Read Alexander (Vol. 3) (Alexander Trilogy) Online
Authors: Valerio Massimo Manfredi
Eumenes in the meantime had looked in on the great hall of the
apadana
and had realized that the banquet was beginning to degenerate. Tais was almost naked now and was dancing wildly, her movements accompanied by the sound of tiny metallic cymbals attached to her fingers. With each pirouette she made her short
chiton
revealed her statuesque legs in full, together with her marble-smooth buttocks and her sex, while the onlookers shouted all sorts of filth at her.
Suddenly the girl twisted violently and stopped, standing on the points of her toes, and then she crouched down slowly, with all the sensual movements of a cat, still accompanied by the music that somehow seemed to follow the development of her movements. When she got back to her feet she was holding a
thyrsus,
a staff just like the one held by the maenads, covered in ivy and bearing a pine cone at its tip; she held it aloft and shouted loudly, like a woman possessed, ‘
Komos
!’
She moved through the columns in the hall like a maenad through the trunks of a great forest and called everyone to take part in the orgiastic dance. Alexander was the first to reply, in his turn shouting, ‘
Komos
!’
Everyone joined in with him. With her other hand Tais grabbed a torch from a holder on the wall and started leading the frenetic dance through the audience chamber, the corridors, the bedchambers of the wonderful royal apartments, followed by the revellers – the men all with erections, the women half-undressed or even completely naked, doing their utmost to excite the men even more with their sensual movements.
‘Dionysius is with us!’ shouted Tais, her gaze burning bright in the light of the torch she held in her hand.
Everyone replied, ‘
Euoè
!’
‘Dionysius wants revenge on these barbarians!’
‘
Euoè
!’ all the men and women shouted again in their delirium of wine and desire.
‘We will avenge our soldiers, those who died in battle, and our destroyed temples, our burned cities!’ the girl shouted once more, and right before Alexander’s eyes she threw the torch against a purple drape that hung alongside a doorway.
‘Yes! Revenge!’ shouted Alexander and he threw another torch under a large piece of furniture in cedar wood. He was completely out of his mind. Eumenes watched on, witnessing events without being able to do anything about it, and with his eyes he searched for someone who might put an end to the madness, but there was no one in the midst of that cauldron of men and women in heat whose gaze showed any sign of reason.
The flames took hold and the room crackled as it was illuminated as bright as daylight with the vermilion light of the fire. As though possessed by demons, the revellers spread out through the chambers, shouting as they went, setting fire to everything.
The wonderful palace was soon enveloped in a whirlwind of flame. The hundreds of columns made from cedars of Lebanon burned like torches, the fire licked the ceilings and spread to the beams and the joists that groaned and split with the violence of the blaze.
The heat became unbearable and everyone ran outside towards the great entrance courtyard, continuing their dance down there, their songs and their mating. Eumenes came out of a side door, clearly in shock, and as he moved away down the external stairway he saw Tais lying completely naked on a carpet in the atrium, Alexander and Hephaestion both taking her as she writhed and turned in ecstasy.
The people who had remained among the ruins of Persepolis ran out of their slums to bear witness to the disaster – the palace of the Great King was exploding now, devoured by fire, collapsing in an inferno of sparks, in a vortex of black smoke that blotted out the stars and the moon. They looked on motionless, petrified, all of them in tears.
*
On the following morning, what had once been the finest palace in the entire world was simply a pile of smoking debris, in some places four or even five cubits deep, out of which protruded only columns with their capitals in the shape of winged bulls. The portals remained, together with the podium and the foundations and the stairways with the images of the great new year procession and the Immortals of the imperial guard for future millennia, mute witnesses to the disaster.
Towards morning Alexander reached his pavilion in the camp and dropped on to a bed there, falling into a deep, troubled sleep.
*
Parmenion came shortly after dawn and the
pezhetairoi
of the guard tried in vain to stop him by crossing their spears before the entrance. The old General roared like a lion: ‘Out of my way, by Zeus! Let me through, I must see the King!’
Leptine came towards him with her hands raised as though she too were trying to stop him, but he pushed her out of the way and silenced the growling Peritas with a fierce look and a simple, ‘Get to bed!’
Alexander jumped up, holding his bursting head and shouting, ‘Who dares . . .’
‘I do!’ shouted Parmenion, no less loudly.
Alexander calmed down, as though Philip himself had come into the tent. He moved over to the basin to put his head in the cold water. Then, completely naked, he moved towards his unexpected guest, ‘What’s wrong, General?’
‘Why did you do it? Why did you destroy that wonder? Is this what Aristotle taught you? This is moderation? This is respect for the beautiful and the noble? Before the world you have shown yourself to be an uncultivated and primitive savage, an arrogant and presumptuous man who believes he can behave like a god! I have dedicated my life to your family, I have sacrificed a son to this enterprise, I have led your army through all its battles. I have every right to expect a reply from you!’
‘If anyone else ever dared say and do these things, these things that you have said and done, General, they would be dead already, but I will answer you. I will tell you why I did this. I permitted the sack of Persepolis because in this way the Greeks know that I am the real avenger, I am the one they can identify with, the only one who has succeeded in bringing a centuries-old duel to an end. And I wanted it to be a young Athenian woman who torched the palace of Darius and Xerxes. Given that the city was already destroyed, what point would there have been in keeping the palace? I left it standing for just the time that was necessary to transfer the treasure and the archival documents to Ecbatana and Susa.’
‘But—’
‘We are about to set off, Parmenion, to follow Darius into the farthest provinces of his empire. That palace, if I had left it intact with its treasure, would have been too strong a temptation for anyone, even for one of my Macedonian governors – the atmosphere there, the luxury of those halls, those scenes sculpted everywhere with memories of Achaemenid greatness and then that throne . . . empty! The gold heaped up in unbelievable quantities under those vaults would have made any man the richest man on earth. No end of Persian nobles would have tried to take it at any cost. They would have been willing to spill any amount of blood to sit on that throne, to hold that sceptre in their hands, and all of this would have sparked off new wars – bloody, exhausting, endless. Is this what I should have allowed to happen?
‘I had no choice, General, I had no choice, don’t you understand? If you don’t want the stork to return then you have to destroy the nest.
‘It is true, I have destroyed one of the wonders of the world, but who is to prevent me, when the moment comes, from building an even grander and more wonderful building? In doing this I have destroyed the symbol of Persia and her kings, I have shown the Greeks and the barbarians of the whole world who exactly is the new master – I have shown that the past is dead, the past is ashes, and a new era is being born now. It was beautiful, General, too beautiful, and for this reason it was too dangerous to be left standing.’
Parmenion lowered his head – the orgy, the dancing, the shouting for the god Dionysius, the state of possession that Eumenes and Callisthenes had told him of just a short time before . . . it had all been planned, all been constructed. The production had certainly been a most realistic one, but it was still acting! Alexander was capable even of this, he was better and more consummate than Thessalus, his favourite actor. And the reasoning behind his defence of his actions was faultless, from the political, military and ideological point of view. That boy thought and acted now as though he were Lord of the entire world!
The King took a scroll from his library and handed it to Parmenion: ‘Read it, it arrived last night. Antipater tells me that the war against the Spartans has been won. King Agis fell in battle at Megalopolis and now there is no one in Greece who opposes my position as supreme leader of the pan-Hellenic league. As for me, I have done what had to be done – I have kept my promise of defeating the centuries-old enemy of the Greeks, and the destruction of the palace also represents this fact. Now all I have on my mind is to follow my destiny.’
Parmenion read through Antipater’s letter with some difficulty because his sight was not what it used to be, but he understood what his King was telling him.
Alexander put a hand on his shoulder and looked at him with a mixture of gruff affection and military severity: ‘Prepare yourself, General,’ he ordered. ‘Assemble the army, restore the strictest discipline. We are about to set off again.’
T
HE ARMY STARTED
moving towards the end of spring and headed north, climbing up to the centre of the highlands with the desert on their right and the snow-covered Elam Mountains on their left. They travelled in four stages for a total of twenty parasangs and as evening fell they reached Pasargadae, the ancestral capital of Cyrus the Great, the founder of the Achaemenid dynasty. It was a small city, inhabited predominantly by shepherds and peasants but at its centre stood the first
pairidaeza
that had ever been built – the breathtaking grounds surrounding Cyrus’s old palace. A complex system of irrigation took water from a spring at the base of the hills and kept all the plants fresh and green – the grass, the roses, the cypresses and the tamarinds, the fragrant gorse, the yews and the junipers.
To one side, to the west, lay the tomb of the founder. It was extremely simple in form, like the quadrangular tent of skins with a double-sided sloping roof, typical of the nomads of the steppe, the four-centuries-old ancestors of the Persians. Initially these people had been vassals of the Medians and their King Astyages, then they themselves became conquerors of vast territories. This simple construction was placed on an impressive foundation of seven steps, like a Mesopotamian tower, and it was surrounded by a colonnade that enclosed a garden with yew trees that were well looked after and pruned.
The tomb itself was still cared for by a group of magi and by a priest who officiated every day at the ceremonies in honour of the great King. Alexander’s approach frightened them because they had heard of what he had done in Persepolis, but the King soon allayed their fears. ‘What has been done has been done,’ he said, ‘and it will not happen again. Show me this monument, I beg you. I simply wish to pay homage to the memory of Cyrus.’
The priest opened the door to the sacellum and let the young King through. He looked around in silence, a ray of sun coming in through the door to illuminate the rough-hewn sarcophagus on which there was but one inscription:
I AM CYRUS, KING OF THE PERSIANS DO NO HARM TO THIS MY TOMB
At the bottom, hanging on a hook, was the great conqueror’s armour – a breastplate of iron scales, a cone-shaped helmet, a round shield and a pure iron sword with an ivory hilt, the only precious material in the entire panoply.
There was a deep silence across the entire plateau, the only sound being the light whistle of the wind as it blew over the imposing solitary tomb. At that moment there came to Alexander a sharp feeling of a sense of the evanescent nature of human destiny, of the ephemeral procession of events. Empires grew and collapsed to make way for others that in their turn would become great and powerful and then dissolve into oblivion. Was immortality simply a dream? He felt his mother’s presence, so strong it was as though he could virtually touch her, all he had to do was stretch out his hand towards the dark wall of the sanctuary. And he thought he heard her voice saying, ‘You will not die,
Alexandre . .
.’
He turned, went out on to the terrace at the top of the steps, breathed the dry, fragrant air of the great plateau and felt himself being flooded by that most clear of lights. When he lowered his gaze to start moving down once more, he saw Aristander who appeared to be waiting for him.
What are you doing here, Aristander?’ he asked.
‘I have heard a voice.’
‘So have I, my mother’s voice.’
‘Be careful,
Alexandre,
remember what happened to Achilles,’ Aristander warned him, and he moved off, the wind making his cape flap and snap like a flag.
On the following day they crossed the territory of a tribe who were vassals to the Great King and they quashed them, but a little further on, while they climbed up even higher towards the Median highlands, a message arrived from Eumolpus of Soloi:
King Darius is in Ecbatana, from where he is trying to assemble an army of Scythians and Kadusians, paying them with the treasure from the royal palace. He has sent the harem to the east through the Caspian Gates. It is urgent that you reach the city as soon as possible, otherwise you will have to engage in a tough battle the outcome of which is most uncertain – the Scythians and the Kadusians are indefatigable horsemen and are truly formidable opponents. They never attackfrontally, but carry out incursions and make use of decoying techniques, disorientating the enemy and tiring them out with continual attacks and retreats. Remember that Cyrus and Darius the Great were also defeated by the Scythians.