The Europe That Was (24 page)

Read The Europe That Was Online

Authors: Geoffrey Household

I saw the direction in which his thought was running, and that he had jumped at the conversational opening I had given. I said awkwardly that Artemis, the goddess of hunting, wouldn't be much good to him.

‘Of the beasts as well as hunting,' he answered. ‘I like to think that she had her sacred park at Bukeia.'

Behind the altar, the substructure of the temple had all vanished under lumpy turf infested by big, black ants of one of the scavenging species. Pierre suggested that they had been there, generation after generation, ever since the first colony fed on the dried blood from the sacrifices. Like so many of his imaginings, that could very well have been true. One reads of the intolerable cloud of flies over the pagan altars, so why not ants? And, if experience on my own land is anything to go by, once ants, always ants. Even modern insecticides only reduce the number.

This lot was decidedly carnivorous. While I was looking for reliefs on the eastern face—which the winds had long since scoured away—four of the little devils were crawling up my socks. They all bit in very quick succession, I suppose because they reached bare skin at nearly the same time. That was not the only shock which had to be relieved. I remember being ashamed of my language in such a thyme-scented silence and hoping that the virgin goddess was broadminded.

‘After three thousand years of angry Syrians,' Pierre said, ‘I expect she finds you unimaginative.'

The dry, ironic voice was uneasy. He had been following my eyes as I closely examined the carved sump of the blood channel.

‘It was you?' I asked.

‘Yes. A lamb.'

‘But you don't believe?'

‘It isn't a question of belief exactly. I told you. I must show my gratitude. As well here as elsewhere.'

That was true enough. It was a place made for worship, where prayer alone would have its greatest possible effect. When I said so, he replied that prayer received but could not give: that life could only communicate with Life through life.

An obscure theory. I did not know enough of pagan mysticism to argue. I could only say that I thought he hated killing.

‘I do. But sacrifice—well, you
must
feel pity. You
must
admire the victim. Oh, I don't suppose the priests did. Like the monks, it became a habit and there was no response.'

‘Was there any for you?' I asked.

‘No. I felt revolted. Partly by the blood. Much more because I knew I had not done the thing properly. Such a sense of inadequacy implies a standard of comparison. Whose standard? I haven't any myself. What was disappointed and telling me that I had made a mess of it?'

I exclaimed that of course he had, that it wasn't surprising he felt a fool.

‘I did not,' he replied. ‘I felt incompetent. I was much too afraid to feel a fool.'

He told me how he had studied and rehearsed the rites, his own purification, everything proper to the worship of Artemis and the moon goddess Astarte, which was her Syrian avatar. In a thin voice he chanted to me a bit of the Greek hymn, then translated it into French.

I saw him for the first time—in spite of his Syrian friends and the Ministry of Agriculture—as a hermit, cut off from his kind and finding the lost Europe in its roots: roots which had meant a lot to him in some sun-lit library of sweet France, fired his imagination and left it receptive to the city walls and temples which still stood serene among agitated Arabs. And I was sure that he, like most hermits, was escaping from himself and something in his past which made him unworthy of his beloved Bukeia. Rumour had it—but rumour would—that awkward questions might be asked if he went home. Nobody knew how he had acquired his capital.

‘Will you help me?' he asked. ‘It's difficult alone, and my people would be horrified if they knew.'

I couldn't refuse outright. I was already very fond of him, and he depended on me. You, Desmond, will feel pagan sacrifice to be actively wrong. I did not. Both he and his hill-top made it seem pure and even beautiful. And his motive was unexceptional. I have stretched out my own arms in gratitude when some combination of life on a spring morning has made me thankful to be part of it, though I have never imagined that killing could help me to express what I thought.

I explained that I had not the sort of tingling temperament which
would welcome Artemis into the twentieth century, and that he would not get me anywhere near the altar. As an act of disapproving friendship I was prepared to come along and hold the horses, but that was all. He thanked me warmly, promising that, if I liked, I could go away at once after I had helped him to lead Antiochus as far as the temple.

The name exploded inside me. It was utterly unexpected, yet plain and obvious once mentioned. I protested. I said it was indecent to waste the life of such an attractive young creature. And then I began to splutter away into nothing as I realized the hollowness of my argument. If Pierre decided that the beast ought to go for beef—which was all he was worth—a Mohammedan butcher would give him the same quick, clean end as he was going to get. And if he preferred to feed himself spiritually instead of on steak, he had a perfect right to do so. In any case, Antiochus had had an idyllic year of life to which, economically, he was not entitled.

Pierre had it all worked out before he made me buy the bull. That was why Antiochus was in a field by himself, near to the hill and far from the herdsmen; that was why only Pierre himself attended to his wants. He proposed to make it look as if he had carelessly left the gate open, and the bull had wandered off into the mountains. He doubted if the ritual roasting of the meat was necessary; the offering and the sincerity of the spirit behind it were the essentials. Jackals would do the rest, as they always had, with the leopard helping if he happened to be in residence. He knew where to hide the carcass, and intended to drive his breakdown truck, tracked and with a winch on it, up the hill the day before.

There was a new moon two nights later: an acceptable occasion, I gathered, for this dubious act of worship. I was glad of that. A delay of a week or more might have tended to exaggerate my reluctance. For twenty-four hours Pierre was not to be seen. Somewhere in the silence of the house he was fasting and submitting his body to the formalities of purification. I could not help being impressed. A certain reverence was unavoidable. The man had nothing in common with the lunatic fringe, playing about inefficiently with witchcraft and black magic. What he was doing was holy and had, after all, been holy to men and women of first-class intellect with spiritual yearnings just as eager as our own.

At dusk we rode down to the bull's pasture—myself keeping well behind Pierre on the narrow path, for he had asked me not to touch him even by accident. He was dressed like an Arab in a white kaftan, bare-legged and bare-headed. Antiochus, a big, grey ghost in the last of the twilight, came plunging up. He tried to eat the garland of wild iris and narcissus as Pierre lifted it over his head, but after that was docile and affectionate. Pierre walked alongside him, caressing the curls between the horns. Mukhtar followed to heel. I led Lys up the
steep grass track, curiously moved and even wishing that I had not excluded myself from all participation.

Near the top we passed the dark bulk of the truck and its winch. It was a mistake to have that cold, modern reminder on the spot. It should have been further away and forgotten. I find it hard to explain what I mean. Put it this way: one does not want a bed in the aisle at a wedding service. We know that the ceremony leads to it; but for the moment proceedings are on a higher plane.

As our heads rose above the last slope, the brilliant new moon came into sight as if it had been climbing up from the Orontes to meet us. I stopped fifty yards from the ruins with Lys and Mukhtar. Pierre and Antiochus walked together to the altar, his hooves clattering on the marble. He was interested and submissive. Vanity? It might have been. Animals of high intelligence can all feel something of the sort. But I retained in the rag-bag of memory that it was always considered a favourable omen if the sacrifice walked willingly to the altar. So it must once have been a common occurrence, whatever the reason.

They were all silver—the mass of Antiochus, the crescent moon, the curved blade lying on the altar. Pierre murmured some prayer which I could not hear and picked up the knife. He buried his left hand in the curls and pulled back the head, throwing his full weight into the movement. The steel flashed in the moonlight, and that was all. He let the head drop, and turned for a moment to the altar with outstretched hands. Then, with a sudden attack in which I thought I could discern desperation, he tried again. I saw the meekly elongated throat very clearly against the sky. It seemed to remain erect even after the knife had tinkled on the pavement.

Pierre came straight over the turf to me, shaking with emotion. ‘I cannot do it to him,' he said. ‘I cannot do it.'

‘Of course you can't!' I answered with a heartiness which offended me. ‘It amazes me that you ever thought you could.'

‘Take him back, will you?' he asked.

I left him with the horses and walked up to Antiochus. He waited, perfectly motionless, his eyes shut. His neck under my hand felt slightly unnatural: a stiffness either of hair or muscle. He was in a kind of trance. The double flash of the steel under his eyes may have caused it.

While I wondered whether to give him an irreverent slap, there was a commotion among the horses. Pierre came running, twisting like a snipe, followed as usual by Mukhtar. But not in the usual way. He just managed to get in among the fallen stones as Mukhtar struck at him with his forelegs. The stallion chased him round to the back of the altar, and then seemed to come to his senses. Myself, I took cover behind the still motionless Antiochus, yelling out to know what was wrong.

‘I cannot imagine,' Pierre answered. ‘The scent of fear, perhaps. Or of shame.'

He realized that the fit of hysteria which had possessed the stallion was over, and leaned across the altar to stroke his nose. Mukhtar whinnied with pleasure; he seemed quite unaware of what he had done. Pierre gentled and petted him for a good minute, then led him out through the tumbled masonry. He was so confident that when they reached the open he sat down to pick off the ants. I was never so impressed by his self-control in the presence of animals, and told him so. He replied that he had been forced to be patient, that any exclamation or excitement might have upset Mukhtar all over again.

Meanwhile, Antiochus returned to normal, more than normal. He began to behave like a healthy young bull waking up from a pleasant dream and impressed by his own excellence. He butted me in the wind and cavorted around inviting me to butt him back. Pierre and Mukhtar headed him off and let him work his energy out of his system on the way down the hill. We returned him to his paddock and went home ourselves.

Next day we hardly discussed what had happened, for it was only too evident, when considered in the light of the sun upon a scientifically managed estate, that the four living beings concerned—I leave out Lys who, as befitted an experienced mother, had remained a mere spectator—could not look back on themselves with approval. I left Pierre to his business, and in the evening drove the truck down from the hill for him and put it away in the barn.

On the third day I noticed that he was walking with a limp. When I asked him if he had sprained an ankle, he replied that he might have wrenched something running away from Mukhtar, but that he had not noticed it at the time. The leg, he said, was a bit painful in the thigh and groin.

That seemed a likely result of dodging among the drums of fallen columns, and I thought no more of it till the following morning when one of his little Alaouites visited my flat. She said that she had been giving her lord hot fomentations, that he had fever and that she did not like the look of his leg. He had insisted that it was nothing, that he had probably caught a chill and that his leg hadn't anything to do with it.

I was up in his bedroom at once. The girl was right. He had such a temperature that he was incapable of clearly examining his leg or any other object. The flesh was noticeably dark, with streaks of red. The doctor who attended him and the Bukeia families was down at the coast in Latakia—many hours away if one had to open up communications by messenger and police post. So I took command. I got some of his men to smash down the door-posts of his bedroom so that we could lift the whole bed out without disturbing him. We lashed it
down to a two-ton truck and made a bolt to Latakia hospital.

God, the speed of the thing! It was too late to amputate, and he seemed resistant to penicillin and every other injection in their dispensary. When they had given him up and the fever dropped in the hour before death he had a short interview with his lawyer—he wouldn't hear of a priest—in which he left Bukeia to a co-operative of his workers. He whispered to me: ‘I have left you Antiochus. Do not tell them why!'

I couldn't have done, because then I did not really know why.

Forget, my dear Desmond, all about the supernatural! There had been nothing inexplicable, except for the momentary possession of Mukhtar when he chased Pierre to the wrong side of the altar. And I think your vet could give you a dozen reasons for that. As for the fact that the ants were more effective avengers, it's nothing but tragic coincidence. The hospital said that the resistant staphylococci which my body was still tolerating could be transferred by an insect bite, though the odds against any of the same four individual ants biting Pierre seemed enormous.

There was no other connection between our moonlight expedition and his death. Those primitive old monks in the next valley might have insisted there was; but my own conscience sees nothing reprehensible in a sincere act of worship directed at Artemis, Astarte, whatever her name and address. As a jealous virgin goddess, kindly only to animals, she seems a fair choice for farmers. As the Moon, we all worship her in our way.

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