The Hittite - Ben Bova [107]
“Your wife?”
“One of the victims of Agamemnon’s thanksgiving to the gods for his victory.”
Helen lowered her eyes. But not before I saw that there was not one tear in them.
“Your husband stood by and watched it all,” I said to her, my rage growing hotter. “His men held me at spear point while his brother did his noble deed.”
She nodded and turned away from Poletes.
“What do you want of me?” I asked her.
In a flat, almost hopeless voice, Helen replied, “You see how cruel they are. What monsters they can be.”
I said nothing, but in my mind I pictured again Aniti’s final moments: the terror she must have felt. The pain.
“He’s going to kill me, too, Lukka. He’s going to take me back to Sparta and kill me, but not until he’s had his fill of me. Then he’ll have his priests put me on the altar like a sacrificial sheep and slash my throat. Just as they did to your wife.”
Her voice was rising, her eyes were wide, but it seemed to me that she was not panicking. Fearful, certainly. But she was not frenzied; instead she was grimly seeking a way out of the fate that loomed before her.
I asked coldly, “What do you expect me to do about it?”
“You will take me away from this camp. Now, to night, while they are all sleeping. You will take me to Egypt.”
I almost laughed. “Is it the Queen of Sparta who commands me, or the princess of Troy?”
Something flickered in her eyes, but Helen maintained her composure. “It is a woman who has nothing to look forward to but pain, humiliation, and death.”
Like my wife, I thought. Like Aniti.
“Do you want me to beg you?” Helen said, a tiny hint of a quaver in her voice. “Do you want me to drop to my knees and clasp your legs and beg you to save my life?”
She was begging, I realized. In her own way, the most beautiful woman in the world was pleading with me to take her away from her rightful husband, a man who had just fought a war and conquered a powerful city to get her back. She was too proud to admit it, but she was beseeching me to help her escape her fate.
“I have five men with me, not an army. Menalaos will track us down and kill us all.”
“He won’t know I went with you,” she said, her words coming faster now that she felt some hope. “He’ll search the camp, the boats. We’ll be far from here by the time he realizes what’s happened.”
“Egypt is a thousand leagues from here.”
“But there are cities along the way. Miletus. Ephesus. Civilized kingdoms. Apet told me of Lydia, and of Phrygia, where King Midas turns anything he touches into gold!”
“Egypt,” I muttered.
“It’s the only truly civilized land in the whole world, Lukka. I will be received as the queen I am. They will treat me royally. Your men can find a place in the pharaoh’s army.”
I should have refused her. I should have flatly told her it was madness and sent her back to Menalaos. But in my mind a mad tapestry of vengeance was weaving itself. I pictured the fat, stupid, cruel face of Agamemnon when he discovered that his sister-in-law, the woman for whom he had supposedly fought this long and bloody war, had spurned his brother and run off with a stranger. Not a prince of Troy, but a lowly Hittite soldier. Not carried off unwillingly, but run away at her own insistence.
I saw Menalaos, too, he who had his men hold me at bay while his brother mutilated Poletes. He who beat this woman who stood pleadingly before me.
Let them eat the dirt of humiliation and helpless fury, I said to myself. Let the world laugh at them while Helen runs away from them once again. They deserve it. They deserve all that and more.
They would search for us, I knew. They would try to find us. And if they did they would kill me and my sons. And Helen, also, sooner or later.
My sons. It was my duty to protect them. I had come all this way to find them, to save them from slavery. What Helen asked would put them in danger, put all of us in danger.
And there was Helen herself. She was a queen, a woman of the nobility, while I was