetrate the walls.

“If the gods look upon me with favor, this time next year I will be wintering near Babylon. It will be warm enough there to sleep out under the stars.”

“Unlike Armenia, with its snows and mountains. Or even Media. Yes, you must be in Babylon by winter,” I agreed.

It would take at least two years to carry out such a campaign, I knew. Caesar had allowed for three, assuming—on the basis of his experiences in Gaul—that everything always took longer than expected. But it would be hard to part with Antony again, so soon, and for such a long time. That it might be forever—I refused to let myself dwell on that. Isis would not be so cruel.

BOOK: The Memoirs of Cleopatra
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