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‘We’re all coming to Ephesus,’ Seckla said.

I nodded. ‘Very well,’ I said.

See? Leadership. Command. Knowing when to follow. Hah! I am only mocking myself. In truth, I was mad as a tanner for a few beats of my heart, merely because they were flouting my wishes, but before a single libation had been spilled, I saw how much easier moving in force would be. Besides, with Phayllos’s ship and Naiad we had some chance of passing as Ionians ourselves.

Except Lydia. With her heavy mainmast and raked boat-sail mast, she was probably the best-known warship on the ocean that year and there was no disguising her. In the end, I decided we could pretend to be a capture if deception was required.

The next hours were so frustrating I could barely restrain myself. I wanted to get into motion, but Cimon restrained me until Themistocles let it be known that we were to continue forward. Again I feel I have to explain — I did not want Themistocles to know I was gone. The risk of betrayal was still real.

So we didn’t leave the beach until the sun was fully above the horizon, and those were some of the longest hours of my life, although we all benefited from them by exchanging oarsmen and loading fresh water where we could.

I was determined to make for Megalos, the islet with the perfect beach where I’d waited for Cimon less than a month before. It was a full day’s sail and required some luck, but it had the signal advantage that I would appear to be Cimon’s vanguard all day, if Themistocles were to watch at all.

Finally, when I was ready to rage at anyone who stood against me — isn’t waiting the most frustrating thing, thugater? Finally, we put oarsmen to stations and got her keel off the beach. Themistocles and the rest of the fleet were left behind and my ships — Lydia, Naiad, Iris, Black Raven, Storm Cutter, and Amastris — were away, in a loose file led by Lydia and Cimon’s squadron fell in behind us.

We still had a beautiful wind and when we came to Sounion and turned due west, the wind was perfect, just over the starboard quarter, and Lydia began to pull away. Then we began to use all the tricks we’d learned in fifteen years at sea: wetting sails, using rowers leaning out to stiffen the ship, brailing up parts of the sail to get the perfect drive — a warship can drive too deep with her ram when overpressed by sail and sometimes, just to confuse a landsman, a little less sail is a better rig.

But it was noon, the sun high in the sky, and our lookout in the basket high above us called down that he could see two sails to the west. The development was sudden, as it always is at sea. In an hour there were forty enemy ships hull up to the north and west, running for the Euboean channel, and another forty running west and south under sail. Either going for Andros or planning to sail up the eastern shore of Euboea — by the way, not a course I’d have chosen, and the wrecks of fifty of the Great King’s ships would show why.

Right before us were a pair of ill-handled merchantmen. The beautiful west wind that had us racing over the seas was not so kind to them and we were making distance on them five to two.

I had Megakles aboard — a precaution in case of a storm — and I waved to Brasidas and then summoned both of them aft.

‘There’s what we need to make Ephesus,’ I said. ‘Take either one, collect mutton and grain at Megalos, and no one will starve.’

Brasidas nodded.

I turned to Megakles. But he shook his head.

‘Seckla’s been to Megalos and I ain’t,’ he said. ‘I’ll steer this girl and Seckla can have the tub all day.’

That was sense too. I had the oddest feeling that my friends were taking charge of me, that I was not, strictly speaking, ‘in command’, but Megakles was correct — Megalos had a tricky beach, especially if he should come in after the sun set, which it did earlier every evening.

We came down on the pair of them like falcons taking rabbits and they did not fight. Since we had to lose way to take them, I let Hector blood his crew by taking the nearer while we took the farther, but he had shouted orders only to take ransoms and strip any valuables and leave them — orders which, as the afternoon lengthened, we watched him disobey.

But the kind wind threw all my calculations out the window, and we were on the beach when the sun was a fine red ball over Attica to the west, and the two round ships were already visible as sails. They came in on sweeps well before darkness fell. We had fires roaring on the beach and a little drama as two triremes appeared and gave them chase — two triremes who proved to be Cimon’s and not Ionians.

Hector had picked up a supply ship belonging to Artemisia. He took a fair amount of teasing from my friends about whoring after a prize and getting rich too young, but then he led me aside.

‘Summon Phayllos,’ he said.

He was so serious I knew he must be in earnest. So I went and fetched Phayllos and his young friend Lygdamis. The Chian trierarch was not pleased to be summoned and his face froze when Hector came up the beach with a small man with a nose like an eagle’s beak — the captain of the merchantman.

‘Aye,’ he said, in Phoenician-accented Greek. ‘That’s him. The Queen’s son. Like I said.’

I had Artemisia’s son.

The two ships were full of food and had almost a thousand gold darics in back pay for various Ionian crews. I took it, served out the money instantly as pay to my own oarsmen, and kept the food, packing it all into one hull. Then I graciously put the two crews into the slower of the two ships and let them go without ransom.

In thanks, the Phoenician captain showed me where another thousand gold darics were dangling from an oar-port into the water on a rope. I had never seen that one before.

The gods were with us. I was sailing to redeem my oath, and by Poseidon and my ancestor Heracles, the capture of two fat prizes — useful little ships — and the good west wind made me feel that it was possible after all. And — I freely admit it — my friends held me up. It wasn’t anything I can describe — no backslapping, very few words.

But they were all there, save Cimon himself and Aristides, and they had other responsibilities.

To cap my good luck, the villagers on the back of the islet sold me most of what was left of their flocks and grain. The Medes had never come near them — that islet was a long row east of the channel, as my oarsmen had cause to know.

We were up before dawn and the hulls were wet as soon as we could see the two rocks that made the beach a hazard. Then we rowed south — not a long row, but far enough to warm up our bodies and give the oarsmen a sense of how lucky they were to have a favourable wind, which today, as if Poseidon and the zephyrs were my personal friends, blew from the north and west to the south and east, wafting us, once we weathered the southern tip of Euboea, almost due west, leaving Andros on our starboard side, and then — with the sun still low in the east — we coasted out into the deep blue and turned south and east, and dolphins came and played by our bows — a huge pod of dolphins that leapt and leapt, playing like people in the waves, so that we knew the gods were with us.

Then I really began to hope. My fertile mind could imagine every horror — torture, rape, degradation — inflicted on her. But my rational head said that she was as brave as a lion and had a cool head, and would not be an easy mark for any man.

The dolphins were a good sign. Indeed, all the auguries that day were favourable, and the birds of the air were from Zeus, and as we passed the east coast of Andros — probably less than sixty sea stades from where Themistocles was even then demanding that the allied fleet lay siege to Andros town — my heart rose again, as it had the day before.

Noon, and I could see the cape at the south end of Andros. As I had expected, the channel between Andros and Tenos had ships, both merchants and triremes, emerging on the wind and spreading their sails. It is a narrow channel, and I came down on them as if I’d planned the ambush for a week.