Читаем King of Ithaca (Adventures of Odysseus) полностью

‘Yes. Utterly,’ she said, with a grim smile of quiet triumph. ‘There’ll be no war unless Priam turns his ambitions towards Greece itself. Agamemnon’s dream to unite the Greeks can never be revived now.’

‘But when Menelaus inherits Tyndareus’s throne, the Atreides will rule the two most powerful states in Greece. With the combined armies of Sparta and Mycenae they could conquer all the other states, effectively giving Agamemnon what he wanted anyway.’

Clytaemnestra shook her head. ‘He’s ambitious, but he isn’t a tyrant. He believes in unifying Greece by mutual agreement, not subjugation. If he were anybody else I could almost admire his vision and his commitment. But he isn’t anybody else; he’s my husband and he’s a bastard. I curse him!’

She spat over her shoulder into the flames.

‘I don’t blame you for hating him, not after what he did to you,’ Eperitus ventured, taking a step closer.

Clytaemnestra hung her head and a shining tear rolled down each of her cheeks. Then Eperitus put a hand under her chin and lifted her face. Her large, bewitching eyes met his and something stirred deep within him. More tears, even though her face was proud and defiant, and then he kissed her. Her lips parted and he followed her lead, each action new to him. His hands found her thin waist and pulled her body against his, the twin bulge of her small breasts pressing upon his ribs. Then as her fingers ran into his hair he felt the tip of her tongue enter his slightly opened mouth, a sensation for which no rumour or description of the act had ever prepared him. He felt his whole body respond.

He squeezed her closer still and dropped a hand to her buttocks, only for her to mirror the action on himself. For a moment both of her hands clawed at his flesh, and then began tugging at the hem of his tunic, sliding it up his back until moments later she pulled it over his head and arms and flung it to one side. Instinctively they stood back from each other as she undid the cord that held her dress together. Then she was naked before him and he found his aroused passion momentarily stilled as he stared at her.

Although he had seen naked women before, never had he beheld a body that he knew within moments would be joined with his own. Clytaemnestra, perhaps enjoying the knowledge she was giving herself to him in a way that Agamemnon would never know, allowed his eyes to roam across her body, over the small white breasts with their disproportionately large, starkly pink nipples, down over the flat stomach to the thick arrowhead of red hair between her legs. Then, before his eyes could have their fill of her, she took him by the hand and led him to a patch of dried grass beyond the ring of firelight, out into the shadows where the moon’s silver luminance gave their bodies a ghostly, even corpselike appearance.

When Eperitus awoke the next morning she was gone. He was disappointed – there was so much he wanted to say and ask and talk about with her – but he knew he was not heart-broken. He glanced about for signs of her, just in case she had only wandered off, but there were none.

He lay back on the bed of grass and looked up at the clouds, his mind sliding lazily between the different pleasures of the night before. But for all the foreign delights of experiencing a woman, every thought ran ultimately up against the same barrier, the single revelation that Clytaemnestra had shared with him between their bouts of love-making. Damastor was a traitor. Damastor had wanted Odysseus to choose Penelope over Helen, and it was Damastor who had given the alarm when Odysseus entered the women’s quarters.

It all sounded too incredible, and Eperitus wondered whether Clytaemnestra’s second sight had failed her or deceived her. But as he sifted through everything he could remember about Damastor’s actions over the past half-year, the distant sound of horns carried to him from across the Eurotas valley. In an instant he was on his feet and standing at the edge of the shelf of rock, shielding his eyes from the sun as he gazed towards Sparta. Away in the distance, the first of the suitors was emerging from the city gates. The courtship of Helen was over. The battle for Ithaca was about to begin.

book

FOUR

Chapter Twenty-five

DEATH IN THE TEMPLE

Even from a distance Eperitus’s shield and spears would mark him out as a warrior, so he was especially cautious in his descent from the foothills not to make himself visible to any watching eyes on the city walls. Once he was back on the level plain of the valley, though, there were enough trees, ravines and stone walls to provide cover and he made much better progress on his way to the sun-dappled waters of the Eurotas.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

1917, или Дни отчаяния
1917, или Дни отчаяния

Эта книга о том, что произошло 100 лет назад, в 1917 году.Она о Ленине, Троцком, Свердлове, Савинкове, Гучкове и Керенском.Она о том, как за немецкие деньги был сделан Октябрьский переворот.Она о Михаиле Терещенко – украинском сахарном магнате и министре иностранных дел Временного правительства, который хотел перевороту помешать.Она о Ротшильде, Парвусе, Палеологе, Гиппиус и Горьком.Она о событиях, которые сегодня благополучно забыли или не хотят вспоминать.Она о том, как можно за неполные 8 месяцев потерять страну.Она о том, что Фортуна изменчива, а в политике нет правил.Она об эпохе и людях, которые сделали эту эпоху.Она о любви, преданности и предательстве, как и все книги в мире.И еще она о том, что история учит только одному… что она никого и ничему не учит.

Ян Валетов , Ян Михайлович Валетов

Приключения / Исторические приключения