Читаем The Oracles of Troy (The Adventures of Odysseus) полностью

Eperitus smiled in reply and turned his eyes back to the ground before his own horse’s hooves. The grass was thin and parched, dotted here and there with broken weapons and armour from the years of fighting that had taken place across it. Looking ahead, he could see the ridge line that marked the edge of the plateau – a deeper darkness rising up against the blue-black of the night sky. His supernatural eyesight could already pick out the tall ring of trees that formed the temple of Thymbrean Apollo, silhouetted against the stars as it stood on top of the ridge. The sight of it filled him with a sudden, heavy sorrow as he remembered his former squire, Arceisius, murdered in the temple by Apheidas – and all because Eperitus had been foolish enough to agree a meeting with his father. If he had trusted his long-standing hatred of Apheidas then Arceisius’s death would not be on his conscience. But he had believed the woman his father had sent to draw him into his trap, and if anything her betrayal had hurt him even more than the loss of his friend. He had shed bitter tears at the passing of Arceisius, tears of grief and regret, but after a decade of war he could understand death and had learned how to accept it. What he had not learned was how to accept treachery of the heart. He wanted to be angry with Astynome, but all he felt was sadness that she was gone. It would have been much easier to hate her for making him love her, when all along she had been living a lie, sent by Apheidas to trick him into betraying the Greeks. To hate was a familiar emotion, easy to live with. And yet, when he recalled her beautiful face framed by the dark mess of her hair, or the soft fragrance of her skin in his nostrils – so wonderful to his heightened senses – he knew he could never truly hate her. Naturally, he felt surges of bitterness and anger, as much at what he had lost as at what she had done; but then he would remember the feel of her long fingers running through his hair and the warmth of her lips against his, and he could not convince himself that she did not love him back.

‘Not far now,’ Odysseus said, catching Eperitus unawares as he rode up beside him.

The king had tipped back his hood and was squinting in the direction of the temple, doubtless nothing more than a black smudge atop the line of the ridge to his eyes.

‘I wonder whether we’ll find anything when we get there,’ Eperitus replied. ‘How are the others?’

‘Grumbling. Just as you’d expect.’

‘But why? After all, who wouldn’t want to spend the night tramping halfway across Ilium on the whim of a crazy priest?’

‘Wouldn’t be the first time,’ Odysseus agreed. ‘However, if Calchas says the secret to Troy’s downfall will be found in the temple of Thymbrean Apollo tonight, then I don’t mind a short horse ride to see if it’s true. Besides, Agamemnon believes him and we do whatever Agamemnon commands, right?’

‘Right,’ Eperitus echoed indifferently. ‘Though I still say this is just another wild rabbit hunt. The problem is this whole war’s been like chasing rabbits – we stop up one hole and the Trojans escape out of another. And if you ask me Calchas doesn’t have the gift of prophecy, and if he ever did he doused the fire with too much wine years ago.’

‘He predicted the day of Achilles’s death, didn’t he?’ Odysseus replied. ‘Anyway, the rabbit holes can’t go on forever. One day – maybe this day – the gods will show us how to defeat Troy. And then we can go home.’

‘Did Troy fall the day Paris died, as Calchas predicted?’

‘That was another rabbit hole. And even if there are a hundred more holes to block, what choice do we have but to stop them up, stop them all up? This isn’t a little matter of personal fate that you and I can try to change. It’s a war, the biggest war the world has ever seen, and only the gods know how it will end. So if they tell Calchas that a new oracle, maybe the last oracle, will be given in the temple of Thymbrean Apollo tonight, then I’m going to be there. I’ll do whatever they tell us, Eperitus, if it means I’ll be able to hold Penelope in my arms again and see my little Telemachus.’

‘Not so little now,’ Eperitus said, slapping Odysseus on the shoulder. ‘Come on, let’s get to the temple and see what the gods have in mind.’

Odysseus turned and called to the others, then spurred his horse into a trot. Eperitus followed, hoping that Calchas’s latest vision would prove right and that they would soon find the final key to unlocking the gates of Troy.

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