CASSANDRA
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by
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KERRY GREENWOOD
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BLURB
Cassandra is the second in The Delphic Women trilogy.
Doomed, magnificent Troy is burning...
Cassandra, the golden-haired princess cursed with the gift of prophecy, and Diomenes, the Achaean with the healing hands, become puppets of the gods.
Their passions are thwarted, their loves betrayed, their gifts rendered useless for the sake of a wager between two immortals.
Will Cassandra and Diomenes find each other in the light of the burning city?
And, if they do, can their love survive the machinations of malicious gods and men?
Acknowledgements
With thanks to David Greagg, Jenny Pausacker,
Susan Tonkin, Stuart Reeh, Edward Jarrett, Sarah Jane Reeh,
Andrea Walker, Vanessa Craigie, Themetrula Gardner,
Irene Kazantzidis, and Danny Spooner.
The Cast
Trojans
- Aegyptus
- a shipmaster
- Aeneas
- son of Aphrodite
- Anchises
- father of Aeneas
- Andromache
- wife of Hector and mother of Astyanax
- Astyanax
- son of Andromache and Hector
- Briseis
- Trojan woman captured by Achilles and claimed by Agamemnon
- Bashti
- an Egyptian woman
- Cassandra
- daughter of Priam and Hecube and priestess of Apollo
- Cerasus
- son of Priam
- Clea
- a Trojan woman
- Cycne
- an Achaean ex-slave, now a Trojan girl
- Dardanus
- first king of Troy
- Deiphobos
- son of Priam
- Dion
- fisherman and priest of Poseidon
- Eirene
- `peace', a Trojan girl
- Eleni
- twin brother of Cassandra, priest of Apollo
- Erecthi
- son of Priam
- Ethipi
- a shipmaster
- Eumides
- a trader, Trojan slave in Mycenae
- Ganymede
- a Trojan prince kidnapped by Zeus
- Hector
- son of Priam, captain and `bulwark' of the city
- Hecube
- the Queen
- Idume
- priest of Adonis
- Iris
- a Trojan girl
- Lani
- a woman of Troy
- Maeron
- a Trojan boy
- Mysion
- priest of Apollo
- Nyssa
- the twins' nurse
- Oenon
- wife of Pariki, mother of Corythus
- Pandarus
- Trojan hero
- Pariki
- son of Priam
- Perseis
- mistress of maidens
- Polites
- son of Priam
- Polyxena
- daughter of Priam, sister of Cassandra
- Psyche
- an archer of Troy
- Priam
- the King, `the ransomed one'
- Sarpedon
- a hero of Troy
- Sirianthis
- a soldier of Troy
- Stathi
- a mou or cat, Egyptian beast, friend of Hector
- Theones
- a shipmaster
- Tithon
- the healer, priestess of the Mother
- Tros
- second king of Troy, the holy city of Ilium
Amazons
- Aigleia
- `eagle-eyed'
- Charis
Eris
- `strife'
- Hippia
- `horse-woman'
- Myrine / Penthesileia / Tydia
- leader of the Amazons, daughter of Ares
Achaeans (also called Argives)
- Achilles
- son of Thetis, leader of the Myrmidons
- Agamemnon
- son of Atreas of Mycenae
- Arias
- a hero
- Arion
- of Telamon, `dolphin-rider', a bard
- Atreidae
- collective title for the brothers Agamemnon and Menelaus
- Calchas
- high priest of Apollo
- Castor & Polydeuses
- twin brothers of Elene
- Clytemnestra
- daughter of Zeus and Leda, half-sister of Elene, married to Agamemnon
- Dikaos
- lord of Tiryns
- Diomedesa
- hero of Aetolia
- Elene
- daughter of Zeus and Leda, most beautiful woman in the world, married to Menelaus
- Elisa
- woman of Mycenae
- Hermaphroditus
- a nymph who had her wish granted
- Iphigenia
- daughter of Agamemnon, sacrificed for a wind at Aulis
- Menelaus
- brother of Agamemnon, prince of Sparta and husband of Elene
- Memon
- apprentice to the bard Arion
- Neoloptolemus
- son of Achilles by Deidama, born after Achilles left Sciros where he had hidden among the girls
- Nestor
- the old man, `honey voiced', went with the Argonauts and then to Troy
- Odysseus
- prince of Ithaca, called Kokkinos `red-head'
- Palamedes
- of Euboea, father of Chryseis and lover of Myrses, responsible for bringing Odysseus to the Trojans
- Patrocles
- lover of Achilles, killed by Hector
- Perseus
- founder of Mycenae, demigod
- Philoctetes
- an archer, marooned and retrieved on prophecy of Eleni of Troy
- Pithias
- a goatherd of Mycenae
- Telamon
- married the kidnapped Hesione, princess of Troy
- Thersites
- an Achaean soldier
- Tyndareus
- king of Sparta, foster father of Elene
- Talthybius
- herald of the Arrgives
Healers
- Achis
- a Kritian healer
- Asius
- a healer
- Chryseis
- daughter of Palameses, wife of Diomenes
- Diomenes
- priest of Asclepius, also called Chryse `the golden'
- Glaucus
- master of Epidavros, priest of Asclepius
- Itarnes
- a healer and Diomenes' best friend
- Lepith
- a Corinthian healer
- Macaon
- the surgeon, son of Glaucus
- Podilarius
- the physician, son of Glaucus
- Telops
- a healer
- Thoriaon
- a healer
- Tiraes
- an old man
Patients (or Suppliants)
- Cleone
- an Achaean woman
- Milanion
- a soldier
- Myrses
- lover of Palameses
- Pais
- a pregnant woman
- Pilas
- man of Kokkinades
Notes of the House of Atreus
First was Tantalus, son of Zeus, who liked offending gods. Stole nectar and ambrosia and sold it to men. Tattled about Olympus. He cooked and served up his son Pelops to Zeus, who took offence, and sent him to stand in crystal water he could never drink, and in biting range of apples he could never eat. Zeus resurrected Pelops, replacing his cooked shoulder with an ivory one.
Pelops, king of Phrygia, inherited mischievous tendencies. Courted Hippodemia, princess of Pisa. Her father challenged each suitor to a chariot race which he always won. She got tired of this and sawed the royal axle half through. Wheel fell off, Pelops won, and killed Oenomaus. Hippodemia married Pelops and bore Thyestes and Atreus.
Atreus married Aerope but she fell in love with Thyestes and bore him two children, who Atreus cooked and served up to his brother at a reconciliation supper.
At this point the Gods cursed the House of Atreus and one cannot blame them.
Atreus' sons were Menelaus of Mycenae who married Elene (Helen), and Agamemnon, who married Elene's mortal sister Clytemnestra.
Agamemnon sacrificed his own daughter, Iphigenia, at Aulis for wind to Troy. Subsequently, Clytemnestra took up with Aegisthis, Agamemnon's nephew, (incestuous child of Thyestes and his own daughter, born as a revenger for his father) and together they killed Agamemnon when he came home from Troy.
Gods
Achaean
- Aphrodite
- of Cyprus, `the Stranger', goddess of erotic love, also known as Ishtar
- Apollo
- the Archer, `Sun Bright', Sun God, patron of Asclepius the Healer
- Ares
- god of war
- Artemis
- the virgin hunter
- Asclepius
- son of Apollo, patron of medicine
- Athene
- Proncea the virgin, his sister
- Attis
- the castrated god
- Boreas
- god to the north wind
- The Fates
- Clotho - the Spinner, Lachesis - the Measurer, Athropos - who cuts the thread of life
- Demeter
- the mother goddess
- Eos
- goddess of dawn
- Erinyes
- `the kindly ones', `the revengers of blood', the Furies - Tisiphone, Alecko and Mageara
- Hephaestus
- smith of the gods
- Hera
- wife of Zeus
- Hermes
- the messenger and guide of the gods
- Hygeia
- daughter of Asclepius
- Hypnos
- god of trance
- Morpheus
- lord of sleep, brother of Thanatos
- Pan
- `ageless' lord of forests and goats
- Pluton
- `the rich one', a title of Hades, god of the underworld and ruler of the dead
- Poseidon
- `Earth Shaker', `Blue-Haired', god of the sea
- Selene
- goddess of the moon
- Thanatos
- `dark angel', lord of death
- Zeus
- the Father
Trojan
- The Lady Gaia
- Mistress of Animals, Snake Lady, one of the Three Women - Maiden, Mother and Crone, who rule ll female principles and breeding, mating, healing, growing and nurture. Her black aspect is Hecate, Destroying Mother, goddess of war
- The Lord Dionysius
- male principle who rules wine, writing and intelligence, also madness, sex and sacrifice
- Apollo
- Sun God, aspect of Dionysius
- Adonis
- the dead god, god of rebirth; known in Egypt as Osiris or Tammuz
Horses
- Banthos
- horse of Glaucus
- Pyla
- horse of Diomenes
PROLOGUE
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Aphrodite yawned and sighed. She stretched, the mossy garment slipping down over her perfect breasts and pearly arms, and shook back her silky hair, long and golden.