Last of the Amazons (16 page)

Read Last of the Amazons Online

Authors: Steven Pressfield

Here came Selene alongside me. “Keep from the foe!” she commanded, indicating the mass of the Scyths now plunging into the ford. “These are not for you.” I could see her scalping knife strapped to her thigh. Her pony lengthened stride; in an instant she had shot clear. A tide of hooves and hindquarters surged in her train. I strained to glimpse the Scyths. This was impossible for the clouds raised by the Amazon horses' passage, not to say the hoof-slewed clods and divots which beat about me in such density that I had to seat my face like a jockey into my animal's flying mane, and even then the broadside nearly bowled me from my seat. The corps of Amazonia thundered ahead. I have never heard a sound of such power or felt the earth shudder with such violence. And above all, that war cry which turns men's bowels to liquid.

You could see the river now, the actual crossing, which had been obscured from the plain by lines of alder and sycamore. It seemed leagues across. There was an islet at midchannel; in its shallows, horses in the hundreds milled, abandoned by their drovers. The Scyths had hauled their waggons over first, to preserve the women and children; the van of these could be seen laboring up the far bank. The main of the horsemen, above seven hundred, surged into the jam at midchannel, parting the milling herd with whips and rods and the flats of their great iron slashing swords. On the near shore, stranded parties of the foe rallied into a defensive front. They were overturning their waggons to form a palisade. They slew the oxen right in the traces, hacking their necks through, to add the beasts' bulk to the rampart.

Now the Amazons shot to the gallop. Across the front one saw rider after rider release her reins, clamping only the slack ends in her teeth while she filled her left fist with the great horn-and-ash bow, containing as well three secondary arrows, fletched ends skyward; from the belt-mounted quiver drew that foremost shaft, whose warhead she had honed to razor keenness and whose death-seeking flight she had dedicated to Ares, Hecate Dark Moon, and Artemis Void of Mercy. Far ahead I glimpsed Selene and the captain Alcippe. At Hippolyta's side they plunged among the foe. When I reached the site nothing remained but mounds of flesh and armor and Amazons straddling them, slicing scalps. The river frothed with Borges' corps in flight.

In the accounts which have been circulated of this battle, and the songs by which it has been made known, the substance is that the Scyths were overhauled and massacred at midriver. This is not how it happened. The slaughter took place beneath the cut banks of the far shore, where the foe in his hundreds sought to mount the bluffs into the teeth of the Amazon blocking force. The women had got ahead of them. The companies commanded by Antiope, Eleuthera, Skyleia, and Stratonike, those which had swum the Tanais via the upper ford, now made their appearance, thundering into position atop the river bluffs. I was at midchannel, my poor Knothole having played out utterly, where I drew up into the shallows of the islet. Here is what I saw:

Across two fifths of a mile of bluff, the warrioresses of Amazonia massed on horseback and afoot, blocking Borges' flight. The Scyths bunched up in the eddies below. From above, the Amazons loosed volleys of shafts and darts, point-blank and by hundreds. The enemy returned fire with bows and lances, maces and pikes and slung axes. They fought with whips and bare hands. At some sites the cut banks held the foe ten and fifteen feet below the Amazons. Here they were being slaughtered like fish. At others, where the bluff stood less sheer, companies of the Scyths sought to mount and duel face-to-face. The broadsides of the women beat them back. Steed after steed of the Scyths upended and foundered, pitching rearward upon their mates.

Now Hippolyta's two thousand closed on the foe from the rear. Breast-deep in the channel, this corps rained iron on Borges' eleven hundred trapped beneath the banks, while from above Antiope's battalions slung shafts and bolts without letup. Missile after missile beat upon the Scythian cohorts. Above the cries of men and horses, one could hear the thwocking concussion of shaft piercing flesh and the metallic ping as warheads caromed off armor and shield. One saw men shot five, ten, fifteen times; their chests, arms, and legs bristled with shafts, yet still they struggled.

Into this melee the daughters of tal Kyrte plunged, driven by
outere
and
lyssa.
Not content to offer slaughter at a remove, they dismounted and pressed upon the foe hand to hand, with axe and saber, spear and thrusting sword, fashioning a front that extended, helmet to helmet, shield to shield, across nearly half a mile. The whole thing looked like some colossal frieze of marble: the twined forms of horses, women, and men, pressed so proximately upon one another that the observer could not tell where one warrior's limbs left off and another's began; individuals conjoined into one seamless mass, depicting by their postures every aspect of strife imaginable. Nowhere on the field could cowardice be descried, but both sides, dying and dealing death, contended with fathomless valor. I saw Theseus, blood-slathered, and Antiope and Eleuthera, insatiate of slaughter, as the poets say. Both women scoured the field for Borges, seeking the trophy of his head. It seemed none of the foe could escape the pound into which he had been driven. But the river had been in spate only days before, it turned out, such that a fresh channel had been gouged downcourse, where the banks were not so steep, and in the initial scrimmage a number of the enemy had gotten clear, with their women and children, into the ravine country on the far bank known as the Parched Hills. Borges apparently was among them.

I got across. Theseus was calling for cessation. I looked to the warrioresses of Amazonia. These resided in such a state as I had never seen beings of human kind. Led by Antiope and Eleuthera they wheeled, seeking Borges' fleeing waggons. The Amazons were after the skulls of their daughters, which the Scyths had taken as trophies to ring the barrow they would raise over the corpse of their prince Arsaces.

There is a trace between cliffs, there at the Parched Hills, along which, I was told later, the sheep and goat traders trek their flocks in season. On this track the Amazons overtook their quarry. The women's numbers were three thousand; the surviving Scyths a tenth of that. The warrioresses fell on the column as it bunched up entering a defile. They slaughtered the rear guard of male defenders, who stood with spectacular valor, then overran the body of the column as it massed in terror midway through the strait.

Borges had fled, marooning his dependents. The Amazons ran these down on horseback, slaying men, boys, and women indiscriminately, taking scalps or simply decapitating all who fell within their grasp. Theseus and the Athenians reined-in amid the carnage, requiring no injunction to contain their fury, so appalled were they by the extravagance of the slaughter, while the Amazons, at first in blood madness, then coolly, unhurriedly hunted down the last living thing. They butchered every beast of the foe, even his draft mules and pack animals, hacking their necks through with the
pelekus,
so that the blood pocked the earth in pools and the parched dirt drank it.

I saw Amazons, gore-mantled and so exhausted they could no longer ride or even lift the axe, yet staggering among the baggage train, dragging forth children and even infants, which they stuck like pigs, disemboweling even the girls and bathing in their blood. But what horrified one most was the mien of these maids as they enacted their evisceration. They were cheerful. No other term may tell it. One was stricken mute at their capacity for horror.

At the junction of two ravines was a sinkhole. Across this, some half dozen of Antiope's cohort had strung the hide cover of a Scythian waggon, four-cornered, so that the midpoint, pending of its own weight, formed a sort of tub or vat. Above this a rude gibbet had been erected. Upon it, women and children of the foe were being strung up and gutted. Their blood spilled in great sluicing gushes, like hogs meathooked in a farmyard, while the yet-living victims cried to their gods and bawled for mercy. When I came upon this, the pool stood calf-deep.

The Amazons had found the skulls of their children among the baggage train. Within the bath of blood they laved now the bones of their daughters. This was the justice they had come for. As I looked on from atop my mount, too horror-stricken to turn away, a youth of the Scyths burst from hiding and fled toward me, crying for clemency; before I could bend, he was snatched apart and scalped, so swiftly I thought his head had been pared off, by a silent black-maned warrioress who then hauled him to the bath of blood to be drained of his fluids.

Everything was red. Not a stone of the ravine, it seemed, had escaped its slathering. Even the canyon walls were painted with the prints of hands and the sole marks of those butchered while attempting to flee. At the center of this theater stood Antiope, an axe in one hand, the severed head of a Scyth in the other. Blood painted both her legs to the hip; fluids dripped from the blades of her pelekus; her hair and even her teeth showed black with clotted gore.

Straight to her face advanced the Athenian Lykos, and it must be said that it took no slender spirit for him to do so, such was the light of slaughter in the Amazon's eyes.

“What do you call this, thou savage!” The prince gestured to the broth irrigating the walls and floors of the canyon. “Are these ‘God's footsteps'? Is this the ‘path of holiness' in which your race treads?”

Theseus hastened forward, reining-in at his countryman's shoulder.

“This is not war,” Lykos bellowed to Antiope. “It is butchery!”

Theseus sought to speak, as if to offer extenuation for the actions of the Amazons. Lykos cut him off with a curse. “You cannot defend the indefensible!”

The prince spurred off, leaving Antiope and Theseus alone at the epicenter of the massacre. The Amazon met Theseus' eye. Such horror stood graven upon his features at this spectacle of barbarity that she, perceiving, came to herself, surfacing, it seemed, from that primordial state into which her warrior's heart had descended. In Theseus' aspect she read this indictment: “Savages.”

Behind Antiope, a paean broke from the corps of Amazonia.

Now it is done, now it is done

Look, all, and behold it

Now it is done.

The Amazons bayed now, a cry which was not the hymning of humankind but the howling of beasts. Antiope peered at her sisters and beheld herself in their reflection. Her stricken glance returned to Theseus. The Amazon sought, it was clear, to summon some defense or grounds of extenuation; to make appeal to him, by sign or idiom, that his verdict was excessive. No speech came. Only, from behind and in compass of her, that ungodly wail.

Night had descended and with him his daughters, Hecate of the Dark Moon; Nemesis, “Righteous Retribution”; and Aidos, “Shame,” to whom the Amazons shrilled as wolves. Theseus read in Antiope's aspect the grief of this awareness. He sought, one could see, not to impose judgment but to exonerate her heart, absolve it somehow, out of his love, not so much for her as a woman, though this was abundant, but as a fellow regent, lord of a people, who so vividly desired that events had transpired otherwise, yet who knew, as Antiope did, that as commander she alone bore responsibility.

At this moment, as Amazon and Athenian stood across from one another, monarch to monarch, a cry broke from beneath a waggon, where, somehow undetected, a girl-child of the Scyths had survived. From this covert the maid dashed like a hare, seeking a slope too steep for mount and rider to scale in pursuit. The lass did not know the Amazon horse. Three warriors flew in her train, running her down in moments. The first snatched the child at a dead run and, upending her bodily with a cry of joy that ascended alongside the wailing of the dirge, cleaved the babe's skull with her axe.

BOOK SIX

THE RAPE OF
ANTIOPE

18

THE OVERTHROW
OF ANTIOPE

Selene's testament:

I
t is common belief that Eleuthera came to be called Molpadia, “Death Song,” subsequent to the siege at Athens. This is not true. It was the Scyths who gave her this name following the massacre at the Parched Hills. It came about like this:

In the immediate aftermath the victors galloped back to the Tanais, where the corpses of the main force of the foe, those who had been slain in the river fight, lay tangled by hundreds in the shallows.

We wanted their scalps.

I myself may testify to the elation of the hour. Here awaited our prizes, which we had won by the valor of our arms and which we coveted for our glory, each and all, that none be accounted less than her deserts, and, for myself, to display before Damon and claim him as my lover. Only the unconventional nature of the fight, that is, the urgency of breaking off to overhaul those of the foe in flight with the bones of our daughters, had conspired to swindle us of the moment for proper prize-taking. It was time to make this up. In a body the corps swept back to the river.

Among the tribes of the plains dread of water eclipses all other terrors, and in this aversion no nation exceeds the Scyths: they abhor lakes and the sea, and will not even bathe, fearing that the liquid conducts apart their
aedor,
their soul. To perish in a river as these foe had, and then lose their scalps, as we intended, was desecration upon desecration. Tal Kyrte burned to inflict this.

But at the bluffs Antiope hauled the corps up. She held the battalions at the brink, and there ranged horseback before the line, exhorting her countrywomen to turn apart and leave the bodies undespoiled. “Enough!” she cried. “We have exacted vengeance sufficient!”

Outrage greeted this. Indignation howled along the line. Why should we not claim these prizes, which Ares Manslayer has granted us? Heaven has exalted us with this victory! It is sacrilege to spurn God's grant! In fact our intent, merely to carve the hair from these bags of guts, exhibits excessive forbearance, for the Scyths, had they gained the day, would have visited unholy desecration upon our flesh, as they had on that of our maidens.

I was at the left of the line. I could no longer hear Antiope, who ranged now at the center. But her intent was clear from her posture, galloping across the front with her axe of war held horizontally above her head:
Hold back! Do not enter the river!

From the brigade broke Eleuthera. I was too far away to hear the rebuke she addressed, first to Antiope, then to the squadrons as a whole. I saw her surge forward, breasting Antiope's mount with her own, then bolt past with a cry, down the bank and into the river.

As one the corps followed. I too churned down, the hooves of my pony ploughing furrows in the slope, already ground to muck by the foe in his doom. We fell upon the prizes indiscriminately—for how could one tell which had been hers?—each seizing that number she knew she had won.

Tal Kyrte has a word,
anoxe,
which has no equivalent in Greek. It denotes that overthrow which occurs in a wolfpack when the leader fails to make his kill, or in a pride when a lioness hesitates on the hunt. The monarch's fall is instantaneous and irreversible.

This fate Antiope had now brought upon herself. She had offered outrage against God's primal decree: Clemency may never be proffered to the foe. To do so violates Ehal, holy Nature, in whose lexicon the word quarter finds no citation. Doubly infamous, such an act was
netome,
thing of evil, for clearly its expression was the fruit of our lady's corruption by the Greeks and her consorting with Theseus. In one instant she was finished, and the whole nation knew it.

That night when camp had been made and the brigade had assembled sated with glory, to Eleuthera was awarded the prize of valor. Not only for her deeds in the fight but for her overturning of Antiope's mad summons of leniency for the foe. Two dawns later, when the kinsmen of the Scythians arrived to reclaim the corpses of their fallen and beheld the spectacle that Eleuthera's hate had prepared for them, they out of their bereavement bestowed upon her that title by which she came ever after to be known: Molpadia, “Hymn of Slaughter.”

Among warrior nations, supreme honors may never be accorded by one's own people but only by enemies. To receive such a name, and from so warlike a race, catapulted Eleuthera to the firmament. Her perduring state as
anandros,
unpossessed by man, reinforced her stature as an icon of implacability for all foes of the people. Nor was it lost on me, even then, that the elevation of my friend would redound spectacularly to my own prestige. I was drunk with the glory of our triumph. By our might of arms, tal Kyrte had requited the iniquity of our foes and, by bathing the bones of our children in the blood of those who had offered them outrage, had reconstituted their persons for the life beyond.

Further, this slaughter, far from rendering the nation vulnerable to the reprisals of our enemies, though such may come, had—as Eleuthera stated, addressing the corps that first night—buttressed the people and vitiated our rivals of the will to attack. With one blow tal Kyrte had revived her flagging fame, establishing the rising generation as no less than those champions who had gone before, but mightier and more to be feared. This victory will give pause, Eleuthera declared, to all who would presume to test us. And it will work us no harm, even among the Iron Mountain Scyths, whom we have so ravaged, whose fear of us, enlarged by this victory, will render them more tractable to accommodation, should the Council elect to seek it. This is the only peace that lasts, Eleuthera proclaimed before the corps, one fashioned upon a foundation of fear.

As a vessel which overflows, I could not contain my joy, but felt as though all I had ever hoped and dreamed had at one stroke leapt to fruition. I burned to make for the Athenian camp to display my prizes before Damon and to claim his love.

But as I withdrew following the Hymn for the Fallen, a girl intercepted me, named Teardrop, who was cousin to Antiope and novice of her third trikona. In distress the lass imparted this message: I was to come away to Antiope at once, apart on the steppe, informing no one. Further, I was to bring a number of my horses, whom Antiope specified by name. I groaned at this, such is the heartlessness of youth. For I well understood that Antiope's star had fallen; I feared that association with her would work harm to my ambition.

Reluctantly I rode out to the site. Antiope waited alone beneath the moon, dismounted, apart from her horse Sneak Biscuits. I had never seen her in a posture of such impotence. This horse as a colt had been named Thunderclap and acclaimed superlative of all the northern steppe, but he had been an incorrigible thief and nuisance, so much so that the elders had summoned Antiope for discipline. Defending her colt, she had likened him to a camp goat who loves to haunt the cookfire, compelled by his rascal nature to sneak biscuits. The council rewarded this with laughter and decreed that the horse may stay but must give up his proud name and take this silly one. Silly or not, Sneak Biscuits had proved his mettle on a hundred fields.

Now he stood apart from his mistress and would not come at her call. Antiope signed me to approach. I trailed the four mounts she had requested. Her horse, she demonstrated, would not hold at the approach of her step. She signed to me to let her try mine, Daybreak, who was also her friend, and the others I had brought, with whom she was acquainted. None would let her on his back uncompelled, nor heed her commands absent application of the quirt.

Antiope had lost her
hippeia,
her mastery of horses.

Loss of
hippeia
is an omen of surpassing evil. It means heaven has withdrawn its favor, in condemnation of crimes against the people.

Antiope staggered beneath this. She instructed me to return to camp, to communicate to the corps the indictment Mother Horse had pronounced upon her. May Eleuthera, she said, as senior of her High Trikona, succeed her as war queen.

Antiope would enter exile this night, she declared, retiring to the mountains to fast and pray.

Would she return? I asked.

She made no answer.

I watched her ride off, compelling Sneak Biscuits by bit and whip. The sight of horse and rider, who had been for as long as I could remember so leagued as to appear a creature of one flesh, now proceeding estranged and disunited sent dread through my heart of evil to come.

In camp Eleuthera formalized her accession by binding about her the war girdle, which Antiope had given me for her. The Song of the Underworld was offered for Antiope, by which rite the corps absolved itself of culpability, should their deposed queen elect to take her own life.

To my shame I countered nothing. Not a breath did I offer in Antiope's defense, but hailed with all her ouster and excommunication. My blood still ran high with my return to Eleuthera's favor and the anticipation of taking Damon as my lover. I sought him out that night among the Greek camp and showed off my four trophies, pended from my battle staff, expecting him to respond with pleasure and pride. Instead he withdrew, repelled. I was baffled and moved to fury. I insulted him, viciously, then spurred away, hot tears coursing.

The roundup and drive home began. To my consternation, and to that of many others, Damon's reaction, or something like it, was repeated across the company of Athenians. They had gone cold and remote, the Greeks, and regarded with aversion those whom days before they had adored. I witnessed one clash between lovers. Glauke Grey Eyes slung an amulet of ivory in the face of her sweetheart. “You used to show a bull's dick for me, now you're limp as a stalk. What has become of you? You have put on women's skirts!”

I had not reckoned how many of tal Kyrte had taken Greek lovers. Now on the homeward trek these unions came to light, if only by their disintegration. The Athenians had become stricken with that malady all wide-voyaging sailors know: of being too far from home too long. They rued their excesses and yearned for familiar skies. Theseus must embark them soon or they would mutiny.

As for Antiope, it was as if she had never existed. No one asked after her; no one offered remembered tales. On the move, her station at the fore of the column was taken by Eleuthera. In camp our new commander occupied that promontory which had always been reserved for her predecessor. The revolution had been effected without a ripple. So it seemed on the surface. Underneath, however, the people moved unsettled. The nation was not the same without Antiope. Order was awry; a color had gone from the day.

Eleuthera as war queen lacked nothing of martial virtue, and Hippolyta as peace commander was more than wise. Nor did either want for political cunning, particularly Eleuthera, who had already dispatched couriers to the nations of the Massa Getai and Thyssa Getai, the Chalybes and the Copper River Scyths, summoning them to council at the Mound City. Eleuthera had schemes for new alliances, a new war to exploit the victory over Borges and the Iron Mountain clans. Yet the pair lacked some element—Eleuthera for all her valor, Hippolyta for all her sagacity—that Antiope alone brought to the people, and without which the nation stood disfigured and diminished.

Perhaps I alone perceived this. All day trekking home my gaze scoured the mountains, seeking the dust of a lone rider, sign of Antiope returning. Days passed. The train took its time, allowing the herds to graze and regain their strength.

One other accompanied my watch. This was Theseus. Though he never approached me, I remarked him day after day, scanning the northern slopes. Dawns and sunsets he watched, the hours one sees farthest on the steppe. He would ride apart from the column, often three or four miles, there mounting to the loftiest eminence and remaining till dark or, if morning, till the column began to move. I knew his coming had brought evil to the free people, as Eleuthera repeatedly professed, yet I could not but feel pity for him. He loved Antiope. It was plain as that.

On the tenth day he let his mount drift in my direction. He had learned our ways by then. He fell in a distance to my flank and indicated by sign that he wished to approach. By sign I acceded. Theseus had learned not to plunge in impatiently, as a Greek will, but to speak of other matters first. Several times he stood on the point of blurting the inquiry which burned like vinegar on his tongue, yet to his credit he contained his impatience.

“I will take you to her,” I offered.

That evening when the herd had been settled, I rolled my kit and mounted. I had sent no word to Theseus, nor even glanced in the direction of the Greek camp. Yet as I departed, at a walk, I could hear his horse, whose gait I recognized, move off, parallel to mine and at a seemly remove.

We rode into the foothills two days. Clearly he burned to interrogate me. Yet again he mastered his tongue. “We seek a col,” I told him on the second noon, meaning a natural bowl in the mountains where prayer would be concentrated by the configuration of the rock. “That is where she will be.”

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