Alexander came up, and I wriggled back to make room for him.
Alexander was weeping.
So was Cyrus.
I waited by Darius’s feet.
Alexander looked at Darius. He took his hand. ‘I will avenge you,’ he said.
Darius gave a minute shake of his head.
Alexander bent low. ‘I would give anythingfor you to live. I . . . what will I do without you?’
Darius had the will to smile. It set him very high in my opinion. He smiled, and his face had a gentle strength. ‘So . . .’ he said, very clearly. ‘So you are Alexander.’ His smile stayed, and he sighed, and with that sigh, his soul left his body.
‘No!’ Alexander screamed. ‘No! You will not slip away again! Damn you, Darius! What is there after this? What can possibly be worthy or great, after this!’ He was weeping, speaking wildly, and he took Darius’s head and held it in his lap. ‘Is this the end? The end of the story?’
I got out of the wagon.
After a time, Cyrus slipped out, too. He didn’t meet my eye.
And when Alexander came out, I wiped the blood from him, and we said nothing. But he put his arms around me, and cried. For once, I understood. Memnon had slipped away, and now Darius. That’s not what happens, in the Iliad.In the Iliad, Achilles is filled with rage, and he kills, and feels no remorse. When he hunts Hector round the city, he kills him, and drags him behind his chariot, and feels no remorse. Only when faced with Priam, Hector’s father – and with the reality of his own death – does Achilles feel anything.
Draw your own lesson. I’m a king, not a philosopher. Alexander loved the whole game. And when Darius died . . .
After a time – I couldn’t tell you how long – he stopped weeping.
‘Ptolemy,’ he said. There was a question in his voice. ‘Is this . . . all there is?’
Sometimes I wonder if he actually asked me that. Sometimes, I think that I read it into his tears and the tension in his body.
But I’m pretty sure he asked.
Because if he didn’t, then what I didn’t say wouldn’t still be stuck in my head, rattling around. I should have said it. I should have told him true.
I should have said, You’ve traded friendship and love for adulation and power. What did you expect?
THIRTY-TWO
We straggled back into Ecbatana. Which occasioned the first time that Alexander himself altered the Military Journal.
Alexander wanted to pursue Bessus immediately. But despite our success – and taking Darius, even dead, was a victory, because we immediately inherited most of his loyalists, by the law of ‘The enemy of my enemy is my friend’ that rules all civil conflict, all stasis– despite our success, our army, such as it was, was wrecked. The Hetaeroi were mostly dismounted, or their horses were ruined by the pursuit. The hypaspitoi were spread from the plains north of Ecbatana all the way beyond Hecatombion and into the Hyrkanian mountains by the pursuit, by fatigue, by the need to garrison the villages that were our lifeline to the rear.
And Alexander was barely functional. It was terrifying, because he didn’t have a mark on him. He ranted at Craterus about pursuing Bessus, and then sat on his horse and issued no orders.
None of us was senior. In fact, among the men who’d ended up on the point of the spear, the concept of ‘rank’ was meaningless. We were the king’s friends, his companions, and we didn’t agree about much except that we were king’s men.
I convinced Philotas to retreat. And when he went down with the dysentery, I led the retreat.
It was my only taste of what it must have been like to beAlexander. Now Ihad to ride up and down the column, looking for stragglers, issuing orders, seeing and being seen. Pretending to be calm and unruffled when in fact I was terrified that Bessus would turn and bite us – or that Alexander would snap out of his funk and kill me. He had ordered us to advance, and we were retreating, and that was my decision.
Ecbatana was twenty-five hundred stades behind us when we started. But that’s where the main army was, and to summon them forward with no preparation would have been foolish.
Or so I maintain.
We didn’t all retreat. I used our new Iranian allies and a hard core of hypaspitoi to hold every oasis and every village, to start building up water supplies and depots of baked bread, grain and water.
Craterus backed me up, and when we fell back on Rhagae and finally had enough healthy troops to fight if we had to face a force larger than twenty raiders, Craterus took command of it. I was exhausted.
Alexander continued to be silent. He made comments, and for some hours seemed to be in command.
But the only person he spent any time with was Banugul. Even Hephaestion was shut out.
At Rhagae, he recovered. It happened all in an hour, when dispatches came in from Ecbatana. He read them, shared them with no one and started firing off orders – mostly to do with Darius’s funeral.
He never mentioned the retreat, except that several days later, when we were already preparing the main body to march upcountry fromEcbatana, and Darius had had his burial, I was adding my notes to the Military Journal, because Eumenes was still with the headquarters back in Ecbatana.
Alexander came into the tent. He nodded to me, went to the main copy of the Journal and leafed through it.
He took a knife and cut the scroll at the death of Darius, and joined it to blank papyrus with a strip of linen. He did this himself. He looked at me, threw the scrap with fifteen days of retreat into the brazier, and walked out.
Read it yourself.
He’d never done it before. But he started to do it more and more.
Darius was dead, and the crusade in Asia was over. That was the tenor of the king’s message, and he gave a speech to the army that was not particularly moving and raised a great deal of resentment.
The long and short was that he was sending the allies home. Most of them were richly rewarded, and a great many of them were offered superb bonuses for staying on without their officers as ourtroops. Kineas, for example, was heartbroken. Alexander actually singled him out at a command meeting – a Macedonian-only meeting – when Parmenio, of all people, asked that he be kept on or even sent to the Prodromoi.
Alexander shook his head. ‘I need friends in Athens,’ he said. ‘And Kineas is notone of us.’
Further, he actively recruited the troopers – the rank and file men of the allied contingents.
He released the Thessalians. Parmenio’s household troops. Men who had served Philip and Parmenio and Attalus since the first light of Macedon’s dawn. Alexander gave them rich rewards, but he sent them home. Next to the Hetaeroi, they were our best cavalry.
I was at the staff meetings, and I knew the agenda – Alexander was clearing the army of rivals, and was preparing to function as the King of Kings. The Greeks – even Kineas – were the most intransigent about who they were, about being Hellenes.They had come to Asia to make war on Persia. To destroy the Persian Empire.
But Alexander was getting ready to become the Persian Empire.
He rid himself of dissent.
And he destroyed Parmenio’s power base. He paid off the veterans – with rich bonuses. He bought mercenaries. And he paid every pikeman who stayed with us a bonus – a two-talent bonus. Two talents of gold. Per man.
For old men like Philip, who asked where is my reward, this was the answer.
The army of Macedon – ably assisted by the Greek allies, backed by mercenaries – took Persia and conquered Asia.
The army that marched away from Ecbatana was Alexander’s army.It had no loyalties but those it owed to him. He was lord, god and paymaster.