Bring Down the Sun Read online

Page 4


  While her two attendants plaited her hair with deft fingers, she caught herself sliding into a doze. She blinked hard, willing herself to stay awake. Of all things she dreaded, sleep was among the worst. In sleep she might dream, and in dream she might finish what her folly had begun.

  Luckily for what peace of mind she had, she was soon done. Clean at last and fit to keep company with a queen, she walked back slowly to her sister’s hall.

  She felt most peculiar. The oil was sweet and her gown was soft. She could not remember when last she had been so clean.

  This was luxury, and she was born for it. She was not made for raw wool and bare feet. She saw beauty reflected in her sister’s eyes, and Troas’ wonder and surprise and—just visibly—her envy.

  Polyxena had beauty to spare, if the queen of Epiros could see her as a rival. The thought made her smile, though she hid it quickly.

  She sat on the stool that had been waiting for her and found another spindle in the basket. It was simple work on the face of it, but it took skill to do well. On that day, she was glad of it.

  * * *

  No one came from the temple to drag Polyxena back to her cage. When night fell, there was a bed for her in the queen’s chamber.

  Troas asked no questions. She was neither dull-witted nor a fool, and she had always known when to let be. There was ample to do in this world she lived in, though Nikandra might sneer at it.

  Nikandra had no use for women who, as she put it, made themselves willing slaves of men. She would never reconcile herself to the way of the world.

  Polyxena not only could do that, she would make it serve her. She flinched a little from the thought that followed, that forcing the oracle to do her bidding had had dire consequences. That was as much Nikandra’s fault as anyone’s, for not warning her that such a thing was possible.

  Her dreams that night were quiet, ordinary, without power or terror. She spun wool, wove a war-cloak, heard a sweet singer playing on a lyre.

  The end of the dream was as vivid as the waking world. She felt life swelling in her belly, and she saw a shadow at the door. Its shoulders were broad and its step heavy.

  Just before she saw the man’s face, she sprang awake. That was the Mother’s jest: to torment her with foresight, but to snatch it away before she saw anything useful.

  Maybe it was a true dream. If it was a mere and mortal fantasy, she would cling to the hope it gave her and pray the gods to make it true.

  Six

  “The Mother and the Son.”

  Promeneia spoke the words slowly but distinctly. Her voice startled Nikandra, who had dozed off at the eldest priestess’ bedside. She had been dreaming that Promeneia had died; it was not far off the truth.

  Promeneia lay as still as she had lain for the past three days and nights, gaunt and shrunken in upon herself. The powers she had raised had drained her dry. It was a wonder she had the strength to speak.

  Nikandra was exhausted with prayer and invocations of those same powers which had served and nearly destroyed Promeneia. Timarete had given up the fight; she had fallen asleep across the foot of the bed. There was only Nikandra to hear the words that Promeneia spoke.

  The old woman said them again. “The Mother and the Son. That is your answer. Let the child seek it there.”

  “But,” said Nikandra stupidly, “where? There are so many places—there is so much—”

  Promeneia did not answer. Nikandra began to wonder if she had imagined the voice and the words. They were as vague as the oracle could be, hovering just past the edge of meaning.

  Her mind was fuddled with the aftermath of her niece’s eruption of power. She still had not focused enough to understand what all of its consequences would be, though the guilt was clear enough. If she had not shielded the child from the knowledge of what she was, this would not have happened. No matter that her fears had been manifold: of the girl’s own immense power, of powers in the world that would seize and wield that power for their own purposes, of wrath and destruction and the toppling of empires. By keeping Polyxena in ignorance, she might well have assured that all those things would come to pass.

  She rose swaying. As she looked down in the lamplight, she saw the gleam of eyes beneath the withered lids. A third time Promeneia said, “The Mother and the Son. Her destiny is with them.”

  Nikandra laid her hand on Promeneia’s brow. It was cool; not quite as cold as death, but life was ebbing from it. “I have to sleep,” Nikandra said—not an answer exactly; more of an explanation.

  Promeneia lay silent, breathing shallowly. Nikandra laid a blessing on her and murmured a scrap of a charm.

  Maybe it was useless; maybe not. The powers of earth were listening. They might choose to honor the invocation.

  Nikandra had forsworn hedge-magic and the workings of common witches when she swore herself to the temple. There was darkness in that path, and loss of will and discipline—all things she had abjured to follow the Mother’s path. She was no wild-eyed witch of Thessaly, all filthy rags and matted hair, flying like a bat against the moon.

  But she had the magic. The power was in her, if she chose to acknowledge it.

  It was remarkably easy to find that way of thinking again, to remember the words and the rituals, the herbs and the smokes and the bones that rattled as if in mockery of the oracle in the Mother’s tree.

  None of them had anything to do with a dying priestess or a child with more power than any mortal should have had, and no useful awareness of that power.

  Nikandra had meant to protect them all, and Polyxena not least. She should have known that such protection was never a wise thing.

  Too late now to undo what she had done. At best she could hope to remedy it, and pray the remedy did not simply make matters worse.

  Exhaustion dulled her wits and clouded her judgment. She shook from her head the memory of love charms and petty curses, and invoked the Mother’s grace on Promeneia.

  The air seemed a little lighter for it. The rattle of breath was the slightest bit steadier. Nikandra did not dare to hope for a miracle—miracles were for men’s gods, gaudy things that they were. But her despair was somewhat less than it had been before.

  * * *

  The Mother and the Son. The words followed Nikandra from sleep into waking. They were persistently, preternaturally obscure. It was not that she knew too little; she knew too much. There were half a hundred places and things to which one could attach that meaning, and she could not choose among them.

  Nikandra was not one to wallow in remorse for doing what had to be done. She could force her way past this confusion of the spirit.

  Here in Dodona, the Mother ruled with Her consort, whom the men did their best to transform into the king of gods. In other parts of the world, She shared the mysteries with Her son, the first and most beloved of Her creation.

  Those rites were wilder than the ones Nikandra celebrated. They struck closer to the body’s passions. Nikandra would not say she disapproved of them, but they were not the rite she was born for.

  Polyxena had that bent of spirit, the wildness that these gentler observances could not satisfy. There was real danger in this: that in the wine and the singing and the ecstatic dances, not only she might find the way to her power; others would find it as well.

  That was the danger. That was the reason Nikandra had hidden her for so long, even from herself. Nikandra had to pray that when Polyxena’s body awakened, it buried the magic deeper, until there was nothing left to find.

  Nikandra left the priestesses’ house in the full light of morning, passing by the pilgrims who had waited in vain for four days while the priestesses tended their eldest sister. They reached out, calling after her. Their hands plucked at her skirts.

  They called down prayers on Promeneia, offering blessings and wishing her well. Nikandra would not have paused for beggars, but for blessings she would be less than gracious if she pushed on past. She had to stop, answer their crowding questions and reassure them
as best she could.

  That was not very well, but they were glad of any crumbs she could spare. It touched her heart to see that they were not simply blind mouths and greedy hands. Who knew? Maybe their prayers would move the Mother to heal Her eldest priestess.

  As Nikandra passed through the last of them, she met a handful of women coming out of the town. They were plainly dressed and affecting no estate, but Nikandra knew the queen’s face too well to be mistaken.

  Nikandra looked on her in newborn respect. Troas recognized it for what it was. Her brow arched.

  Nikandra caught herself flushing—a rarity, and not one she was glad of. She covered it with brusqueness. “The girl? She’s well?”

  “My sister,” said Troas, “is well cared for.”

  Nikandra nodded. “I thank you for that.”

  “No need,” said Troas. “Blood cares for blood.”

  That was a rebuke, though gently spoken. It stung as it was meant to.

  Troas smiled faintly. “I’ve always been invisible to you, aunt. It seemed to me you only saw her. Now I wonder. What do you see? Are we real to you at all?”

  Nikandra’s spine had gone stiff. “Is that why you came, lady? To give me the sharp edge of your tongue?”

  “I thought I might speak the truth,” Troas said. “My sister was never meant for this place. Perhaps I might have been, if you had seen me; but I’m content with the lot that’s been cast for me. I’ve spoken with my husband, and he has a solution to suggest—if you are capable of hearing it.”

  Truth had a bitter taste. Nikandra had heard that said but had never understood how bitter it could be. She swallowed it along with her pride, though it gagged her, and said, “Tell me.”

  “The Mother and the Son,” said Troas. “When the earth tried to break, those were the words I heard in it. When I repeated them to my husband, he recognized them. ‘Those are the Mysteries on Samothrace,’ he said. He was initiate there when he was young.”

  Nikandra stared at her niece. There was the answer. It should have been obvious.

  The past days had robbed her of any wits or learning she had had. Or had her mind been deliberately fuddled? Were the omens of Polyxena’s birth coming true at last? Were powers gathering that would transform her into the weapon that Nikandra had foreseen?

  Who, then? Who would, or could, do such a thing?

  As with Promeneia’s prophecy, the answers were too many. It could be any one of a hundred rivals of Dodona’s priesthood, or even someone whom Nikandra did not yet know: some enemy so well hidden that there was only the whisper of a prophecy to mark him.

  Nikandra shook herself hard and made her mind focus on the moment, on the thoughts that were safest to think. “Samothrace,” she said. “Of course.”

  Troas nodded. “The king has agreed to send a ship to the isle with a cargo of offerings and such of our people as wish to go. I’ve asked to be among them.”

  “And your sister?”

  “Yes,” said Troas. “We’ll sail as soon as the ship is ready.”

  Her face was tight; she looked as if she was braced for a fight. Nikandra might have offered one, but she had too much to ponder. All the certainties that had bolstered her mind and spirit had crumbled; there was little left to lean on.

  This much she could do. “Guard her well,” she said. “Never let her out of your sight, unless someone you trust is guarding her. Let no one near whom you do not know or trust. Will you promise that?”

  Troas studied her with dark and steady eyes—remarkably like Promeneia’s, if Nikandra would face the truth. “You have reason to fear for her?”

  “I might,” said Nikandra.

  “Is it anything she knows?”

  “No.”

  Troas nodded slowly, as if something she had long suspected had come clear to her. “Someday soon, she will have to.”

  “But not yet,” said Nikandra.

  Troas might have had more to say, but she forbore to say it. She turned instead and made her way back to the palace.

  Nikandra stood on the edge of the grove and watched her go. It would be a while before she understood fully all of the emotions that stirred in her.

  Regret, yes. Guilt. Resignation, perhaps—though that would be slow to grow.

  She had done the best she knew how. If Polyxena could be content to live as a pampered princess, then the rest of it might sink beneath the surface again.

  The Mysteries in Samothrace would suit her. They were rites of the deep earth and the wine’s ecstasy; they celebrated the body’s passion and reduced the mind to wordless desire. They were made for Polyxena.

  There was power in these ancient rituals. But could the girl control it? That had always been the danger. The omens had warned against it, and every prognostication Nikandra had ventured gave the same result.

  In Samothrace they embraced it. And maybe, Nikandra thought, that would do what all her efforts had failed to do. Maybe, if Polyxena had a careful fraction of what she thought she wanted, it would be enough. She would not go seeking any more of it.

  The Mother Herself had guided Polyxena toward this path. Nikandra had to trust in Her.

  Seven

  The wind was brisk, striking foam from the faces of the waves. King Arybbas’ ship danced on them, looking ahead with the bright eyes painted on its prow. The striped sail was as full as a bearing woman’s belly; the oars were shipped and the oarsmen sprawled at ease, basking in the sun and spray.

  Polyxena knelt as close to the prow as she could get, right above the painted eyes. Cold spray stung her cheeks and stiffened her hair.

  Close against her breast, the little snake coiled tightly, hugging her warmth. It had no comprehension of all this strangeness, and no power to understand.

  It was remarkably like the queen’s maids. They yearned audibly for their familiar place, for earth that stayed mostly still and sky closed in by palace walls. Polyxena could no more understand them than the snake could understand her.

  Poor things, all of them, not to know the joy that filled her. It was wonderful—glorious. She closed her eyes and tilted her head back and grinned at the sky.

  She was as free as a woman of this world could be. Her sister sat under the canopy amidships, comforting her maid Merope, who was miserably seasick. The other four clung to anything they could find, in terror of this leaping, surging motion.

  Most of the sailors were king’s men; when they reached the island they would become guards, ready to defend the queen and her women to the death if need be. They were strong men, well built and good to look at. If the world and its wonders had not been so engrossing, Polyxena would have been content to sit and stare at them.

  She had never been outside of Dodona before. After her sister gave her the news, she had been too full of excitement to eat or sleep. The queen’s preparations had been breathtakingly brief—only a day and a night—but Polyxena had counted every breath and every hour until the king’s house and the grove and the temple were behind her.

  She had more than half expected that the priestesses would try to stop her at the last, to bind her forever to a place and a priesthood for which she had no calling. But no one barred her way. No stern face watched her from the temple or the grove, and no voice called her back. Even the sense of being watched was absent, as if whatever it was had elected to let her go.

  There had been no farewell from within the temple. Polyxena had not expected one.

  She supposed she was in disgrace. She did not care. She turned her back on the grove and the temple and let the brown mule carry her as far away from it as she could go.

  As they rode out of the steep valley with its lowering mountains, down to the river and the ship and thence to the sea, Polyxena drank in every sight and sound and smell. From mountain tracks still marked by scars of the wrath she had brought on them to fertile valleys to stony shores and the crash of waves, she committed each step to memory, to bring out later and cherish. Even the ship was a wonder, because it w
as not Dodona.

  Everywhere she went, the Mother was. She had been taught as much, but the truth of it was stronger than she could have imagined. Sometimes she was so dizzy she could hardly stand; other times she had to swallow broad grins or gusts of laughter that her companions might take for hysteria.

  Where they were going, her sister’s women had assured her, this near-ecstasy was nurtured and encouraged. She pressed them for more, but that was all they knew or would say.

  “It’s a Mystery,” said Deianeira before seasickness silenced her. “When we come back, we’ll know, too—but we’ll have sworn terrible oaths never to tell.”

  Secrets, thought Polyxena. She wanted to hug herself. Mysteries. Ecstasies. If she could have put on wings and flown, she would have done it, to be there all the sooner.

  * * *

  The isle of Samothrace rose sheer out of the sea. It was as mysterious as Polyxena could have asked for: a landscape of stark cliffs and wind-whipped greenery, dashed about its feet by wine-dark waves.

  They came to harbor late in the long summer day. The walled town climbed the hills above them, humming with people like a meadow with bees. They disembarked shaky-legged on the stony shore and saw their ship drawn up and secured amid a throng of others greater and lesser. Theirs was not the greatest or the most splendid, but it was not the smallest, either. Some of the boats were hardly bigger than a cockleshell.

  There were people waiting, a man and a woman in long tunics of plain white wool, with their feet bare and their hair unbound. The offered the queen no obeisance.

  She however, with wisdom that Polyxena had learned to admire in her, bowed to them as she would to one of the priestesses at home. They inclined their heads in return and beckoned the newcomers to follow.

  * * *

  That night the travelers from Epiros spent in the city in a hostelry for those who would be sworn into the Mysteries. They had come just in time: tomorrow was the great rite, and every room was full.

  The queen was separated from her guards, as men and women lodged apart in this place. Troas lost none of her serenity, even when she was crowded into a barracks of a room with a chattering phalanx of mothers and small children surrounding her. Far down the length of the room, over by the wall, sat a woman decked out with gold enough to fill a temple, attended by a flock of all but naked slaves.