‘You see, I have faith in my son. He has his father’s love of fighting, but he is less driven by passion and more inclined to follow his intelligence. He will know why you’re here, but he’ll not rush madly off to war. And by ill chance for you, tomorrow morning will marry Phaedra, the girl I have chosen to be his wife and bear his children. You may tempt him, Odysseus, but in the end he will choose love over glory.’
She bowed to them, then turned and walked from the great hall.
Chapter Twenty
NEOPTOLEMUS
After the audience in the great hall, Odysseus, Diomedes, Eperitus and their escort were taken to the same wing of the palace the Ithacans had been quartered in on their first visit to Scyros ten years ago. They climbed the steps to the roof and looked down at the galley in the bay below.
‘It’s a thin hope now,’ Diomedes said. ‘If the lad’s getting married, the last thing on his mind will be coming with us to Troy. We couldn’t have arrived at a worse time.’
Odysseus didn’t share his gloom.
‘I’d say the gods have brought us here at exactly the right moment. Tomorrow, we would have found him a married man, freshly committed to his new life as a husband. Today he’s in that strange, fleeting place where the old has gone but the new hasn’t yet come. His mind may be full of love for this girl he’s due to marry, and yet it’ll also be stricken with doubt. He’s young, remember. He’s never ventured beyond the shores of Scyros. The news of Achilles’s death may open a new door – a chance to follow his father’s path, away from domesticity and into adventure. I’ve seen it happen to others in his position. More than that, he has Achilles’s blood in his veins: when Neoptolemus sees the gift I’ve brought him, it’ll be enough to challenge even his strongest convictions about getting married.’
‘We’ll see,’ Diomedes replied.
In the afternoon, after they had eaten a modest lunch, Eperitus was resting on the mattress in his room when a slave brought him a clean tunic and told him he was to go to the garden as soon as was convenient. He left before Eperitus could question him, so the Ithacan changed his clothes and went to answer the summons. He followed the scent of flowers and the rich aroma of well-composted earth until he found the walled gardens where he had first seen Achilles – disguised as a girl by Lycomedes to prevent him from being taken off to the coming war against Troy. He entered it through an arched gateway and saw it had not changed much since his first visit, except then it had been spring and there had been fragrant blossoms on the trees on either side, and now it was autumn and the leaves were turning an ochre colour and peeling off to form a patchy carpet on the lawn. The circular pond at the centre of the garden was filled with lilies that boasted a handful of white flowers. Dressed in a yellow chiton and seated on a stone bench at the water’s edge was Deidameia, looking at him expectantly.
‘I’m glad you came, Eperitus. Please, join me.’
She patted the space beside her and he sat. He could smell her perfume, potent even in a garden full of flowers. She gave him a smile and he could see the fullness of her lips and the way her skin was still soft and supple with her youth, despite the advanced maturity he could read in her eyes.
‘What do you want of me, Deidameia?’
‘A warrior’s bluntness, I see. I just wanted to talk a little.’
‘You picked the wrong man, my lady. Odysseus is the one for talking –’
‘Ah, but can I trust him? I think I can trust you, though. You have an honest look about you.’
‘I think you’d find my conversation a little dull, unless you want to hear about war and death.’
‘But that’s precisely what I want to hear about,’ she replied. ‘Particularly the war in Troy and my husband’s death. Were you there?’
Eperitus nodded and, reluctantly at first, told her what he had witnessed on the day Achilles had died. It would have been a short account – he had none of Odysseus’s ability to embellish a story – if Deidameia had not teased out every important detail from him. She showed little emotion as the full truth was laid before her, and when the story was done insisted on hearing more about Achilles’s achievements before his death. Eventually, after Eperitus’s clumsy retelling was done, she turned to the real reason she had summoned him.
‘Do you think Neoptolemus will be a replacement for Achilles?’ she asked. ‘Do Odysseus and Diomedes really believe that?’
‘We do. He has his father’s blood in him, after all.’
‘But he is not Achilles. You will know that when you see him tonight. He can’t do the things his father failed to do! So why are you here? Why leave the war in Troy for the sake of one man?’
Eperitus stood.
‘It’s not my place to say, my lady. Odysseus and Diomedes were charged with this mission, not me. If you had hoped to trick me –’
‘Of course not,’ she said, her tone conciliatory. She took him by the elbow and encouraged him to retake his seat. ‘I’m sorry if I’ve offended you, Eperitus. I’m just a mother worried for her son. You must have children of your own.’
‘A daughter.’
‘Then don’t you miss her?’
‘She died before the war.’
Deidameia faced him and laid her hand on his forearm. Her eyes were full of compassion.
‘How old was she?’
‘She was nine. The truth is I hardly knew her. I slept with her mother in Sparta ten years before, but I didn’t learn she’d given birth to my daughter until a short while before she died.’
‘And how did she die?’
Deidameia’s voice was soft now. Eperitus looked down at her slim, long-fingered hand on his arm, felt the hotness of her skin against his, and wondered whether he should answer. Whether he could answer. Then he felt the old anger rising as he thought of his daughter’s murder and his own inability to save her.
‘She was sacrificed to appease the gods. King Agamemnon murdered her so that his fleet could sail in safety to Ilium.’
Deidameia’s eyes narrowed in confusion.
‘But that was his own daughter, Iphigenia, born of Clytaemnestra. Everyone knows the story.’
‘They know some, but not all. Clytaemnestra was my lover in Sparta and Iphigenia was my daughter. I tried to stop Agamemnon, but –’ He stood again and stepped away from the bench. ‘I must go. Odysseus will be wondering where I am.’
‘Tell me why they want my son, Eperitus. As a father yourself –’
‘I sympathise with you, Deidameia, I do, but that’s for Odysseus to say, not me. He’ll tell you why we’re here tonight. And as for your son, he’s not a boy any more; he’s old enough to be a warrior now, like his father before him. And part of him will want to follow Achilles. You say you have faith in him, that you know him, but you don’t. How can a woman really know what’s in a man’s heart? A man lives under the shadow of his father, for good or bad, and at some point he wants to be free of it and live his own life. How Neoptolemus does that is up to him, not you.’
He held her gaze for a moment, then turned and left.
The sun had set and the first stars were beginning to prick the deep blue of the evening sky outside when torch-bearing slaves came to their quarters with a summons to the promised feast. Without armour or weapons, Odysseus, Diomedes and Eperitus followed the slaves through the palace to the copper gates, where they were awaited by Polites, Eurybates and Omeros who had come on Odysseus’s orders. Polites held a great wooden chest on his shoulder, making light of the burden, while Eurybates wore Achilles’s shield on his arm, its splendour hidden behind a covering of sail cloth. Omeros was struggling to even hold the huge ash spear that Achilles had wielded with such devastation in battle. At first the gate guards were reluctant to let them carry weapons into the palace, but agreed when Odysseus said they were gifts for Neoptolemus and suggested a detail of warriors could accompany them to the great hall.