‘When do we leave?’ he asked.
Chapter Twenty-one
THE GREEKS AT BAY
Agamemnon closed his eyes and took a deep breath. His arms and legs felt like stone and his mind was fuddled by a night without sleep, but a new morning was upon him and he was still the leader of what remained of the Greek army. The King of Men, he mocked himself with an ironic smile.
Then he forced his lids open again and pushed aside the heavy canvas flap of his tent. As he stepped out, the top of the sun was peering over the battlements to the east, framing the figures that stood watch there. Grey smoke crept across the blue skies above them, twisting up from the smouldering bonfires that had burned great holes in the blackness of the night before. Beyond the walls were more trails from the many pyres of their enemies on the plain. The morning air, though freshened by a breeze from the sea, still reeked of burnt wood and roasted flesh.
‘My lord,’ said Menestheus, the Athenian king, greeting him with a small bow.
King Idomeneus was beside him, but the Cretan remained standing stiffly and only acknowledged Agamemnon with a slight narrowing of his eyes. Both men were dressed in breastplate, helmet and greaves, with swords slung in scabbards beneath their left arms. Their armour-bearers stood behind them, holding their shields and spears.
‘What is it?’ Agamemnon asked, too tired to bother hiding his annoyance. ‘Are they preparing to attack again?’
‘Their camp’s astir, but they’re in no hurry to renew battle,’ Idomeneus answered. ‘Perhaps they won’t need to.’
Agamemnon shot him a stern glance. ‘Meaning what?’
Talthybius appeared from the tent before Idomeneus could answer, carrying Agamemnon’s shield, helmet and spears. The Mycenaean king was already wearing his greaves and the cuirass gifted to him by Cinyras of Cyprus, though its bands of gold, blue enamel and tin were still dinted and spattered with gore from the previous day’s battle. He took the helmet from his herald’s hands and crammed it onto his head.
‘If you’ve got something to say, then say it,’ he snapped, glaring at the two kings.
‘We’re worried for the morale of the army,’ Menestheus said, stepping toward Agamemnon and looking him in the eye. ‘The Mysians are fresh and eager to fight. Their king – this Eurypylus – is like another Hector, riding across the battlefield and bringing death wherever he goes. The Trojans have taken new heart from his presence, while yesterday we were fortunate just to reach the safety of the walls with most of our force still intact. But the men won’t take much more. Even if Eurypylus and Deiphobus don’t breach the walls today and destroy us, there’s talk that some men are planning to slip away at night – push the galleys into the sea and just sail home. They’ve had enough.’
Agamemnon’s brow furrowed. ‘We’ll see about that. Where’s my brother?’
‘Up by the gates, with Nestor, Little Ajax and Philoctetes.’
Agamemnon tossed his blood-red cloak over his shoulder and strode up the sand towards the countless sun-bleached tents that filled the land between the shore and the sloping ridge above it. Here, the walls and gates they had built just a few weeks before were the only thing that now stood between the Greek army and annihilation. On the other side were Deiphobus’s victorious Trojans, replenished by new allies under Eurypylus. For days both armies had battled each other across the plains at the cost of thousands more men killed and maimed, but once again the fickle gods had sided with Priam and brought his warriors to the very edge of the Greek camp. And this time when the assault was renewed there would be no brooding Achilles to come to Agamemnon’s rescue.
The King of Men felt his anger rising. The weakness of the kings under his command had brought them to this point, and now their fools of men were threatening to desert back to Greece. It was something he had feared more and more as the years of war had dragged on, but as he walked between the grimed and bloodied soldiers who sat or stood in dispirited groups about the mouths of their tents, he could see it in their faces. Then, as Idomeneus, Menestheus and Talthybius caught up with him – their armour clanking about them – a wounded man leaned across and spat in the dust at the Mycenaean king’s feet.
Agamemnon grasped the handle of his sword and the soldier drew back. His right hand had been severed above the wrist, but to Agamemnon’s shock and disbelief the men around him reached for their own weapons and leapt to the protection of their comrade.
‘Don’t be fools,’ Menestheus warned, standing between them and the King of Men.
Agamemnon felt Idomeneus’s hand on his, pushing his half-drawn sword back into its scabbard.
‘Now do you believe us?’ he whispered, and with his other hand on Agamemnon’s shoulder kept him moving forward. ‘A few more outbreaks of indiscipline like that and we’ll have a full blown mutiny on our hands.’
‘I’ll send a detachment of men and put them under guard until the fighting’s over,’ Menestheus said, joining them. ‘If we’re victorious they can be punished as an example to the rest of the army; if we’re not, then I don’t suppose it matters.’
Agamemnon said nothing. The shock had passed quickly and left him in no doubt that this situation was more dangerous than he had anticipated. Only one thing would save them from destruction now – the arrival of Neoptolemus and the fulfilment of the oracle – but for all he knew Diomedes and Odysseus could still be on Scyros or in the Peloponnese, or have already perished on the long voyage there or back.
They joined the main path that led up to the walls and found Menelaus waiting for them, with Nestor, Little Ajax and Philoctetes the archer at his shoulders. Huge companies of spearmen sat in ranks by the walls, awaiting the order to stand and fight, while behind them many hundreds of bowmen were busily standing their arrows point-down in the dust, ready to fire blindly over the walls into the packed Trojans when the inevitable attack came
‘They’re forming up,’ Menelaus growled as he walked to meet them. ‘Our army can hold them, but there are plenty more men still scattered among the tents whose units were destroyed in the fighting. We need to organise them and the lightly wounded into a strong reserve, just in case the –’
‘Has there been any sign of Diomedes and Odysseus’s sail?’ Agamemnon interrupted, casting a glance over the Aegean.
Menelaus frowned and bit at his bottom lip.
‘A ship has been spotted, approaching from the west. For a while we thought it was them returning, but then it changed course northward – towards Troy.’
‘It could still be them. Why haven’t the galleys we keep ready on Tenedos been sent to intercept it?’
‘When the badly wounded were sent over yesterday I ordered every able-bodied man on the island to return to the camp. That includes the crews of the galleys –’
‘You deliberately disobeyed my orders!’
‘Damn your orders,’ Menelaus snapped. ‘Don’t you realise we need all the men we can get here, not at sea waiting for a galley that’s probably still on the other side of the world? The sail belongs to a merchantman and nothing more. And if you’d kept your mind on the battle, rather than this fantasy over Achilles’s son, perhaps the Trojans would have been pushed back behind their walls again, not us behind ours!’
‘Are you suggesting I’ve led us into this situation?’ Agamemnon hissed, drawing up to his brother.
Every eye was now turned to watch the argument.
‘I’m saying Helenus led us all into a fool’s trap. The oracles he fed us were a lie, designed to have us looking back homeward while all the time Troy was being reinforced by thousands of Mysians. Thanks to him, two of our best fighters are off on a wild rabbit hunt across Greece and we’re pinning all our hopes on a mere boy – whatever his ancestry – rather than believing in our own prowess in battle.’