The blind man, Homer, and his secretary had been waiting in the olive grove
for nearly two days when word got back to them from Mount Olympus. Homer first
heard the popping sound that always accompanied a god taking human form, then
the sure, even footfalls that told him this time it was Pallas Athene. He said her name.
"How could you be so sure it was
me?" Athene asked, amused and intrigued.
Homer touched his chest near his
heart with the fingers of one hand. "In here I know all of you better than I
know myself." Next he touched his head. "And in here, Pallas Athene, where I
create my stories, I know you best of all, the god of art."
"Perhaps you know me too well,"
Athene warned, an edge in her voice.
"What threat could a mere human
pose to one such as you, especially a blind human?"
Athene laughed at the poet's
question. "Your own words reveal how dangerous you are. You could talk a leopard
out of its spots."
"Perhaps," Homer admitted, showing half a smile. "Have you word from your father
about my new story? Does he like it?"
"Oh, yes. Very much. He asked me
to bring a contract with me for you to seal. As soon as you've done so
production can begin."
Homer nodded and Athene handed a scroll to his secretary, who read it out loud
to his master.
"What's
this about minor changes?" Homer demanded a moment later, interrupting his
secretary.
Athene
shrugged, then remembered that Homer could not see. "Nothing important, I'm
sure. Father, being the kind of god that he is - "
"Full of thunder," Homer
interjected.
" - being
the kind of god that he is, would like to spice up the action a bit."
"What does 'spice up' mean,
exactly?"
Athene drew in
a deep breath. "A little more blood and gore, I suspect."
"This is going to turn into
another Iliad, isn't it?" The poet was angry.
"Of course not, Homer," she said
soothingly. "None of us could afford another adventure on that scale."
"Another debacle on that scale,
you mean. How many worshippers did Zeus lose in that one? Over ten thousand,
wasn't it?"
"Something
like that," Athene admitted.
"If only he'd stuck to the
original plot - "
"Yes,
alright. Keep your voice down. He might hear you, and no one likes having their
mistakes rammed down their throat."
"Well, he'd better stay with the
story this time."
"You
mean you'll seal the contract?"
Homer nodded glumly. "What choice
does a mere mortal have before the will of his gods?"
Athene realised Homer was speaking
rhetorically and didn't reply. Anyway, the answer would only have depressed him
further.
Odysseus was the hardest nut to crack. "Look, it took me ten years
to get home the last time," he earnestly explained to them, "and that was after
ten years spent fighting outside Troy's bloody walls."
"The idea's got a lot of popular
support," Hermes said.
"Especially among the gods," Iris added.
"I'm just not interested in a
rematch - "
"It's not a
rematch, Odysseus, it's a sequel. Son Of Helen Of Troy."
"What's a sequel?"
"Like Odyssey was to
Iliad, like your son Telemachus is to you," Hermes explained.
"So we're talking about a sequel
to a sequel - "
"Look,
Odysseus, it's got everything going for it," Iris interrupted, impatient with
semantics. She started ticking points off on her fingers. "Public interest, a
great story, great characters, divine inspiration, meaningful dialogue . . . you
name it, Son Of Helen Of Troy's got it."
"Everything, huh?" asked the King
of Ithaca, his suspicious nature making him sceptical.
Hermes leaned across the slate
table around which they'd gathered and said, in a confidential tone: "Homer's
written the story, based on an original concept by Ares himself." Odysseus was
impressed, and his expression showed it. "And Phoebus Apollo's agreed to do the
music."
Hermes rested
back, giving his news more time to sink in. This was a mistake, for it gave
Odysseus an opportunity to discover what he thought was their plan's fatal flaw.
The two gods were surprised when he slowly shook his head.
"What's wrong?" Hermes asked
nervously, wondering what it was they'd overlooked in the sales pitch.
"More than half the original cast
is dead and gone, remember? Achilles, Hector, Agamemnon, Paris, Patroclus,
Priam, Aias, Cassandra . . ." his face clouded over ". . . not to mention the
entire contingent from Ithaca, except me . . ."
Iris glanced nervously over her
shoulder to make sure no one else was listening in, and said: "Apparently the
Great Director's been having chats about that very problem with Persephone . .
." She let the sentence fade without finishing, but winked knowingly at
Odysseus.
He was
wide-eyed. "You mean Hades is willing to release them?"
"As special guest stars only; but
at least they'll be making an appearance, no matter how brief."
Odysseus could not speak. Hermes
sensed it was time to move in for the kill.
"We haven't discussed payment
yet," he said. "I think you'll be very interested in our proposal."
Odysseus was the hardest nut to
crack, but the gods had brought with them a big enough mallet.
"I can't believe you're going off to war again," Penelope said to her husband
even as she helped him pack a few things. "Not after the last time." "It may not come to a war,"
Odysseus tried to explain for the hundredth time.
She ignored his protest. "Will you
be taking your great bow with you?"
Odysseus closed his eyes and
prayed desperately for courage for himself and understanding for Penelope. A
sudden, horrifying intuition suggested to him that Penelope perhaps understood
things better than anyone, and that her misgivings were entirely appropriate.
He opened his eyes,
turned to his wife and laid his hands on her shoulders. "The gods have promised
me I'll return, and before the year is out."
"Another year Ithaca must be
without its rightful king."
"Telemachus will rule with a
fairer hand than mine. Our son was born to rule."
"In his own time," Penelope
rejoined, shrugging off his hands.
Odysseus didn't reply. He felt he
was losing the argument, and he didn't want Penelope to see that he couldn't
defend his position. That would mean leaving under an even darker cloud.
Penelope and Telemachus
accompanied him down to the beach. This time he wasn't taking a fleet with him:
Just one bireme, its fifty crew and six trusty followers. The ship left soon
after dawn, heading southeast towards the Gulf of Corinth, farewelled by a small
crowd of well-wishers that had gathered quietly by the edge of the sea.
Menelaus glumly looked out from where he stood on Sparta's great wall. On the
distant northern horizon he could see huge clouds of dust. The enemy had
arrived. The gods' new epic was about to begin. He was joined on the wall by his
wife, Helen. "They've come," he told her.
"So I see. Don't look so
despondent, husband. We will survive this war. It has been promised to us by
Aphrodite herself."
"She
promised the same thing to Priam and his sons," Menelaus pointed out.
Helen bit back an angry reply. Why
must her men always prove to be such fatalists? Even her son, Tydeus, was
turning into one. Which reminded her . . .
"Where is he?"
Menelaus glanced at her. "Your
son, you mean?"
"Our son."
Menelaus nodded towards the advancing enemy. "They don't think so. They attack
Sparta because they believe this house protects Paris's whelp."
"He has your eyes," she said
lamely.
"God's teeth,
woman; nine out of ten Achaeans have brown eyes! But he has Paris's hair,
Paris's nose, Paris's bloody adulterous mouth . . ." The sentence was strangled
by his bitterness. "They're my friends out there, Helen. I fought by their sides
for ten long years so we could free you, and now because of you I must fight
against them." He turned his face away from her. "The gods have betrayed me."
The gods have betrayed
us all, Helen thought grimly. As they have ever done.
Pallas Athene eventually found Homer sitting on the edge of a cliff
overlooking the great harbour of Thera. "It is quite a view," she said to
him.
"I wouldn't know,"
he replied.
"Why do you
come here?"
"The updrafts
are refreshing, and the wine they make here is excellent. Better than that
Anatolian muck I was raised on."
"The story is about to start," she
told him.
Homer sighed.
It was a sad sound and sent a shiver down Athene's spine. "I know. Even this far
away I can hear your father chortling."
Athene felt she should be angry at
the poet's words, but because she understood, even if she didn't yet
know, what was about to happen in far away Sparta, she found her anger
consumed by an unnatural sympathy.
"Tell me, Homer, does your story
have a happy ending?"
"Oh, yes. All my stories have happy endings."
"Iliad was a tragedy," she
pointed out.
"Not
originally."
For a while
neither of them said anything. The white houses around them, the cobalt sea
below, the great arc of the harbour and the gusts of fresh Mediterranean air all
worked towards a feeling of peace and general calm. Athene understood then that
even without eyes Homer saw things better than most mortals. She wondered
briefly if her kind really had created humanity. The species seemed infinitely
more complex, emotionally and spiritually, than those who resided on Mt Olympus.
This man, this blind poet, scared her; in his own way he was more godlike than
she could ever be.
"I
have to go back." Homer said nothing. "What will you do now?"
"I'm already working on another
story. It's about the end of the world."
"I look forward to hearing it when
it's finished," Athene admitted.
"I shouldn't if I were you. Zeus
will probably want to produce it like he has all the others."
But Athene didn't hear the
warning. She was already gone.
Odysseus found he was camped next to Diomedes, his closest friend from the
days of the Trojan war. Their reunion was warm and sincere, eventually made
boisterous by too much wine. As night carried on and their followers left them
to find places to sleep, the two old warriors sat together around a spluttering
campfire. "Have you been
in touch with Menelaus at all?" Odysseus asked.
"I tried soon after the high
priests announced the war, but the gods had already sealed Sparta off from all
contact with the outside." Diomedes poked the fire with the tip of his sword,
watched orange sparks scatter and fall. "I don't like this fighting between old
comrades. If I'd known this was what Zeus had in mind I'd never have signed up."
"We all would have come
anyway, in the end. This is something the gods willed, and who are we to refuse
them?"
"Have you ever met
Tydeus?" Diomedes asked, changing the subject. Odysseus shook his head. "He came
to Argos last year on an embassy from his father . . . well, from Menelaus . . .
and he impressed everyone with his intelligence and courtesy. And to boot, he's
as beautiful as his mother to look at. I think the gods have it in for him. If
it wasn't this war, they'd have thought of something else to get him."
"You've become cynical with age."
"Perhaps. That doesn't
mean I'm wrong."
"No. No,
it doesn't mean you're wrong. The gods have always been jealous of us humans. We
can dream, where they cannot. We can die, where they cannot."
"And we can love."
"So can the gods, by all
accounts."
"Not as truly
as we. The gods lust after things, Odysseus. Zeus after flesh, Athene
after knowledge, Ares after war and strife, Apollo after pride."
Odysseus peered into the gloom,
tried to make out the walls of Sparta. "I wonder what daylight will bring."
Other than Penelope, Diomedes was the only person in the world to whom Odysseus
would have spoken such thoughts aloud.
"What did the gods offer you?"
"They guaranteed I'd
return home before the year was out."
"That's all?"
Odysseus glanced down at his feet,
obviously embarrassed. "As well, they hinted I might get a potshot at minor
godhood when I died."
Diomedes let out a low whistle. "Only Heracles has ever been offered so much
before." He smiled at his friend. "They will make you the god of deception, I
think. Odysseus the Deceiver." Odysseus looked up, and Diomedes saw a tear
trickle down his cheek. "Whatever's the matter?"
"I've just realised that even
Odysseus the Deceiver can himself be deceived. I've been a fool."
Diomedes stared at Odysseus with
surprise. Suddenly he understood that his friend had somehow seen his own fate.
"This is going to be another bloody disaster, isn't it?"
"I've heard rumours that Hera and
Zeus have fallen out again. Apparently she caught the old lecher red handed on
the casting lounge with two swans, a peahen and a rock python of enormous
girth."
Diomedes couldn't
help laughing. "Just like last time! Well, we have to fight for something, I
suppose."
"Oh, yes. We
all have to fight for something."
Above them the sky was lightening,
and dawn sent rosy fingers shooting out from the eastern horizon. In the
distance a trumpet sounded, welcoming the new day and whatever it would bring.