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Master of All Sorrows: Book Two of the Ellix Saga



A MYSTERIOUS SHIP ARRIVES ON THE COASTS OF ELLIX, VISIONS AND DREAMS HERALD THE ARRIVAL OF THE GOD IN THEBES AND A COMPLETE CHANGE OF GUARD....





All night there had been a storm. The people in the villages by the sea had not feared, and that was strange. Lightning riddled the sky and clouds boiled, the waves slowly rolled onto the sand and washed off of the shore, and now and again, some people came out to watch the water. Husbands came out with their wives, and the wives put their heads on their husbands shoulders. The children and some adults danced about in excited circles, linking hands at the approach of the weather. The wind whipped up was not cold. It was just cool enough. All that afternoon, as the sky had gotten ready for the night, it was the purple color of wine, and the sun on the sea turned it the color of rose wine. An old man, blind for years, turned his head to the water, and his daughter said, “If only you could see that sky.”
He said, “I can. I almost can. I can feel it.”
And so they had not feared as the weather grew strong. One woman, inspired, gathered dead wood and began to build and altar. Some of the people sang as they set fires blazing.

“Eko! Eko! Samilak!
Eko! Eko! Assarak!
Eko! Eko! Iacchus, O!
Eko! Dionysio!”

Fires burned across the night, and meat was roasted, and all up and down the coast, villagers, always close, were closer than ever. They remained until the rain washed away some fires, but other fires burnt long, and still they remained. They remained while it rained until the rain was too much and then, slowly, with only a little regret, they returned to their houses. On a night like this, when one looked out onto the water, she might think of the east, of the long isle of Evio, where the poet Hesiod had come from, or the Isles, or of Phrygia, and the lands beyond. On a night like this one thought of the east.
The storm ended before sunrise, and the sky was a rich wine color, the sun coming through purple clouds. It was in this wine soaked light that a ship came into the harbor. It’s sails were purple, and it was more like a building than a ship, because vines and tendrils hung from it. The sweet drunken smell of grapes could be inhaled all along the beach, and women and men ran out to meet the boat. With no anchor, with no danger, gently, the long ship, sails purple and soaked with rain, resinous with wine, crowded with strange laughing women and yes, gentle tigers, lions like kittens, jaguars, slowly crashed into the beach, and more in desire and love than fear, the people of the shore went to their knees.




For once, Mykon woke before Manaen. As lovely as his strong thick body looked, Mykon parted himself from his father and, naked, went to the altar room. He stretched himself out across the cool ground and then rose, lighting the candles of the altar, holding his palms out to the flame and feeling the heat, stretching out on the ground again, filled with the memory of last night’s dream and the lovemaking with Manaen that had occurred before it, the lovemaking which, accompanied by the devotion, would happen again.

Oh Lord, I love you. It is not that I do not revere you, but I did not love you, for I did not know you. I had never seen you. Now I have seen you and you have touched me, and I am in love with the glory of you. You came to me, and I never expected that you would to one such as I. What am I, a soldier? I am one who assist my father in his duties and his devotions. I have seen the devout others, but never though the devotion would come to me, that you could come to me.
When you came I felt like a boy again, like a little child dancing on the beach or in a field of flowers before the battle ax went to my hand, before I had to think of strategies. I do not feel like I have never killed a man though I have killed too many. I feel as if everything I’ve done, I am pure from. It is as if everything I’ve ever done is done in your love. You came to me and said, “I am the word that spoke and light was made.”
I was so afraid of losing, so terrified because for such a time we have come up and up and up, saving ourselves from the old disgrace, growing in might and power. Only in Manaen’s arms have I let myself be completely vulnerable. I have loved Pyrs and Maro, but only in the arms of the one who cradled me when I was a child has all the strength I exercise given way to weakness, to being protected.
Lord, when I saw you it was like that again. I was naked again, not naked as in the gymnasium when the hardness of my body is a warning to men, a reminder that these arms hold the sword, these thighs squeeze the horse, this chest wields the ax in battle. I was naked the way I was the first time I gave myself to my father, almost weeping when we held each other. It was so with you. And there you were, like me, not like the great gods I have seen, but vulnerable, a boy, and I loved you, all of my body yearned for you. I ached for you, and was it a dream or not? You took me in your arms. Whispering over and over and over again.

“I am the seed that died to be reborn.
I am the grain scattered in violence
over the hillsides,
gathered into one loaf to feed all.
I am the grape, crushed and crushed
under men’s feet.
Buried in the earth unseen to become
the wine of life.”

We lay together, as together as I’ve ever been with a lover, and you whispeed to me while I wept, “I am coming for everyone and everything.” I cried again because, all of my life I had loved one thing and hated another, and in your presence I knew it was time to love all things.
“How can I love all things and slay some things? A warrior is still what I am?”
And you said, “Give yourself to me.” You said, “Give all to me.”
Now, I am afraid. Now I think of Pentheos of old, that second king of the city, so proud, who did not welcome the Lord when he came. I am not King, but I am almost a ca king. I am as Creon was when he made himself king. Teiresias tried him and found him wanting. Lord, when you come, find me humble. Find me open to you. I had thought the reason we had come through all this, that our family had built ourselves up in such a way was for our own benefit, to recover from our own shame. But it was for this moment. It was for this.



That night. Jocasta dreamed a dream of unbearable light. In the dream, it was as if she could not turn her face from the light or shut her eyes. It pierced her eyelids. But when she ceased struggling, her only desire was to be in that brilliance. She thought, “How long can I stand it? Could I try and stand it? Could I bear it. She thought, I cannot leave this light, to turn from it would be darkness, and I could not live in darkness again.”
And here is the thing, until she had voiced this, she never knew there had been any darkness. The light burned. It burned all of her, and she knew now that she could leave it, but she chose not to. She let herself be consumed in flames until the suffering became a pleasure, until she almost moaned as the light lessened, as she opened her eyes to a golden glow, rich and thick as honey.
Now that she did not suffer, she smelled the sweetness of honey, and the different, sharper sweetness of lavender. And there was thyme, thick on the air, and rosemary and basil and the smell of bread. Where was she? She felt she was possibly back in her room in Manaen’s house. She turned to look at the figure in the window. From the corner of her eye she could see him, a young, lithesome boy, like Mykon had been only a few years back, but when she looked fully on him, the lines and shapes of him disintegrated and her focus left her.
“Welcome, sister,” he spoke to her.
She bowed her head, for only in bowing could she see him. She said, “Hail, Lord.”
“How is it with you?”
Jocasta thought.
“It is well. It is more well than it is has ever been.”
She looked up at him now, and thought sometimes he was Mykon, sometimes he had the head of a tiger. His forms kept shifting, and she was terrified and delighted, like the very first time she’d lain in Marophon’s arms.
“I cannot explain it. I have never felt like this before.”
Then she said, “Lord, why have you come to me?”
“Because you are mine.”
“I do not even know who you are.”
“You do.”
Jocasta found herself saying, “You are the word that spoke and light was made. You are the seed that died to be reborn.”
“I am the grain scattered in violence over the hillsides, gathered into one loaf to feed all. I am the grape, crushed and crushed under men’s feet. Buried in the earth unseen to become the wine of life.”
“Yes, Lord.”
“And what else have you learned?”
“That so am I,” Jocasta said, breathlessly.
“Men call themselves Gods when they refuse to fall. They do not understand the Gods,” the Voice said. “They make Gods who are ever young and unsuffering, unyielding. Rapacious. They have made the Gods in their own image, but in the very beginning the Gods made men to be like them.”
“The Gods are always dying,” Jocasta heard herself saying, and along with the God she said, “And rising again.”
“Sister,” she heard him say, “Do not stay gone too long, for I am returning to my homeland and your homeland. Long has it been since last I was there, and men have forgotten me. Now it is time to be remembered. Now it is time for much that has been forgotten to be remembered.”
For the first time she saw him now, a beautiful young man, and he was golden and brown like a field in August. But as she gazed on him, he fell away, spreading all across the ground like wheat, and she heard only his voice:
“In the end my love will conquer all.”



She blinked in the semi darkness, a darkness much more intense for the light she had dreamed. She turned to see Marophon’s back, and she was glad that he was here, that she was his wife and they had loved each other in this bed. She shook him and he shook himself, turning over and blinking at him.
“Oh, Maro!” she began, but she stopped talking because his face was alight.
“You had it too!” Marophon whispered to her. “The Dream. Of Him?”
“Yes, and now I do not want to go to Attika.”
“We will turn back. We will go back to the city,” he said. “We will wait to see what happens.”

MORE TOMORROW....
 
Wonderful to get back to this story! This mysterious ship seems like it is going to be very interesting! Jocasta and Maro have meanwhile decided to turn back. I am fascinated to read what happens next. Excellent writing!
 
Well, with the ship stuff is about to get real,and even Maro is having visions. I must admit, it's trippy to turn from Geshichte Falls, back to this story.
 
WHILE CLAUDIA, XIAN AND ECO MAKE PLANS TO FREE THEMSELVES AND POSTUMUS FROM TYRRANY, BACK IN THEBES, POWERFUL FORCES ARE ON THE MOVE


Be not unbelieving, but believe.

-Clio Aristikion











CHAPTER FOURTEEN

THE COMING OF THE LORD

Άρχοντας





“I’m not doing it!” Postumus said, flatly.

“What do you mean not doing it!” Claudia put down the drumstick she had been gnawing. Though born to the nobility, she did an excellent impression of the peasantry in the tavern that night.

One shave was not enough for Postumus, and he still looked more animal than man and more prisoner than noble.

“I want to be done with it. I was done with it when when Grandfather put me in that villa, and in that villa I would have gladly remained. I only want to be out of the damned prison. More than that… I can disappear. I will be glad to disappear. The only thing that I regret, the only thing I long to do, is see Grandfather again.”

“That’s madness,” Claudia said in a low voice.

Postumus turned to Autolycus and said, “Begging your pardon, kind thief, if you could get us to the port of Lindisium, I would walk from there to meet our Grandfather, to reconcile with him. Perhaps, seeing him in secret without the old bat Drusilla, he would begin to see reason.”

“It is you who needs to see reason,” Claudia said before the black haired thief could speak. “As for me, I’m getting as far the fuck away from Cyra and Grandfather’s reach as I can.”

“Though it is not my place to speak,” Eco began, “your sister is right. We are going to Axum, and there your sister will be safe and so would you be. If you wish to write to the Emperor, then so be it, but write him from the safety of Axum and wait to see what the lion says.”

“Yes!” Claudia clasped her hands together. “Yes, listen to Eco.”

Postumus’s brows knit and his lower lip almost stuck out.

“It feels like cowardice,” he said.

Eco looked to his cousin Xian. She nodded. She knew. She was the warrior, not him. An emperor must be a man of political strategy or strategy on the field, hopefully both. Postumus was untried in battle. No soldier would regard caution as cowardice. No, this man, whatever he might be, would not be an emperor. No matter what they did, no matter how many armies were behind him, he would, in the end, die.

“It is not cowardice,” Claudia said, fiercely. “It is wisdom.”

“Whatever it is,” Autolycus noted, “it will let you live to see another day. If you truly wish to get away from your old life come with me. We will sail the Keys and the Spirals. There is much wealth to be had. Wine, women and song. Men too. And soon I am riding into Thebes to help an old friend. The merchant Manaen.”

“I have heard that name,” Claudia began.

“It sounds familiar,” Eco said, and Xian said, “Of couse it does. Manaen is the son of the woman Phocis. She came in the name of his family, to make common cause with us. If not for him, or at least his family, we would not be here now.”

“Well bless him or damn him,” Postumus said, and Eco murmured, “Amen.”

Postumus chewed on the hard bread a little longer and, at last, he said, “Well, very well, I will go to this Axum. On Axum I will think.”

Then he said, “Eco, Xian, I am truly sorry.”

“For what?”

“I know you had counted on me to be the one who would stop this war, the one who would be a new emperor, but I am no emperor.”

“Better to know it now than figure it out later,” Xian said.

“And I hoped to do a great good for the world by doing a great good for your family,” Eco said. “I did not rescue you or your sister to save my home, but to save you for your own sake. I had only hoped that it would lead to the ending of wars. Somehow I think it still will.”

They were all quiet, and Claudia touched her stomach.

“Do you feel him?” Xian asked.

“I feel the shadow of him,” Claudia said, “if that makes sense.”

“To Axum?” Autolycus raised his cup.

Eco raised his as well.

“To Axum.”




A STRANGE MOOD CAME over the city in those days. From the east came reports of miraculous happenings on the coast. A ship, tangled in vines, had arrived on the shore and tipped out spilling tame lions and tigers, languid jaguars. Maidens from the east, hair streaming behind them, crowned in garlands of grape leaves, were with them, and strange men who seemed more goatlike than human, the satyrs.

Merope put no stock in this. She was a woman of the city. She had seen many things as high priestess of the God, participated in the intoxicating chase and dismemberment of the beasts of the field, and she had known many people to be carried away. This was not the the first time she had heard mad stories. This was not the first time she’d heard of the eastern women and the satyrs, and the God traipsing over the land.

Only this time, she had to admit, the stories were so very specific. He had landed on the beach near Techne, they said, and was making a slow progress up the Portland Road. In the town of Berun he had passed a woman being harassed by young men and the God, with a wave of his pine cone tipped thyrsus, had changed them into pigs. The woman, unmarried, an old maid by the standards of her village, untied her hair, lost her veil and climbed onto the back of a jaguar and now she rode with him.

People poured in from Achinthus declaring that the God had turned the river into wine, and the trees near there had lifted up their roots and began to walk. It was said a very magical and strange cavalcade was making its way to the city.

And yet Merope saw none of these things. No one in Thebes saw them, though their effects were seen. Women, the women she had counted as her women, left the city. Wealthy women took off their fine jewelry to go off into the woods and the fields, singing. Even now, if she listened, she could hear their singing, and the singing came down the streets, and even the maids sang.

“Take courage, you have found favour with my heart.

I am loud-crying Iacchus whom Cadmos'

daughter Semele bare of union with Zeon.”

Hail, child of fair-faced Semele!

He who forgets you can in no wise

order sweet song!”


When Merope went to the kitchen to see what was taking so long with the food, she heard her maid Asena and old Arsenoe, usually so hard working and, so very practical, murmur again and again, starry eyed as they kneaded bread, “He comes, he comes! The Lord he comes!”

She could not speak against them. She could not chastise them for their laziness, for was she not the high priestess of the God? Had she not led women out of the city and into ecstasy? Well then, where was her ecstasy, and why were they not coming for her? She could not deny the heady smell, the smell of grapes and sweetness in the air, nor the very warmth of the air. When she stood outside of the Assembly, listening to the men, she could not help but admit to herself how her heart was not in plotting, how the men of the Assembly could just barely keep themselves awake, could just barely be interested in their own plots and plans. It seemed that Mykon and Pyramus were much the same, but there was something about their languor, a confidence in their half asleep indolence.

And then Merope awoke, She awoke because now they were coming from the West, not the strange tales of Gods riding on lions, but the normal business of politics.

Merope watched them stream into the city from Cenchrae and Nucrae, from Opahlos and Pendaton, the other great cities under Thebes, the villages, the estates, all the might lords. They came from Tyron, the city greater than Thebes that was now under Theban rule. As she looked from the rooftop of the house where she had been imprisoned, she thanked the gods that Phocia was now more than Thebes and the surrounding villages. The Anaxionade might rule in the city, but could they rule the whole land or, this day, when the Great Assembly met, might she be able to turn them back to her and to Cyron to regain the control they had lost. Was there possibly a way she could take power from the Anaxionade, and undo Manaen forever?

The council went on for five days, and in those days Merope turned all her thoughts from tales of Gods and devotees. She heard that Mykon had stood up in council and declared that they needed a new king in Thebes and quickly, that this was the first order of business. Merope found it interesting that neither Mykon nor his cohort declared that it should be him.

“There is a princess we can turn to,” Mykon declared, and though Terpsichore, as a princess, was the only woman allowed in the Assembly, though she wore the tiara of her mother, and her hair was twisted into the royal braid, they spoke as if she was not there.

“She is too old. She is past the age of bearing children.”

If she was made queen she would go on childless, and at her death they would have to cast about for another ruler.

Now this, Merope noted, was roundly unfair. Terpsichore had been a child with a head still full of baby teeth when her father the Old King, had stabbed out his eyes, and her mother the Old Queen had taken her life. She was the same age as Marophon or Manaen, and a man her age would have never been called too old. A woman of high rank could certainly bear children. Certainly Jocasta had been past the the age of bearing when she had born her second husband—who after all was her son—four children, the youngest of whom was Terpsichore herself. Practical politics often interfered with Merope’s sense of fairness, however today, fairness was not Merope’s concern.

And now, Marophon declared that there was indeed a young and marriageable princess, the Lady Harmonia, and Cyron noted that Marophon was recently married himself.

“Who then would you see marry the princess? Your brother-in-law? Make Mykon the Autarch of the city?”

And there it was, and it would have been something if they had played into it, but the bastards had not. Mykon had only said, “Creon made himself Autarch, and you called King. You put the crown on his head for twenty years and bowed to his will. We are not speaking of kings but of queens, and we have one in Terpsichore and one in Harmonia if you would make the choice.”

Merope had known what would come next, and it was the only thing that truly irritated her.

“This is not Akxa or Attika or the land of the Amazons. A woman has never sat on this throne and ruled Thebes. Nor shall she.”

And then the wrangling began again.

This morning it was being pointed out that down south in Therapne, there had been two kings for a long time and that between Mykon and Marophon there was more than enough noble blood to make one or both of them Autarchs,

“So they circle about it again and again,” Merope thought to herself.

She called one of her male servants. She thought, “He can walk in to the Assembly because he’s a man, but here I am, one of the highest ranking persons in the city and I have to send him in for me.”

When Jaxon arrived, Merope said, “Go to the Assembly for me. Tell them the High Priestess seeks entrance. Tell them the High Priestess of Iacchus has received a holy message from the God, and would stand before the Assembly and deliver it.”



MORE AFTER THE WEEKEND
 
I am glad I have the weekend to reread as there is a lot going on here and so many names to remember. That being said I am enjoying where this story is at and I look forward to reading what happens next. Great writing and I hope you have a nice weekend!
 
“We were assembled in that hall, the great lords of the land, and the more Mykon continued to deny it, the more everything they kept saying was, “Make him Autarch! Make him Archon. Put a crown on his head and the head of Marophon!”
Pyramus, grinning, tore the bread and handed the rest to his wife. She tore at it and handed it down to Thalia.
“Not that I spite my brother anything,” Charis said, looking across the table at Mykon, “but why did they not offer Pyramus a crown?”
“Because they figured your family’s blood is ancient and pure,” Manaen said to her, “and if Mykon were to marry Harmonia, then his blood would be pure enough.”
“And at any rate, as angry as some people still are at the Anaxionade,” Marophon’s mother said, “they are still descended from three noble families of this city.”
“I don’t really have the heart to talk about this,” Phocis said.
“What’s wrong, Grandmother?” Clio turned to her.
“Nothing is wrong, child,” Phocis said. “It’s just all… so boring. I know it’s a foolish thing to say, but I just feel as if everything will work itself out. Politics seems, at the moment, so unseemly. I want to drowse on the rooftop as if it were summer. Take all of my clothes off.”
“My mother-in-law still has a fine figure,” Memnon said.
“Shut your mouth,” Phocis said, grinning at him foolishly.
“Why, it’s true. Memnon continued. When I married your mother,” he said to Clio, “I thought, let me get a look at the mother to see what the daughter will be. And I was damned please if I do say so.”
“You’re making me blush,” Phocis said, reaching for the wine ewer while Mykon, reclining on his side by Manaen said, “Grandmother never blushed a day in her life.
“But,” Mykon added, “I am in a strange mood, too.”
There was Pyramus, merry and laughing, and Mykon longed to kiss him. They were still lovers, and they had not been together as often as usual. The other night he stood outside the doorway, touching himself while Pyramus fucked his wife. The moment he heard Pyramus groan he’d wanted to spill his seed too. He longed, more than anything, to place his hand on his father’s thigh. What was wrong with him, this strange mixture of lust and drunkenness though he’d had little wine? He longed to dance, to sing as well, and outside he could hear singing.
“Is it just me?” Manaen said. “Feeling this way?”
“No,” Phocis said. “Something strange is coming over us. Over this city.”
They could just barely hear it, and then suddenly, Pyramus, who heard it first began to sing.

“Be favorable, O Insewn,
Inspirer of frenzied women!
we singers sing of you as we begin
and as we end a strain,
and none forgetting you may call
holy song to mind.
And so, farewell,
Dio Nyssus,
Insewn,
with your mother Semele.”

There was noise outside, that of servants moving around and Manaen said, “It seems ashame anyone whould work tonight. Let them stop serving. Let them stop. We can serve ourselves.
“We could serve them,” Clio suggested.
But at that moment, black haired, confused and slightly angered, in a white knee length gown, entered Alexandra.
“Daughter, what are you doing here?” Manaen said.
She scanned the room and declared, “You all are drunk!” and then departed heading, Manaen supposed to her rooms.
But his questions were answered when Jocasta entered the room, followed by Marophon. Both of them were wearing crowns of grape leaves, and both sat down on either side of Manaen, Jocasta catching her father’s hand.
“You will not believe the dreams we have both had.”
“The God sent us back to the city,” Marophon said. “He said said something was about to happen and we must be here.”
Manaen looked up and he saw, lastly, Prince Theon enter.
“You are back with us,” he called.
“What madness is this?” he said, sitting down on the sofa, exhausted and confused, but taking the cup that Memnon offered.
“It is a divine madness,” Phocis said, “And we are all here to witness it.”
“Oh, but,” now Pyramus remembered, “I did not tell all that happened in the Assembly today.”
“What’s that?” Marophon turned from Manaen to look at Pyrs.
“In the Assembly,” Pyramus said, “after things stopped spiraling around to making you and Mykon double kings—”
“What? What?” Marophon said now.
“A message came from Merope. She said she had a prophecy to give, given to her by the gods, and it would damn us forever, before all the lords of Phocia, and then things would be put in their proper order.”
Jocasta sat up, looking instantly more serious, but Pyramus was laughing, his eyes full of tears.
“Yes, that’s how I felt,” Mykon said, beginning to laugh.
“You don’t think it’s serious?” Jocasta asked.
“The thing is, I don’t know,” Mykon told her. “And somehow,” he continued laughing, “it doesn’t matter. My heart is so merry. We will either be crushed like the grape and the wheat to feed all and give all pleasure, or Merope and her faction will, at last, crush themselves. Either way my heart is light, and I cannot be afraid.
And just then Jocasta watched her brother stand up and sing

“Madmen! what god is this whom
you have taken and bind,
strong that he is?

Not even the well-built ship can carry him.
Surely this is either Zeon
or Apollyon who has the silver bow!

Come, then, let us set him free
upon the dark shore at once!”

He stooped down, lifting Jocasta and kissing her passionately.
“Can you not see, dear sister? There is no fear! There is no fear.”



They sailed into the great port of Chania, and Postumus murmured, “Woah! Good Gods! What is this?”
“This,” Eco murmured, solemnly, “is Axum.”
All about, brown skinned men moved on the docks, merchants and perhaps magicians in robes. There were copper skinned broad chested servants, and the people coming onto the shore were white, olive, red headed, bareheaded, dark haired, Khemeti, Easterners, Akkadians and Babalonians. Beyond them were the high, long, white buildings made of stones large as a man with great square pillars that reminded Xian of the foundations in Mykenae and all the old cities.
“What is it?” Postumus said, looking at the green haired woman who, though sober looking as always, had tears in her eyes.
“Can you not understand?” Autolykus said, “How would you feel if you were to see Illium.”
“Illium is in ruins,” Postumus said. “And Cyrans do not look back.”
“Axum is not in ruins,” Xian said, her voice full of feeling as the ship sailed closer to its dock. “This is the land we came from so long ago, so close to Ellix, but so different. There is so much to know here. This is the land that used to rule Ellix so long ago, further back in time than men can remember.”
Claudia wondered, “Will these people have a little room for me?”
“It is a great island,” Eco said. “In many ways. Many races from many places, arriving over the long centuries make up the people of Axum. Here we are,” he turned to Autolykus. “I wish we could go with you, through the Isles and onto Thebes. I feel as if great things are happening there.”
“What is happening there I cannot say, but being in Manaen’s presence has never been dull.”
“Oh, Eco,” Xian wondered, “where will we stay?”
He pointed past the the highest buildings on the dock, to one long white structure that resembled, Xian thought, the labyrinth of the ancient tales.
“That is a Bull Temple, I think. All of a sudden I realize I don’t know a thing about this place. We came without researching. We came in hope, and hopefully these people will shelter us tonight.”
Xian nodded. She touched the red lacquer hilt of her sword.
“I had thought this would be the end of our journeying, but now it appears we are only at the beginning.”



When Merope saw her servants singing and dancing, she began to fear. It was not that she did not believe in the God, only that she had always believed he was more or less under her control, around when she called him. And suddenly things were happening which were not only out of her control, but outside of her entirely. The sun set not into the usual spring time silver white sky touched by gold, but into rich purple and red streaked with luminous blue, and it was not quick in setting. From the east came a spicy wind, warmer than any she had known.
As the lamps were being lit about the house, she saw the first of the marvels. As plain as anything, Hekabe, who lived across from her in a house as old and large as hers, who was born into one of the greatest Agae families and married into the Sparti, walked out of her house completely naked, and singing to herself, looking drowsy and content, she went down the street. She was not the only one, though some women retained clothes, and the words of their song could be heard in snatches. When she went to her parapet and gazed over the babbling city, where song and laughter was rising, she saw, against a wall, a man fucking a woman, her thighs wrapped about him, her head thrown back in ecstasy as his hairy buttocks flexed in and out. People passed, unamazed, some stopped to gaze not in lust, but in open reverence and admiration.
And then she saw, wonder of all wonders, Cyron, dignified lord of of this city, who kept all his desires to himself, tumble out of his house completely naked, his large erection pointing him to the south. The few on the streets did not point or stare, unless they looked on in reverence, and soon the white shadow of the fifty year old aristocrat had disappeared in the night.
Slowly, as torch lights went up around the city, the various streams of song seemed to make one song. It seemed as if half the city sang:

"Every nature, every modeled form,
every creature, exists in and with
each other.
They will dissolve again into their
own proper root.
For the nature of matter is dissolved
into what belongs to its nature.
Anyone with two ears able
to hear should listen!"

And in shuddering breath of ecstasy, as the bright stars shone over head, the other half of the city sang:

“The soul answered, 'I saw you.
You did not see me nor did you know me.
You took the garment I wore
for my true self.
And you did not recognize me.'”



MORE TOMORROW!
 
That was a great portion! I understood or rather could keep up more with what is going on which is a good thing. We find the characters in a strange mood. I am very interested in seeing what happens next and what is happening to cause the mood of the characters. Excellent writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
Yes, this mood is going around, and something is about to happen, and what the something is no one can really guess. Though I'm sorry I missed our usual conversation, I'm glad you enjoyed this portion of the story. What's coming? We'll have to wait and see.
 
When Merope saw her servants singing and dancing, she began to fear. It was not that she did not believe in the God, only that she had always believed he was more or less under her control, around when she called him. And suddenly things were happening which were not only out of her control, but outside of her entirely. The sun set not into the usual spring time silver white sky touched by gold, but into rich purple and red streaked with luminous blue, and it was not quick in setting. From the east came a spicy wind, warmer than any she had known.
As the lamps were being lit about the house, she saw the first of the marvels. As plain as anything, Hekabe, who lived across from her in a house as old and large as hers, who was born into one of the greatest Agae families and married into the Sparti, walked out of her house completely naked, and singing to herself, looking drowsy and content, she went down the street. She was not the only one, though some women retained clothes, and the words of their song could be heard in snatches. When she went to her parapet and gazed over the babbling city, where song and laughter was rising, she saw, against a wall, a man fucking a woman, her thighs wrapped about him, her head thrown back in ecstasy as his hairy buttocks flexed in and out. People passed, unamazed, some stopped to gaze not in lust, but in open reverence and admiration.
And then she saw, wonder of all wonders, Cyron, dignified lord of this city, who kept all his desires to himself, tumble out of his house completely naked, his large erection pointing him to the south. The few on the streets did not point or stare, unless they looked on in reverence, and soon the white shadow of the fifty year old aristocrat had disappeared in the night.
Slowly, as torch lights went up around the city, the various streams of song seemed to make one song. It seemed as if half the city sang:

"Every nature, every modeled form,
every creature, exists in and with
each other.
They will dissolve again into their
own proper root.
For the nature of matter is dissolved
into what belongs to its nature.
Anyone with two ears able
to hear should listen!"

And in shuddering breath of ecstasy, as the bright stars shone over head, the other half of the city sang:

“The soul answered, 'I saw you.
You did not see me nor did you know me.
You took the garment I wore
for my true self.
And you did not recognize me.'”




Kybernets has brought the hookah from the east. When the door opened and Cyron, naked and entranced. arrived in the house, none of the men seemed terribly surprised, and the women had gone to bed. For his part, Marophon did not feel especially high, merely mellow. He had wondered what Manaen meant by saying he didn’t want to feel this drunk and then pulling out hookahweed, but this was different, cleaner than being drunk, and all of his senses felt turned on at the same time he felt mellow. Kybernets was blowing smoke into Manaen’s mouth, and the smoke was coming back out of Manaen’s nostrils, Pyramus’s hand was comfortably on his thigh and his arm around him, and everything felt right. Manaen was frankly kissing Kybernets and then Lysander, and then Kybernets was kissing Lysander while, appreciating, Manaen watched. Lysander had left Clio’s room, coming here, blinking to see what he had never seen before.
Then, surprising them all, he had disrobed revealing a penis bobbing with curiosity. Now he joined in, making love, joining his body to this body of men.
Pyramus was looking half asleep between Mykon and Marophon who looked like he was going to cry, like he was so moved while he stroked Pyramus’s head against his breast.
But… Marophon wondered, blowing smoke into Pyramus’s mouth while Pyramus stroked his thigh, if Pyramus was with Manaen, then how could Pyramus be with him, and then he felt so stupid, because it was Cyron he was now kissing.
He looked across the room where Kybernets was being kissed by Manaen, then Lysander, and now Lysander was pulling up Kybernets’s gown. Manaen’s eyes were shining with unshed tears.
“I never knew we loved each other this much,” Pyramus said, and though his head was still on Manaen’s chest, his eyes were open and he was looking at Marophon kissing Cyron as if it were nothing at all, or as if the something it was did not diminish him. Across the room, his bobbing brown cock thick as a baby’s arm, Kybernets now stood naked while Manaen, naked to his waist, wrapped his arms about him, kissing him, and Lysander, on hands and knees, buried his face in the bronze man’s ass.
And then Marophon stood up. And he was so stiff and so hard, that he lifted his chiton and pushed his cock into Cyron’s open mouth, and Cyron pulled on him so sweetly, and he heard, behind him, Pyramus say, “Yes!” and he was aware that he’d wanted something like this all night, and then he sank to the couch, closing his eyes while Cyron went to his knees, sucking him. For some time he wasn’t aware of what everyone else was doing, only that they were not watching him.
Cyron said nothing, but in time rose from his knees and led him upstairs. In that room, Cyron undressed him and they were on the bed, Cyron sucking him, licking him, massaging him. Cyron saying, “Fuck my face now.” And so Marophon did fuck his face on the edge of the bed, a thing he’d never done, and it felt so good to plunge his dick into someone’s mouth while they sucked on it, to rub his own body the same time he rubbed Cyron’s, to tease his own nipples and then, when he slid across that same face, and Cyron licked his balls, and the place between his balls and his ass and finally darted his tongue deep into his asshole.

“Tonight everything will happen,” Mykon said into the room where Cyron was sprawled out in the middle of the bed, asleep. Marophon was terrified. He felt, suddenly,very much out of control. A Force was moving through this house, and they were all giving way to it.
“Marophon,” Mykon said in a pleading tone. Marophon hadn’t even noticed until now that Mykon was naked too. Mykon climbed onto the bed beside Cyron. For a moment, Marophon thought he would climb on the other, but he climbed on the same side as Mykon, aware of how hard they both were. His terror gave way to deep sorrow, and in Mykon’s arms, Mykon’s mouth pressed to him, Mykon’s firm erection pressing to his own, the sorrow turned into yearning, into comfort, into…. This, their bodies moving together to find sleep, but in the end finding, at the same time Manaen and Pyramus did across the hall, a climax that pulled itself from his body, bunching his muscles, clenching his jaws to sacred silence as, helplessly, he spilled, and spilled, desire, lust, tenderness, need and love all over Mykon’s body.



This was the offering and the gift, gift of heaven and gift to heaven. The soul must be prepared for a gift from God, ready to receive it. In the reception is also the return, the giving back.
“How can you go back?” Manaen said to Cyron. “How can you go back to who you were now that you’ve had what you’ve always wanted?”
“What is happening?” Cyron wondered. “I do not understand any of it.”
“The coming of God is happening, the righting of wrongs,” Kybernets said, rising naked, stretching in the sunlight.
“What was long hidden is being uncovered.”



When Jocasta woke with Theon’s arms about her waist she was not surprised. She had known it would happen again, but not so quickly. His face was pressed to her stomach, his mouth open like a baby’s. He pulled her closer in his sleep, but she knew the men had left. She’d heard them leaving, and she knew Clio was dressing, and she knew she had to be with her.
“I will come with you,” Theon murmured, wiping the sleep from his eyes.
They were in the pool in the atrium, like children. Clio was in white and Charis beside her. Last night, when Lysander had, stirred by something, kissed Kybernets on the mouth, Charis had led Clio away. In the dark perfume of her room, Clio gave her kisses and light touches and taught her the experience of another woman. Now Charis dressed her like a bride, and the women departed for the Cadmea.
All the banners of the various lords flapped in the breeze of the morning, but the breeze was heavy with perfume, and whatever surprise was left from last night disappeared when she saw the women, naked, hair unbound, walking about singing. All of them thought, but women do not come into the Assembly, but none of them said this as they walked up the steps and then onto the common. Looking about, Clio thought, “But where are the people, the soldiers?” However she said nothing. None of them did.
“Hear now the words of the God, the Twice Born,” she heard from the hall of the Assembly, “hear his speech as he returns to his city. Hear him level guilt upon those whom guilt belongs and redeem the proper rule of this city!”
And now they were in the hall, and no one seemed to notice that they were the only three women, Merope being the fourth.
“He says, I am Thebes and I am for Thebes, you have seen my return. All over the land you see the signs of my return. Now hear my voice as I call you to look to those who have perverted this city and taken it in their hands. You will see him today, though he has no right in the Assembly of citizens, himself being no citizen, Manaen Anaxionade. This man is a traitor as was his father, save worse, because through his mother and his daughter he has sought to place on the throne the daughter of the man his father would have seen usurp our noble seat. What is more, by joining his son to his lover, he has made it so Thebes, my holy city, is now infeebled by being enslaved to his private army. Now the city is a prisoner to these foreign ways, but I have come to free it.”
“Liar!” Jocasta heard behind her, and she was sure it was Clio, for it was the voice of a woman.
“Silence your lying, before in lying you perish.”
Jocasta turned to see, behind Clio, an old man, shining in pristine white, his curling white hair glistening as his beard tumbled down his chest. Clio tilted her head in surprise, for he had not seemed this way before, carrying a great oaken sfaff, golden circlet on his head, blue eyes, pupiless, but blazing with sight.
Merope seemed to have lost her speech or her courage. At the dais on the other side of the hall, she cleared her throat, then said, “I have come to—”
“Silence, Liar,” Teiresias said, “The Judgment of heaven and earth is already behind you.”
“You are that clapped out old imposter!” Merope cried. “I remember when you came at the time of the Old King, ending his reign, ruining our city, bringing famine with you. You are the one, one of the several who plays at being the holy Teiresias. And even if you were him, you were evil and evil smelling then.”
“The first time I came to this city I was already old,” his voice filled the hall, “and it was in the days when Pentheos, second king of this city, would not honor the God. I foretold judgment would come upon him, and now judgment has come upon you. Speak, carefully, younger sister, be sure of the next words that come from your mouth or better yet, say nothing at all.”
“Damn you and your witchery!” Merope called out. She turned to look to Cyron, but he was not with her. He looked different now, smaller, unable to speak. The council seemed not to be for her, but neither against her, and then they were looking at her, and even as they stared in her direction, she felt heat on her arm and looked down to see the golden eyes of a tiger in a face as broader than her waist. How large and hot the orange and gold creature, black striped, long tailed, was. It growled low, like a rumbling storm and then, landing on velvet paws, there was a great maned lion, leaping through the window and landing beside her. She trembled so she nearly fainted, and felt urine running down her thighs.
The men in their seats in the Assembly went up as high as they could while saving as much face as they could. But the lion and the tiger and now the jaguar, and now the other cats leaping into the windows cared little for them. They crossed the great hall, advancing toward the three women at the entrance, and Jocasta, seeing them, wondered why she felt no fear. But, they were not attacking, simply strolling it seemed, like cats. The first lion laid down before Clio and then the tiger and next the leopards sat on either side of her, wrapping their tails about themselves.

But as Jocasta watched this, she had not seen the walls red and pruple with wine, the vines pouring down the walls, the singing outside now being the singing inside as the women entered.

“I am the queen of every hive
I am the fire on every hill
I am the shield over every head
I am the ax of battle
Who but I am the tree
And the lightning which strikes
the tree!”

On that day, the Assembly was filled, by lions and tigers, by jaguars, bears and cheetahs, by the Maenads and by wondrous creatures rarely seen by light of day. And then there he was, in the midst of them, though some saw him and some did not. Some said it was only a boy and some saw a blazing light. Clio remembered him, looking to Teiresias.
This was the boy, the shabby servant. The boy who led him on that night.
“How dare you!” Merope cried. “How dare you come here! And ruin this city and try to…”
But Jocasta saw it, and Mykon saw it. Pyramus saw it, and those who had eyes to see could see it. Some said they did not know what became of Merope, and some said the tree was planted in memory of her, and some said that the wild women had torn her apart and made off with her remains. Some said Clio, the new high priestess of Iacchus, who had been crowned with vines and embraced by him, had done this, but Manaen saw the Young Man reach out and touch her. He saw her mouth sealed, her robes sealed to her. Her dark gowns darkening, crusting, scaling, her hair twisting and hardening into branches, bark climbing over her face until what remained was an olive tree in the middle of the Assembly Hall.
The tree had a name, and all would know that, but the name was never spoken. It passed only from the lips to the ears of the priestesses of Iacchus, and so when the elder priestess would ask the acolyte the name of the tree, the young women would reply to the elder, “Judgment."

END OF PART ONE

TOMORROW..... NIGHTS IN WHITE SATIN
 
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That was a great and surprising end to part one! I never suspected that that would happen you were right about that. I am fascinated to see what happens when this story returns and look forward to Nights In White Satin tomorrow! Excellent writing!
 
Well, I'm glad you were as surprised as I promised. I hope you keep being surprised and pleased. See you tomorrow night for Night in White Satin
 


PART FOUR

ANCIENT MOTHER

Μάτηρ




Behold, I am she that is the natural mother
of all things,
Mistress and governess of the Elements,
The initial progeny of worlds,
Chief of powers divine,
Queen of Heaven!








CHAPTER FIFTEEN

THE GODDESS

Θεά




THE FIRST DAY QUEEN Xanthe sat on her throne, her sister, Ao of the purple hair stood beside her.
“Mother is leaving for Arcady soon.”
“Aramache should have been back days ago,” the white haired Queen said, “but a messenger brought me word from her and Aeon of the prophecy from the Pythoness. The prophecy says that whatever we seek will be found in the south.”
“I didn’t know that we were seeking anything.” Ao said.
“We forgot we were seeking something. Until Harmonia came.”
“We forgot the two lands were one land. We forgot we were one of many people.”
“The last time we came together was during the Illium War. Why is it that War is the only way?”
“I do not know,” Xanthe said, but at least there will be no war today.”
“Akxa is strong.”
“And now the north is as well,” Queen Xanthe said, “if you believe the tales.”
“They say the God himself came into Thebes, and he dwelt in the city for several days. Men gave up their weapons, women put away their spindles as in times of old. Later he left and went all across the land enriching it, turning rivers into wine. One would think it would make the land weaker, but it seems to have made it stronger.”
“Happienss makes us stronger, not sorrow. That is an old lie. Sorrow brings despair.”
“That remarkable woman Phocis—it is said that the day the God arrived in the city, there was strife between the factions of the city—but after he arrived, the princes of the land made her grandson, General Mykon, one of their Archons. He and the General are Archons together, and the Assembly defers to them. It is said they would have made Mykon king but he went to his father, bowed before him and asked his advice, as if he were still a boy. Then his father declared that the royal house was still the royal house and that the Princess Terpsichore had a claim to the throne. She turned it down, and then Manaen said that the title of Queen could be claimed by the Princess Harmonia, and that unlike the last man who called himself king, Mykon should only be a ruler in place of the absent ruler. He chose his brother-in-law to rule with him and Pyramus. Some say they were lovers, and some say he was the lover of Mykon’s father, but all know him to be an able general and now expect him to be a fair ruler. All of Phocia agreed to this.”
“Then that is strength for Thebes.”
“And there is more,” Ao said. “They say that as the train of the God left Phocia, it came into Attika to deliver the same joy as in Thebes, and Prince Theon went with them and so did the man Manaen. In Athene the Attikans made compact with Phocia, and they sent troops into Makadakan to secure it from the Illyrians.”
“And what of Helion?”
“Helion is for another day, I suppose,” Ao said.
“And what will happen on that other day? The Queen said, rhetorically.
“Sister,” said Ao, “only those days will tell.”




At last she was finding some measure of peace. She knew it could not last forever. Everyday, Claudia Macenas Secundus, granddaughter of Claudius Augustulus Imperator of Cyra and Princeps of the Great City remained on Axum, she knew the time would come when she would leave. In fact, the peace she was feeling was inextricably linked to her growing acceptance of that. Originally she’d had to accept remaining. She was sure that Eco wanted to remain here to learn as much as he could about the mysteries of Axum, but Autolykus had talked of being on his way to Thebes, and Postumus did as well. Then Xian said she would have to go to protect Eco from the stupidity of Postumus, Claudia said, “What of me?”
“You will remain, princess,” Xian said, simply.
“But I don’t want to be alone!” Claudia found herself crying.
“You are with child and beginning to show. You cannot travel to Thebes and we cannot remain here. We’d be pleased if Postumus did, but he’s too stupid to know to stay, and we can’t really trust him to stay once we leave. For the sake of your child, for the sake yourself, remain.”
On their very last night, Postumus had said, “It’s a good thing, you know?”
“What?”
“Your remaining here. All your troubles have come from never being able to be alone.”
It was a who-in-the-hell-do-you-think-you-are-? kind of thing to say, but of course he knew exactly who he was. He was her brother who knew her very well, and he was right.
She was surprised. She’d thought things would be harder when they were gone. That she would be sadder. They had landed in the port of a town called Theotiki, and for a few days stayed around the great white mountain of the Spiraling Tower. There, no women entered, or so she thought, until on the last day Eco had said, “Women come and go as they please, its just that few are pleased to enter the Spiraling Tower.
They had traveled along the inner roads through lush green land seeing, in the distance, great cities and houses and come, at last, to Knossos, the great city on the sapphire harbor.
“It’s hard to tell where the city ends and the palace begins, and of course the palace and the temple are one.”
This was the place that now men called the Labyrinth, that was older than the old legends told in Cyra that had originated on the mainland of Ellix. This complex structure rose out of the town like a low winding mound, its entangling galleries, porches and halls wound so that, in the past, people had said it was the labyrinth in which the great bull, the Minotaur had been hidden.
“You will stay in the keeping of Pasiphae,” Eco had said.
“I thought she’d be dead after all these years,” Claudia had jested.
The Hierarch of the Spiraling Tower had referred Claudia to Pasiphae, and Pasiphae had agreed to have her. Eco did not spare a smile for a joke he probably didn’t believe was very funny, and he and Xian had brought her to girl who had brought her a dark haired woman in copper robes with a golden circlet on her head, named as were all in her place, Pasiphae, since the one time queen of the ancient legend. Pasiphae had linked arms with Claudia right away, and to Claudia she smelled of lilacs and warm evenings in her garden back home. For a moment she wanted to weep, and suddenly understood her tears were as much for home as the realization that in that home she had never been safe and never truly felt safe.

“I do not understand this city,” Claudia said, days after the others had left.
“I do not understand how, though I wander I am never truly lost, and though I travel far away I never have a hard time finding my room, or even what these rooms are. Back in Cyra we have priestesses, we have virgin priestesses, and they stay in the House of Vesta. No one comes to them. And then we have our princes, our highborns. And then, of course, we have common people. You never stumble into territory that isn’t yours.”
“It simply isn’t so here,” Pasiphae had said as they sat in a courtyard. “This place was made in the long ago, and there are farms and villages, small towns, isolated houses, where people keep to themselves, and then they come into the town, and in the town the houses are pressed closer and then the streets can narrow or be very wide and suddenly it’s hard to tell where houses become apartments and townhouses, and where those form courtyards, and some become more lavish, and open up onto other courts and temples and terraces. Then, suddenly, some of those places belong to princes, princesses, priestesses. Some are many rooms, some are great solitary spaces. Some have old magics that ensure you will never find them. The granaries, the weaponries—for there are such things—are all around. And then there are the halls, the feasting halls, the dancing halls, the arena for the bull dancing, galleries, galleries, gardens and terraces all around the Great Hall. It is from a different time when all things were still one, and there was not so much difference between rich or poor, peasant or lord, woman or man.”
“There is a brighter sky here,” Claudia noticed, “a richer, warmer wind.”
“It is a wind from a time that is past,” Pasiphae said. “That is the magic laid on Axum.”
Pasiphae went quiet, Claudia noticed, biting off a thought, and then she said, “Though some say it is also its curse.”
“Curse?”
“Axum cannot really change. Cannot really enter into the world anymore than the world can enter into it. Kemet is just as old, but long ago made another choice. And so it it has endured conquerings and connivings, forgettings and erasures. But it has remained part of the world. It is hard to say which of us was wisest.”
Claudia did not know who was wisest but she knew what she needed.
It was from Axum she heard that her Grandfather had sentenced her lover Junius to death, beheading him. She remembered that last night of pleasure, when she, Junius and Ovid had made drunken love, and she had stumbled from it to scream at the sight of Eco and Xian. She remembered telling Junius to please go with her. Telling them both, please go with us. But they had not believed, and now Junius was dead. Grandfather had declared that if ever he found Claudia, her child would be exposed on a rock, and she would live out her days in exile beside her mother.
Mother.
What of Mother?”
“But what of the child? A boy, here, in the cradle. Grandfather had called him a bastard, and he was. She could not say for sure who his father was. He would never be an emperor. Ovid, her poet, had been sent off into exile, west, to the wild lands past Illyria. He would die there, away from pleasure and far from fans. She couldn’t think of that now. It helped nothing to think of it. These days, she prayed to the Great Mother. She sat alone in her room, feeling glad to be alone for the first time in her life, and folding her legs under her, murmured:
“Protect us.”

MORE TOMORROW
 
An excellent start to the new part of this story! The backstory behind these characters is fascinating. I hope Claudia stays safe. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
WHILE CLAUDIA REST WITH THE IMPERIAL PEOPLE OF AXUM, MANEAN AND JOCASTA JOIN THE NORTHEN FIGHT AGAINST MAKADAKAN

“THIS IS THE DAY of triumph,” Marophon Cleomanes said as the long black masted ship sailed into the harbor.
Ahead of him, helmet under his arm, blue cloak hanging from his shoulders as he rode his black horse to the shore, his brother-in-law, Mykon Anaxionades said, “Let us not be so quick to call victory when victory has not yet come.”
There were several other ships for several other reasons, and they were all along the coast, but especially here at Aegina. The greatest port city before the capital of Makadakan. There were the ships of Phocia and Attika, which had brought the men of the two southern kingdoms to the shores and fields of Makadakan to secure it, and these days there were the ships of the southern Makadakan who had joined Mykon’s army. In their multi colored sails were the pirate ships of the Keys, present for profit and adventure, and also present were the men of Evio and some of the Isle kingdoms who had come planning to join the new conference, so that when Phocia came into its true power, they might not be forgotten. There were the green sails of Autokolos, and the strange friends he had brought with him, a green haired princess from Akxa who could fight like hell, and a rough faced Cyran who called himself the Thanaton, Afterdeath. He was accompanied by a compact young man, about the size of Mykon’s own father, but perhaps the same age as Pyramus, with a head of savage pink hair, Eco a sorcerer of Arcady and cousin to Queen Xanthe of Akxa.
The fight that had begun to secure Makadakan was ending in the meeting with the King of Makadakan in a matter of days, and as the black sailed ship was anchored to the shore, and the covered sedan chair born down the gangplank, Mykon, dismounting, walked across the beach thinking, “Only a few short years ago, we were out of favor. Only a few short years ago, I was a boy, and we were disrespected in our city, and I could not understand what you were doing.”
The sedan chair opened, and from it descended a man in a black robe, necklaces of black stones linked by silver about his neck, a black mantle chased in silver sworls hanging from his shoulders. Now he rose from his kingly seat. Rings twinkled on his fingers as if he were a lord, and though he was no king, he was indeed a lord. The young Autarch bowed to him, kissing his hand. And then rose, embracing him.
“Father!” he whispered fiercely into Manaen’s ear.
Manaen’s eyes scanned the tent town along the beach, the armies of the clans and cities of Phocia, the encampments of the Attikans, camp followers, minstrels and servants, wenches and use boys, and beyond, above them, high towered and walled in stone the color of sand, large as Thebes but captured by Thebes was the great city of Aegina.
“Look what you’ve done for yourself,” he exclaimed.
“Yes,” Mykon said, scratching his thin beard nervously, “but not by myself.”
Manaen shook his head.
“Is this glorious man with biceps of iron, tall as a tree, unshaven, holding a plumed helmet that makes him look the God of Battle, truly the child I once dandled on my knee?”
“Father, stop!” Mykon said, suddenly looking nothing like the Lord of Battle.
Marophon came forward, embracing Manaen. Pyramus Aktade was stepping from the ship, holding the hand of the lady Phocis who was followed by Antha and her servant Eurynome..
“Where is my daughter?” Manaen asked. I could not believe she came with you.”
“You would not have believed it if she had stayed in Thebes,” Marophon said. “She is big with child and about to give birth any day, which is why I summoned you.”
“I will hold her hand through her pain,” Phocis said, but the magic is not mine. That belongs to Manaen and Kybernets.”
“If it is like my births, or the births of all the Anaxionade women,” Antha said, kissing Marophon on the cheek, “then it should be an easy one.”
None of them spoke of how Manaen’s first wife had died bearing her second child, or how Marophon’s first wife had died bearing twins who had also died. He had put the horror of that behind him and never spoke of it to anyone save Manaen, and only in the time when they were lovers. Years later, when he had married Manaen’s daughter, it seemed crude to speak of fearing she would die bearing his child.

It had been nearly four years since a young man, battle hardened and no longer a boy came to him, kissed him hungrily and drew him into bed, and now there was almost as little resemblance to that young man as the young man had to the boy. When Manaen said that he hardly recognized this general, he meant it sincerely. Whatever strangeness he had first felt about taking Mykon into his bed, four years later it seemed strange not to have him there. It was not that he did not acknowledge Mykon as the first child his wife had born him, only that the last few years had rendered this as inconsequential. It was not that he did not own Mykon as his son. Everyone knew he was. It was simply that the nature of that relationship took the shape that it did. Mykon’s first lover had been Marophon and Marophon was married now to his sister, but Marophon was a year older than Manaen.
Manaen, seventeen years older than Mykon, was not even forty, and though he did not possess a warrior’s body, his thighs were full and his arms strong, his body smooth and golden brown, and he wrapped those thighs about Mykon as Mykon, passion undamned after months of separation, fucked him deeply, planting his strong arms on either side of him, rejoicing in Manaen’s rejoicing as he ran his hands up and down his arms, as he pulled Mykon’s face down to kiss it, as Mykon, not getting enough of him, buried his thick curls in Manaen’s chest, nuzzled him, sucked on his lips, thrust his tongue in his mouth, thrust into him again and again, both of their bodies desperately crashing together.
“I’m…” Mykon began. “I thought I could… hold it.”
Manaen reached up, tugging his hair savagely, and through gritted teeth, Mykon growled, his body trembling, as he crammed himself deeper in Manaen, and spilled his seed. The two of them cried out and twisted, and in the thrusting of their bodies, Manaen came too. They were still, almost frozen, and then fell apart, lying side by side, limp and sweating, sighing, unable to speak.
We crush each other, Mykon thought as he lay exhausted beside his exhausted father. We squeeze everything out of each other. It’s no good if we don’t. This was the sex we learned in front of the altar. That we learned when offering ourselves up as the sacrifice, preparing the magic, the sex where we give everything to each other and through each other to the gods. Through the gods to the God.
They were both breathing savagely, their limp fingers touched, clasped lightly.
The evening of the Festival of Iacchus, when the women had gone out to lament the God, the night Terpsichore had come, the night the Old Man had come to the village, as the darkness deepened they had all embraced. There was so much love, the love Mykon had for Manaen, the love he had for Pyramus and Marophon, the love Kybernets had for Father, Chiding people did not understand how much courage it took to make love, to be vulnerable to each other. They had all lit the candles in the holy room in Chio, and before the God given themselves to each other all night. Surely this sacrifice had been one of the reasons the next morning they had defeated Merope’s desire to embarrass them. Surely this binding sacrifice had been the reason that, at last, the Holy Child had come.
Mykon turned and lay across his father, kissing his nipples, wrapping his thighs around him.
“I have missed you,” Mykon said. “You must never go back to Thebes.”
Manaen laughed. “You must stop leaving! You are their Autarch. They grow weary of me. And I grow weary of my children being gone from me.”
“Well,” Mykon said, raising an eyebrow, “you’ve got Alexandra.”
At the face Manaen made, Mykon threw back his head and laughed, and then he drew Manaen to him, kissing him again.
What was the Holy Child? It was the God Himself, when he had come to the city in glory, yes, but was it also Mykon as the Autarch? Was it the victories in battle they were having? Was it the north coming together? Who could say. You must just keep doing, Kybernets would say. Faith is to just keep doing. The last day before the God had come, his influence had brought even Cyron to their house, and his power had empowered them to give in and make the last sacrifice. Battle did not scare Mykon, but the sacrifices of love, where he and Maro and Pyramus, together, made love all night, and Manaen as well, these did terrify him.
It terrified him to be drawn into what he hardly dared imagine, but desired more than anything. There was no pain. They were so tender to each other. But there was vulnerability, longing, tears. The last time. Kybernets had been there again. Mykon had lain on his stomach, pinned to the ground while Kybernets fucked him again and again, and he wanted to give himself to the priest, and he knew the priest was giving everything to him. But Cyron, that night, he had watched as the man who was their enemy for so long had fucked his father. The whole time he thrust into Manaen, tears brimmed in his eyes, tears for the desire he’d felt for so long, the love he’d let be twisted into something else. In the despoiled atrium, his orgasm had been a sob as Manaen held him in his arms, acceptance at last, for the rejection he’d felt. They’d lain naked together, his long time enemy moaning, muffled, into his shoulder, “I love you. I love you so much.” That had been what weakened the resolve of the Assembly the next day, what had made it impossible for Cyron to stand against them beside Merope.



“I see you like her,” Memphis said.
“I more than like her,” Jocasta shook the flame from the stick of incense and planted it in the sand before the image. “I adore her, and I can think of no goddess like her in Ellix.”
“The worship of Auset was ancient when Axum ruled all of Ellix, before the Heraklids came, in the days of the Pelasgo,” Memphis said.
“Is it true ships from Kemet are arriving in Thebes?” Jocasta asked.
“Yes, Lady,”
“When I get back there I will want to know so much about that land. And this one as well.”
“Well, how do you mean?” Memphis asked.
“It is old, but it is the old of another place. This city is new. New compared to the south. In Thebes and in Attika we build and build, but always on the bones of the ancient great stone walls and palaces that were before us. Here, no one builds on the ruins or out of the structures of the Techtones.”
Jocasta was ginger as she sat, placing her hands on her firm round stomach. “As for Kemet, for now I’ll have to ask you.”
“What would you know?” Memphis went back to sewing. “During the time of the Makadakan Illyrian Confederacy two hundred years ago, we took the isles and all Phrygia. It was during the time of Alexander. He reached Kemet and Babalon, and then he died in Bactria. After that his empire fell into pieces, but Kemet went to the House of Aramache whose origins were in Makadakan. They ruled Kemet until the time when the August One defeated Queen Aramache the Tenth. He thought he would rule Kemet, but then the House of On took over, and pushed the Cyrans out. For two centuries they did not push us out because were respected their culture and became one with it, and to this day, in Makadakan there is much that is Kemeti.”
“I feel welcome here,” Jocasta said, “and I feel as if there is so much to learn, but I wish to be home as well. And… I will not lie, I wonder how I will fair on the other side of childbirth.”
“You will fair well,” Memphis said, “And Auset will see to it.”
“Can the gods of Kemet care for a Theban?”
“Auset is the Goddess of all women and all mothers. She is the Mistress of Magic.”
“Lady,” a servant in white entered the room, bowing, “you have visitors.”
The curtain parted and in came Manaen, Phocis and Antha.
Jocasta clapped her hand together, exhaling, as she turned to Memphis, “Then the Goddess has heard me already!”
“You’re so large!”
“Carrying high,” Antha nodded. “It’s a boy.”
“Or a girl,” Phocis said, “I carried high with you.”
“And with Manaen?”
Manaen looked to his mother.
Phocis shrugged, “There really is no science to it. Oh,” she turned in surprised and made reverence, “Auset!”
“You know her?” Jocasta said.
“I am a woman of the world,” said Phocis as Memphis, sitting by Jocasta’s bed sewing, smiled.
“In the beginning earth and heaven loved each other, and they conceived four children, But so tight was their embrace, nothing could live between them. Then the Sky and then the Sun came between them, holding them apart, and so their children were born, the twins of shadow, Nephthys and and Set and the children of light, Auset and her brother Auser, and Auser was her lover.”
“It is a bit like our tale,”Marophon said as he entered with Mykon, “The one by Hesiod.”
“But only a bit and far older than Hesiod,” Phocis said. “This tale was ancient long ago, for the days of Kemet are like the days of Babalon, older perhaps.”
“Then, I wonder,” Jocasta said. “if we are in Illyria’s way.”
“Of course we are in Illyria’s way, and what do you mean?” her brother said to her.
“Before, in the time of Alexander,” Jocasta said, “what happened when Illyria came to Makadakan?”
“Makadakan was like the other lands of the far north,” Memphis said, “all claiming descent from one man, from one of the Heraklids, but many different city states, often at war, but never at power. And then we became a province of Illyria, and the Illyrians actually made us stronger. So when they had their first empire it was ours as well, as you know. The old Aramache family was Makadakan. Even our current royal house comes from them. This was why, before you came, Makadakan was to ally with Illyria.”
“And why,” Mykon added, “annexing Makadakan will cause us to come into direct conflict with Illyria.”
“But I was wondering,” Jocasta began, “in Phocia were are so… inward gazing. We do business with other small kingdoms, but what do we know beyond Ellix? What if the way of things was for Illyria to unite us all again, tie us to the ancient knowledge?”
“Sister, I love you,” Mykon said. “But you sit here, glibly suggesting that we let the Illyrians conquer us, and—”
“No, Myka,” Jocasta held up a hand. “I was just musing, nothing more. The last time the Illyrians did not come through Ellix because the Achaea and Pellynesse fwere strong. If they had come through a while ago, doubtless they would have burned down Thebes, Athene and every other city that came between them and ruling.”
“Yes,” Mempliis said, dropping her sewing so that they all noticed her.
“The sharing of knowledge, art, languages, cultures, was a fruit of the empire, but they were not the cause for empire. Greed is the cause for empire, and the Illyrians, though they began the empire, did not keep it going, and they did not benefit much from it. The culture that reached Makadakan, I am afraid never reached there, and Illyria was divided until less than fifty years ago. I am afraid the new king is not thinking about culture as much as he is thinking of conquering.”
“And lady,” Mykon turned to her, “do you think he can conquer us?”
“I am a lady of the court of Aegina,” Memphis told him. “That is not for me to say. But when you meet King Archelaos, doubtless he will tell you much more.”


TOMORROW, NIGHTS IN WITH SATIN
 
The fight against Makadakan is definitely heating up! And time moves forward rapidly for the characters, becoming parents and growing up. That was some great writing and I look forward to Nights In White Satin tomorrow!
 
Yes, Mykon is fully a man and Jocasta is getting ready to have babies. Sure, people get married early in this society, but time certainly is marching on. Tomorrow we will return to Michigan where time marches a little more slowly.
 

AS MANAEN AND MAROPHON AWAIT THE BIRTH OF JOCASTAT'S CHILD, THEY CONTRONT THE DIFFICULTY OF THEIR RELATIONSHIP


When Manaen came into Eco’s chambers, he first kissed Autolykus on the cheek and then bowed to the young man, and to the woman and rough man beside them.
“When I heard that you were coming to me, I thought it was far more meet that I come to you. Having a measure of wisdom, I also thought I would come alone. And you must understand, my son is my other self and hears me in all things, but this conversation,” Manaen said, taking his seat, “because I thought you all would have it that way.”
“All the world has heard of your fame and your discretion,” Eco said.
“Surely not all the world, though you must have met my mother when she came to Akxa.”
“A formidable woman.”
“That is the understatement of the age.”
Autolykus chuckled low in his throat and Manaen said, “Does he still talk of sleeping with her?”
At this the man called Thanatos blushed through his beard and Manaen said, “Well, that’s a yes, and I cannot see Phocis turning you down. She is here You should make your pleasure known. But of more important matters, why have you come?” and he was focused on Thanatos.
Thanatos looked confused, and then he said, “Do you know who I am?”
“I have some suspicion, and I don’t believe anyone else does. The Emperor has kept this thing a secret, but various men, men not to be trusted, hunt you down. It would have been better for you to stay in Axum with your sister, but you are certainly welcome to stay with me. My household is probably the second safest place you can be—”
Then Manaen looked to Eco, “With the Prince Eco who, it is well known, has power of his own.”
“It is rumored,” Xian said, “that you too have a certain power.”
“As long as it is merely rumored,” Manaen said, “that is fine. We will hide you,” he said to Thanatos. “We will keep you from the eyes of any men until such times as you are completely safe.”
“I would like to write my Grandfather, to make peace with him.”
Manaen sighed. “He cannot be long for this world, but when he is gone I suppose we must all deal with Tiburon. Yes, write him, but we will have to make sure he does not know where you write him from.”
“Do the Emperors have mages?” Xian said.
“No,” Manaen answered while Eco shook his head. “They are opposed to magic, and only know the rudest and most superstitious levels of it.”
“I wish to make peace,” Postumus said. “I do not wish to rule.”
“My Prince,” Manaen said, “what you wish to do is your affair. We will keep you safe. However, what the Gods wish… who can say?”



Long, ago, before the mountain exploded, before the season of earthquakes which men still remember, the men who sprang up from the ground, the Pelasgo, still lived all over the two lands, Achaea in the south and Pellynesse in the north. On the land they ruled humbly, except for the mighty city of Tiryns, and they raised up the beginnings of Thebes and and Pallas, but where they became mighty was Axum. Axum was the long and mighty isle, some even said, where the Pelasgo had begun, and on Axum they had trade with the men of Babalon and Tyre to the east and to the south the wise people of Kemet. Axum grew wise in their shadow, and it was Axum that held a gentle influence over the the Two Lands. Even when the Danaans had come and set up their rule in Mykenae and Therapne in the south, the culture of mighty Axum held sway over all of Helles and to the northeast, like a tongue, stretched out Phrygia, the land sacred to Cybele the Great Mother and Iacchus the Lord of the Vine, and in those days it was ruled by the mighty empire of Hatti..
Some said it was the judgment of the Gods, and some that it was simply the way of the earth, when the Mountain exploded. Some said it sank the great isle of Atle and some that it merely buried some islands under water for some time, but when it was done, so was the great culture spread all across the lands. It was said that in those days came the Sea Peoples and who they were, none could remember. Had they been the Pelasgo, or had they chased the Pelasgo away? One could not be sure. Had they been the ancient Danaans who had destroyed Ilium and Hatti, or were they the ones who had destroyed the Danaan and the Hatti alike? None could say. But in those days, the might and wisdom of Axum shrunk in on itself, and the magic and mystery of that once great land went to wrapping itself in spells and mists so that none could attack it. The mighty old kingdoms of Tiryns and Mykenae fell into ruins. Of the old cities, only Pallas and Thebes and Akxa remained.
And then came the Dorians, who called themselves Heraklids. Pale and tall, brown haired, sometimes golden, the descendants of Heracles, they had swept into the land overwhelming the Ellixians who had lived their for hundreds of years. They had taken everything save Attika, Arcady and Akxa. They had conquered Thebes and married with the ruling house, claiming their descent from Herakles and establishing themselves as the Phocians. They had swept through Attenae an Evio, Decan too. Only the Amazons, who were just coming from Thermedon to join their might to Akxa and Maesa, had been able to stop them, and for this the Dorians spoke ill of the Amazons till this day. The Dorians had taken the coast lands of Phrygia, and many of the isles, but at Axum they had stopped, or been stopped.. Every Agae and Sparti family in Thebes, which traced itself to the beginning, was of these folk, intermarried, and down south, in Cona, the Heraklid had taken Therapne as well.
And so, in time, the Pelasgo, the Danaan and the Heraklid, had made their uneasy peace as the people of Ellix. The Heraklid brought their newer stories and their new gods and the Pelasgo quietly turned a deaf ear to them. Medusa became Pallas, the Great Mother was now Ceres and Proserpina, the Goddess of Heaven and Earth now merely Teleia Here, the Goddess of Heaven, and of course, there were, among the two cultures, other heritages, other relations. The Thebans remembered that once upon a time Cadmos had come from Babalon, and his sister had gone to Axum, and the Akxa remembered their relationship to Axum and Cadmos as well. There was, like it or not, a sort of unity but this was ended by the Illyrians when they attempted to come from the north and reign over all.
Who were these Illyrians with their great kingdom? Not Ellixians, being neither Heraklids—who claimed to have once been Pelasgos, nor the original Pelasgo or the Axumi their southern kin. Certainly they were not the esteemed men of Kemet or the African kingdoms. They had aped Ellixian ways and, once upon a time, attempted to swallow Ellix. And then there were the Cyrans. If they had not claimed descent from Illium, and attempted to swallow up the Ellixians, a sort of peace might be made with them, but they had swallowed up the south and made the people of Cona and Onesse their servants. There could never be a lasting peace.
“Is that the way you see it?” Jocasta said as she sat in bed, patting her stomach.
Marophon, as white as she was dark, pulled his hands through his hair.
“Is there any other way to see it?”
“The incense is about to go out before Auset,” Jocasta said, “would you put another stick before her and whisper the childbirth prayer?”
Marophon rose with a groan, and smoothed his robe over his knees, looking back at his wife.
“Why not?” he said. “I trust this Goddess more than I trust any of mine.”



Manaen was coming down the hall when Maro stood directly in front of him.
“Maro! What is it?”
“Are you and I through?”
“Maro, we are family,” Manaen said, “We will never be through. But I am on my way to the library.”
Manaen tried to move forward, but Marophon pressed himself on Manaen again.
“Don’t be glib with me,” Maro said. “Don’t tell me we are no longer what we were.”
“Maro,” Manaen whispered, “Jocasta is about to give birth She’s so wide she’s practically exploding. With your child. Because you are my son-in-law.”
“I am your lover!” Maro growled. “The very first. And you have not been with me since that night before the God came. Since the night when we were all together. And you have not been alone with me since Jocasta’s wedding.”
“I wanted to give you a chance to be her husband. To take my own daughter’s husband into my bed—”
“She knew it would happen!” Maro said. “She came to me for that very reason. If you are being decent then fine, but I could not bear to think you really do not love me anymore, that you have gone off me. That I’m merely a son-in-law, and a one time love, something you don’t even think about. Gods forgive me, I cannot bear to think you love Mykon so much, or Pyrs, that you have displaced me.”
“I will never displace you!” Manaen said. “I have told you the way of it.”
“You did not disdain to lie with me when you gave me to Myka. How can you refuse me now because I am wed to Jocasta? And do you think I don’t know she lay with Theon on that night, the last time I was with you? Oh, the child is mine. She would never do that to me. She was already pregnant. But…” Maro took Manaen by the shoulders. He pressed himself against him.
“Fuck the library,” he growled in his ear. He lifted Manaen’s face to his and kissed him.
Manaen pulled his face down to him. They embraced tightly.
“Gods, gods, I would have thrown myself in the sea if I thought you’d gone off me.”
“I thought, perhaps,” the shorter man said, stroking Marophon’s hair as he bent into his shoulder, “You would have gone off me. Being what we are to each other.”
Marophon pulled back, smiling out of the side of his mouth.
“You sleep with your own son, but my being your son by marriage…”
“I know, I know.”
“Take me,” Marophon said. “Right now. We have the whole evening. Do you want to be with me as much as I want to be with you?”
Manaen held Marophon by the hips. Today he was in the short chiton he’d replaced with robe and mantle as he settled into the life of a married man. He looked like the soldier who had come back to him, and Manaen longed to go on his knees, to pull Marophon into his mouth. Marophon groaned and placed his fingers on Manaen’s head murmuring even as Manaen was so tender to him, kissing, sucking, licking, pulling nuzzling, “Not here, Gods… not here… Not in this hall. Not where anyone…”
And Manaen hadn’t intended to, but this was where it happened, and it wasn’t long before Marophon convulsed and, whimpering, filled Manaen’s mouth with heat and salt slickness as Manaen took it all, Marophons hands gripping Manaen’s head.
Now Manaen rose up to kiss Marophon, who was drowsy against the wall.
“Come to bed,” he said. “We will go to your room. We will come to know each other again. It’s my fault, it is, all these times we are apart and we have to come back and know each other all over again.”


MORE TOMORROW
 
Mandan and Maraphon certainly did have a frank discussion while waiting for the birth. They sorted things out. I also appreciated the history learned in this portion. With people hiding the stakes if this war are still growing. Excellent writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
Manaen's love life is certainly as complicated as the history of the land they live in, and almost as fraught with danger. Marophon and Manaen have been through a lot, and while it's a little sorted out, it can hardly be completely sorted out.
 
TONIGHT, A NEW GENERATION OF ANAXIONADE COMES INTO THE WORLD.



“I feel about you such a variety of ways,” Manaen said, the back of his hand on Marophons cheek as the other man, gazed at him. They lay naked, face to face in the darkness of his room.
“The first time I saw you I was so fascinated by you. I worshiped you, the tallest boy in our year.”
“Because I was the tallest?”
“And the most handsome and heroic and… I would not have known how to say all that. Everyone looked up to you and you were fair and full of courage and… you chose me.”
“You were the smartest and the funniest,” Maro said. “You were different from everyone else.”
“Well, I was different,” Manaen allowed, “but I did not see it that way. You were my best friend, the friend who was nothing like me, who loved me. And then you were the boy who kissed me and initiated me into love and held me all night when I was unsure, and you were and are my first lover, and my first partner. So many things, Maro,” Manaen’s voice was breathless as it ran along Maro’s shoulder, as he kissed his shoulder.
Their thighs linked together.
“I are closer to me than was my brother Ajax,” Manaen said. “You are my very twin.”
“When we were making love,” Maro murmured into his shoulder, “when I was riding you, when you were inside me, I felt like I was becoming you, like I was you. Like I could feel your pleasure. I always feel like we are climbing inside of each other. That’s why I panicked when I thought you no longer loved me. I cannot be without you. We are like Castor and Pollux.”
“Did Castor and Pollux fuck each other?” Manaen tweaked Marophon.
Marophon gave one of his elegant shrugs. “If they didn’t they should have.”


There was a light knock at the door seal and then, as Marophon stirred, the curtain was pushed back. He stretched, separating from Manaen, who was blinking and the maid said, “My Lords, the Lady Jocasta has gone into labor.”
“Oh, my!” Marophon jumped out of bed naked, and the maid turned her back.
“Oh my! I have to.., I have to....”
“You have to find your clothes,” Manaen said, leaning over the bed and pulling on his robe. “Janice,” he said to the maids.
“Yes, Lord?”
“Would you find Lord Maro’s robe?”
“Yes. There is the white one with the red stripe.”
“It doesn’t matter what robe!” Marophon cried desperate, though now he was pulling on his chiton, and Manaen had circled the the bed and was sashing it.
“You needn’t yell at her,” Manaen said, “and you needn’t hurry. Babies don’t just slip out.”
“And they usually don’t require men,” Janice said, holding out the robe to Marophon who took it. Janice bowed and left.
“You should apologize to her later,” Manaen stood on his toes, smoothing Marophon’s hair, and they prepared to leave the room. “She’s no slave, and even if she was…. You should apologize.”
“Do you really keep no slaves?” Marophon said.
“At the end of the day servants are cheaper, and you can trust them more,” Manaen said. “I don’t trust slaves because I don’t trust slavery.”
Before they headed into the hall, suddenly and desperately, Marophon kissed Manaen.
“My first child,” Marophon said, almost through clenched teeth. “And Jocasta.”
“Stop thinking of it,” Manaen said, briskly, grabbing Marophon’s wrist. “Come.”
When they came to the anteroom, Antha’s son Macro was standing there, hands behind his back. Manaen wondered why Clio couldn’t have come instead, but now Jocasta cried out and Marophon flinched.
“Peace,” Manaen said. “Peace. It is the way of women. It is the way of life.”
The servants had set coffee to brewing, and Pyramus commented, “How did we ever live without this stuff? Do they have it all over Makadakan?”
“They have it all over Phrygia,” Mykon said. “And Makadakan’s trade routes are connected.”
“Thank you,” Manaen said as Gorgos poured him another cup of steaming coffee and spooned sugar into it. “Gorgos, that is sufficient.”
“How can you be so…?” Marophon sat by him, his long legs pulled to his chest.
“Courteous?” Manaen said.
“Calm.”
“It is our manners which preserve us through all things,” Manaen said. “This is what my mother always taught me. My father as well.”
“And Manaen sees no difference between slaves and servants and free men,” Macro murmured.
“Hold your tongue, nephew,” Manaen said. “The Gods made men. Men made slaves.”
In the corner of the room Gorgos sniggered and Macro said, “I heard that.”
“Ignore him,” Manaen said to Gorgos. Then he gripped Maro’s hand, clapping it.
“There is no need to fear. The women of the Anaxionade are strong.”
From beyond the curtain, Jocasta screamed again and Marophon jumped up.
Mykon slammed his face into his hands and Manaen put his free hand in his son’s hair.
None of them said it, and Manaen could not dare to think it. Maro’s only wife had died in childbirth along with the two children and Mykon’s mother had died with the baby inside her. They never spoke of these things, but when Jocasta cried out again, Mykon shook his head and said, “My sister, my sister.”
“Shush,” Manaen smoothed his hair.



“Child,” Phocis said as she stood on one side of Jocasta and Antha on the other, “you are doing so well.”
The women walking Jocasta round and around the room while she breathed in and out.
“I want to die!” Jocasta hissed
“Be silent or Hades will hear you,” Antha said sharply.
“You do not want to die,” Memphis said from the corner of the room, ringing out water and coming to her, wiping her brow. “You want to live. You want to live and hold this child in your arms, and then you want to have several other children besides.”
Jocasta’s eyes lit.
“Fuck that foolishness. I’ll—” her face changed with the surprise of pain. It was always a new pain. Her eyes widened, and she staggered, squatting to moan, “never do this again...”
Her words disappeared in a scream, and just then, from between her legs spilled a fluid like olive water, and Memphis stopped washing the naked woman and said, “Sit her on the stool. It comes, it comes.”
The priestess before the image Auset, the image that no longer had incense because it had made Jocasta throw up, now beat her drum quicker. She had asked what the priestess was singing, and Memphis had said, “It is the Telling, the story of the creation of the world. While you are bearing your child before Auset, we tell of the world itself being born, and so Auset’s power comes into you.”
“Please! Please! Let it be over?” Jocasta panted, closing her eyes. How was it possible women did this every day? That women died in it every day was understandable. Her mother had died in this. That was a fact. But now the likelihood that she would too made so much sense. How could a woman live through this? How could both a woman and her child survive? Now she did not blame the older women, the uncared for servants who went to the old witch to have the child removed before it could be born. Now she understood everything.
“Stop talking to yourself!” A new voice said.
Jocasta blinked. Green hair. Tied behind her head. Snapping eyes.
“Lady… Xian?”
Xian commanded, “Pay attention to Memphis and breathe. Breathe. Breathe and push. Push that fucking baby out of you! Scream while you fucking do it. Give her myrrh for the pain. Give her nard to drink.”
While the priestess chanted louder, Jocasta cut them all off, screaming.


Macro looked on at the other men in distaste. These were supposed to be soldiers, and yet only Uncle Manaen seemed in any control. Pyramus was banging his fist against a wall and General Maro’s face was white, and he was panting as if he were in labor, shaking his head and wailing, “My wife! My wife!”
Suddenly, Manaen struck him across the face.
Marophon sighed, shook his head, and cried, “Thank you! Do it again.”
Manaen slapped the shit out of him again.
“Thank you,” Maro said. “I feel much better.”
Now Jocasta’s scream cut even into their ears in this room. It cut through the walls of the palace, and Maro and Mykon stared out at nothing, horrified. But Pyramus stopped banging the wall and looked to Manaen with a smile.
“I know that scream. I’ve heard it several times. It’s the triumph of battle. Charis has always given it toward the end.”
And then just like that, there was the piercing, healthy cry of a child, and Marophon pulled Manaen and Mykon to him, looking up toward the curtain and trembling. The child wailed on, and they looked toward the curtain until Phocis came out, looking much worse for wear, all of her fifty five years on her face.
“Mother,” Manaen began.
“Do not come in yet,” she said. “It is not over. Something unsuspected has happened.”


In the midst of the pain, Jocasta saw two women, or rather one woman as in double vision, standing side by side. The Mother of Grains, her grain colored hair tied in a matronly bun behind her head, cradling fruits in her large bosom and beside her Proserpina, Queen of the Dead, lither, slender in her red, black hair hanging down her shoulders. She cradled skulls and some of the skulls were little. As she blinked the Mother and the Daughter became one.
“Death and life are one,” She said. “I am the Mother of All. Will you raise your children in this world or in the next?”
But it seemed, as she blinked, the Mother of the Earth who was also the Mother of Death faded, and now in rich purples, bearing the sun and moon in her hands was Auset. The Kemeti woman, her eyes kohled, her sundisk crown on her head simply moaned, “Breathe.”
And so she did.
And so she screamed.


“Come in,” Antha said, “after a time. “But not all of you. Let’s not all crowd her.”


“Twins!” Marophon wept, balancing both babies. “Twins.”
“A boy for you and a girl for Jocasta,” Macro said.
Antha commented, “I think both of the children will be for both of them.”
“Aren’t they the most beautiful things?” Marophon said to Manaen, and Jocasta watched her husband show the squirming babies to her father. “This little one here, he looks just like me. And she looks just like Jo.”
“They both look like drowned rats,” Manaen said.
“Really!” Marophon sounded shocked.
Manaen bent down to kiss his daughter’s head and knelt at her ear.
“We all do when we first come out.”
“Oh good,” Jocasta sighed, “I thought I was just being a bad mother… when I thought they looked like rats myself.”
Manaen noticed Xian in the corner of the room and said, “I didn’t know you were a midwife as well.”
“I’m a woman of many talents,” the warrior princess nodded, smiling as she poured hot water into a basin.
“And look at this little man,” Pyramus took the boy from Marophon. “Look at this little soldier. He’s the very image of his father.”
“Hey, guy! Hey, guy!” Mykon waved his finger in the baby’s face while Manaen took his granddaughter.
“What do we name them?”
Pyramus lifted the boy and growled, “Megacles! The name of Maro’s father. A mighty name for such a mighty nephew.”
The baby, tight eyes closed, gurgled in confusion.
“Or Anaxamander, a great name for a future general,” Mykon said.
“I was thinking,” Marophon said as he looked at his son in Pyramus’s arms, “about the name Archistracus.”
“Be silent,” Jocasta sighed, sitting up. “I ache in ways you cannot imagine, and I will not have three stupid men giving my baby ridiculous names far too big for him.”
“Be he will grow into them—” Marophon began.
“Give me my son,” Jocasta said. “Father, let them see my daughter.”
As Pyramus handed Jocasta the boy, she said, “Tradition is to name the boy after his paternal grandfather.”
Marophon opened his mouth in assent.
“I do not like that tradition. And Megacles already has a son with his name. My son’s name is Titus,” Jocasta looked at Manaen. “You have never been a vain man, and there will be Manaens for you, yet. I will name him after your father and all will see we are not disgraced by our past. His second name will be Aiax, after your brother.”
Manaen looked quietly pleased, but Pyramus said, “Jocasta, it is tradition for the man to name the child. Especially his first son.”
Marophon, again, looked about to say something. But Jocasta said, “When it becomes tradition for the man to carry two children for the better part of the year and go through more than half a day of life endangering pain to bring them into the world, then we can follow the other traditions. For now you must leave. You weary me. I will be alone with my husband and my children. And…” she added as the girl came to join her brother, “she will be named Phoebe for mine and Mykon’s mother. Both of my children will have second names.”
They waited.
“Because my husband is patient,” Jocasta said, “his son will be called Marophon after him.”
“And the girl?” Mykon asked.
“Marophon as well, for she will be strong and gracious hearted like her father.”
“Phonia? Maro? Mari?” Antha said.
“Yes, all of them,” Jocasta said, touching Marophon’s cheek. “Yes.”



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