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  I could hear the sounds of the fighting from outside the temple. I dropped lightly to my feet and walked quietly toward her.

  "Helen," I said.

  She whirled to face me, her fists pressed against her mouth, her body tense with terror. I saw her eyes recognize me, and she relaxed a little.

  "The emissary," she whispered.

  "Orion," I reminded her.

  She stood there for an uncertain moment, wearing her finest robes, decked with gold and jewels, more beautiful than any woman had a right to be. Then she ran to me, three tiny steps, and pressed her golden head against my grimy, bloodstained chest. Her hair was scented like fragrant flowers.

  "Don't let them kill me, Orion! Please, please! They'll be crazy with bloodlust. Even Menalaos. He'd take my head off and then blame it on Ares. Please protect me!"

  "That's why I came to you," I said. As I spoke the words, I knew they were true. It was the one civilized thing I could do in this entire mad, murderous day. Having slain the man who had abducted her, I would now see to it that her rightful husband took her back.

  "Priam is dead," she said, her voice muffled and sobbing. "His heart broke when he saw the Achaians coming over the western wall."

  "The queen?" I asked.

  "She and the other royal women are in the main temple, just on the other side of that door. The guards outside have sworn to go down to the last man before allowing Agamemnon and his brutes to enter here."

  I held her and listened to the clamor of the fight. It did not last long. A final scream of agony, a final roar of triumph, then a thudding as they pounded against the locked doors. A splintering of wood, then silence.

  "It would be better if we went in there, rather than letting them break in and find you," I suggested.

  She pulled herself away from me and visibly fought for self-control. Lifting her little chin like the queen she had hoped to be, Helen said, "Yes. I am ready to face them."

  I went to the connecting door, unlatched it, and opened it a crack. Agamemnon, his brother Menalaos, and dozens of other Achaian nobles were crowding into the temple. Gold-covered statues taller than life lined its walls, and the floor was of gleaming marble. At the head of the temple, behind the marble altar, loomed a towering marble statue of Aphrodite, gilded and painted, decked with flowers and offerings of jewels. Hundreds of candles burned at its base, casting dancing highlights off the gold and gems. But the Achaians ignored all the temple's treasures. Instead they stared at the richly draped altar, and the old woman on it.

  I had never seen Hecuba before. The aged, wrinkled woman lay on the altar, arms crossed over her breast, eyes closed. Her robes were threaded with gold; her wrists and fingers bore turquoise and amber, rubies and carnelian. Heavy ropes of gold necklaces and a jewel-encrusted crown had been lovingly placed upon her. Seven women, ranging in age from gray-haired to teenaged, stood trembling around the altar, facing the sweating, bloodstained Achaians, who gaped at the splendor of the dead Queen of Troy.

  One of the older women was saying quietly to Agamemnon, "She took poison once the king died. She knew that Troy could not outlive this day, that my prophecy had finally come true."

  "Cassandra," whispered Helen to me. "The queen's eldest daughter."

  Agamemnon turned slowly from the corpse to the gray-haired princess. His narrow little eyes glared anger and frustration.

  Cassandra said, "You will not bring the Queen of Troy back to Mycenae in your black boat, mighty Agamemnon. She will never be a slave of yours."

  A leering smile twisted Agamemnon's lips. "Then I'll have to settle for you, princess. You will be my slave in her place."

  "Yes," Cassandra said, "and we will die together at the hands of your faithless wife."

  "Trojan bitch!" He cuffed her with a heavy backhand swat that knocked her to the marble floor.

  Before any more violence erupted, I swung wide the door of the sanctuary. The Achaians turned, hands gripping the swords at their sides. Helen stepped through with regal grace and an absolutely blank expression on her incredibly beautiful face. It was as if the most splendid statue imaginable had taken on the power of life.

  She went wordlessly to Cassandra and helped the princess to her feet. Blood trickled from her cut lip.

  I stood by the side of the altar, my left hand resting on the pommel of my sword. Agamemnon and the others recognized me. Their faces were grimy, hands stained with blood. I could smell their sweat even from this distance.

  Menalaos, who seemed to be stunned with shock for a moment, suddenly stepped forward and gripped his wife by her shoulders.

  "Helen!" His mouth seemed to twitch, as if he were trying to say words that would not leave his soul.

  She did not smile, but her eyes searched his. The other Achaians watched them dumbly.

  Every emotion a human being can show flashed across Menalaos's face. Helen simply stood there, in his grip, waiting for him to speak, to act, to make his decision on whether she lived or died.

  Agamemnon broke the silence. "Well, brother, I promised you we'd get her back! She's yours once again, to deal with as you see fit."

  Menalaos swallowed hard and finally found his voice. "You are my wife, Helen," he said, more for the ears of Agamemnon and the others than hers, I thought. "What has happened since Aleksandros abducted you was not of your doing. A woman captive is not responsible for what happens to her during her captivity."

  I kept myself from smiling. Menalaos wanted her back so badly he was willing to forget everything that had happened. For now.

  Agamemnon clapped his brother on the back gleefully. "I'm only sorry that Aleksandros didn't have the courage to face me, man to man. I would have gladly spitted him on my spear."

  "Where is Aleksandros?" Menalaos asked suddenly.

  "Dead," I answered. "His body is in the square at the Scaean gate."

  The women started to cry, sobbing quietly as they stood by their mother's bier. All but Cassandra, whose eyes blazed with unconcealed fury.

  "Odysseus is going through the city to find all the princes and noblemen," said Agamemnon. "Those that still live will make noble sacrifices to the gods." He laughed at his own pun.

  So I left Troy for the final time, marching with the Achaian victors through the burning city as Agamemnon led seven Trojan princesses back to his camp and slavery, and Menalaos walked side by side with Helen, his wife once more. A guard of honor marched alongside us, spears held stiffly up to the blackened sky. Wailing and sobs rose all around us; the air was filled with the stench of blood and smoke.

  I trailed behind and noted that Helen never voluntarily touched Menalaos, not even to take his hand. I remembered what she had told me when we had first met: that being a wife among the Achaians, even a queen, was little better than being a slave.

  She never touched Menalaos, and he hardly looked at her, after that first emotion-charged meeting in the temple of Aphrodite at dead Hecuba's bier.

  But she looked over her shoulder more than once, looked back at me, as if to make certain I was not far from her.

  Chapter 21

  The Achaian camp was one gigantic orgy of feasting and roistering all that day and far into the night. There was no semblance of order and no attempt to do anything but drink, wench, eat, and celebrate the victory. Men staggered drunkenly around, draped in precious silks pillaged from the burning city. Women cowered and trembled—those that were not beaten or savaged into insensibility.

  Fights broke out. Men quarreled over a goblet or a ring or, more often, a woman. Blood flowed, and several Achaians who thought they were safe now that the war had ended learned that death could find them even in the midst of triumph.

  "Tomorrow will be the solemn sacrifices of thanksgiving to the gods," Poletes told me as we sat beside our evening cook fire. "Many men and beasts will be slaughtered, and the smoke of their pyres offered to heaven. Then Agamemnon will divide the major spoils."

  I looked past his sad, weatherbeaten face to the smoldering fi
re of the city, still glowing a sullen red against the darkening evening sky.

  "You will be a rich man tomorrow, master Orion," said the old storyteller. "Agamemnon cannot help but give Odysseus a great slice of the spoils, and Odysseus will be generous with you—far more generous than Agamemnon himself."

  I shook my head wearily. "It makes no difference, Poletes. Not to me."

  He smiled as if to say, Ah, but wait until Odysseus heaps gold and bronze upon you, and iron tripods and pots. Then you will feel differently.

  I got to my feet and went out among the riotous Achaians, looking for Lukka and my other Hatti soldiers. I did not have to look far. They had made their own little encampment around their own fire. The area was heaped with their loot: fine blankets and boots, beautiful bows of bone and ivory, and a couple of dozen women who huddled together, clinging to each other, staring at their captors with wide fearful eyes.

  Lukka scrambled to his feet when he saw me approaching out of the raucous darkness.

  "Is that what you've taken from the city?" I asked.

  "Yes, sir. The custom is for the leader to pick his half and the men to divide the rest. Do you want to pick your half now?"

  I shook my head. "No. Divide it all among yourselves."

  Lukka frowned with puzzlement. "All of it?"

  "Yes. And you've done well to stick together like this. Tomorrow Agamemnon divides the major spoils. The Achaians may want a share of your booty."

  "We've already put aside the king's share," he said. "But your own . . ."

  "You take it, Lukka. I don't need it."

  "Not even a woman or two?"

  I smiled at him. "Where I come from, women are not taken as slaves. They come freely or not at all."

  For the first time since I had met him, the doughty Hatti warrior looked surprised. I laughed and bid him a pleasant night.

  As I crawled into my tent I thought that the howling and screaming of the camp would keep me awake. But almost as soon as I stretched out on the pallet, my eyes closed and I fell asleep.

  To find myself standing in that golden emptiness once more, in the realm of the Creators. I peered into the all-pervasive glow and made out, dimly, strange shapes and masses far, far off, like the towers and buildings of a distant city seen in the dazzle of an overpoweringly bright sun.

  I had not willed myself to make contact with the Creators, I knew. It must be that the Golden One had summoned me once again.

  "No, Orion, he has not summoned you. I have."

  A human form materialized about twenty yards from me. The dark-haired one with the precisely trimmed beard, the one I thought of as Zeus. Instead of godly robes, though, he wore a simple one-piece suit with trousers and sleeves and a high collar that buttoned at his throat. It was sky-blue, and it shimmered strangely as he walked toward me.

  "Be glad that our Apollo has not called you," he said, his expression halfway between amused curiosity and serious concern. "He is furious with you. He blames you for the fall of Troy."

  "Good," I said.

  Zeus shook his head in a neat, economical move. "Not good, Orion. In the rage he's in now, he would destroy you utterly. I called you here to protect you against him."

  "Why?"

  He cocked an eyebrow at me. "Orion, you are supposed to thank the gods for the blessing they bestow on you."

  I bowed my head slightly. "I do thank you, whatever your true name is . . ."

  "You may call me Zeus." He seemed delighted at the idea. "For the time being."

  "I thank you, Zeus."

  His smile widened. "The most grudging thanks a god has ever received, I'll bet."

  I shrugged my shoulders.

  "Nevertheless, the truth is that you have wrecked Apollo's plans—for the moment."

  "I doubt that I could have done anything at all without the help of some of you other Creators," I said. "Several of you opposed his plan for Troy."

  He sighed. "Yes, we were not united about it. Not united at all."

  "Is the one I call Hera actually your wife?" I asked.

  He looked surprised. "Wife? Of course not. No more than she's my sister. We don't have such things here."

  "No wives?"

  "Nor sisters," he said. "But that's not important. The real question is, how do we continue our work in the face of Apollo's intransigence? He's quite enraged. We can't have an open split among us, it would be catastrophic."

  "Just what is your work?" I asked.

  "I doubt that you could understand it," Zeus said, staring hard at me. "The capacity was never built into you."

  "Try me. Perhaps I can learn . . ."

  But he shook his head, more vigorously this time. "Orion, you can't visualize the universes. When you freed Ahriman and allowed him to tear down that continuum, you never thought that a new continuum would establish itself out of all that liberated energy, did you?"

  His words struck a dim chord of memory in me. "I freed Ahriman," I said slowly. "After tracking him down in the time before the Ice Age."

  "Before, after, it makes little difference," Zeus said impatiently. "Ahriman's people now live peacefully in their own continuum, safely out of the stream that we are trying to protect. But you . . ."

  "The Golden One—Apollo—did he truly create me?"

  Zeus nodded. "And the entire human race. There were five hundred of you, originally."

  Faint images were shimmering in my mind like ghosts, blurred and indistinct, but almost within touch. "We were sent to destroy Ahriman's race, to prepare the Earth for our own kind."

  He waved a hand impatiently. "That's of little consequence now. That's all been resolved." He did not like to think about our task of genocide. He had agreed to it, obviously, but did not want to be reminded of it.

  "And a few of us survived to establish the human race on Earth."

  "That is true," said Zeus.

  "And we evolved, over the millennia, to eventually produce . . ." I remembered now, "to eventually produce you, a race of advanced humans, so advanced that you seem like gods."

  "And we created you," Zeus said. "The one you call Apollo headed that project. Then we sent you back in time to make the Earth habitable for us."

  "By killing off its original inhabitants: Ahriman's race."

  "They're safe enough," he said, showing that trace of irritability again. "Thanks to you."

  "And Ahriman now has the same powers you do."

  "Virtually."

  I saw it all now. Or most of it. "But what's Troy got to do with this?" I asked.

  Zeus smiled thinly, as if savoring his superior knowledge. "Once you begin altering the continuum, Orion, you create all sorts of side effects that must either be deliberately controlled or allowed to run their natural course until they damp down of themselves. Apollo seeks to control events, to make deliberate adjustments to the continuum wherever and whenever they can be altered to our advantage. Others among us feel that this is self-defeating, that every change we make engenders more side effects and makes it more difficult to protect the continuum."

  I almost understood. "He sent me to Troy, then, to help the Trojans win."

  "Yes. Most of us wanted the war to run its natural course, without our interference. Apollo defied us and sent you to that spot in the continuum. I believe his plan was to have you slay the Achaian leaders in their camp."

  Almost, I laughed. But then a wisp of memory made me blurt, "He said something about dangers from beyond the Earth, and even you spoke of universes—plural."

  Zeus made an effort to control the surprise and fear that my words struck in him. He controlled his face and made it almost expressionless, but not quickly enough to totally mask his emotions.

  "There are others, elsewhere in the universe?" I asked. "Other universes?"

  "That was something we had not expected," he admitted. "Our continuum impinges on others. When we make changes in this space-time, it affects other universes. And their manipulations affect us."

  "And what
does this mean?"

  He made a deep sighing breath. "It means that we must struggle not only to maintain this continuum, but to protect it against outsiders who would manipulate it for their own purposes."

  "And I? Where do I fit in?"

  "You?" He regarded me with frank puzzlement, as if a sword or a computer or a starship had asked what its purpose might be. "You are a tool of ours, Orion, to be used where and when we see fit. But you are a stubborn tool; you disregarded Apollo's commands, and now he seeks to destroy you."

  "He killed the woman I loved. She was one of you: the one I call Athene."

  "Don't blame him for that, Orion."

  "I do blame him."

  Zeus shook his head. "It's sad that you should blame the gods and regard us as the source of your troubles. It was your own actions that have brought you worse sufferings than any you were intended to bear."

  "Yet you protect me from Apollo's anger."

  "You may still be useful to us, Orion. It is wasteful to destroy a tool that can still be used."

  I felt the anger rising in me. His cool smugness, his air of superiority, was beginning to infuriate me. Or was I seething because I knew he was superior, far more powerful than I could ever hope to be?

  "Give the golden Apollo a message for me," I said. "Tell him that I am learning. My memories are coming back to me. One day, whatever he knows, I will know. Whatever he can do, I will be able to do. And on that day I will destroy him."

  Zeus smiled at me, pityingly, the way a father smiles at a naughty child. "He will destroy you long before that day arrives, Orion. You are living on borrowed time."

  I wanted to reply, but he faded into nothingness. The distant city, the golden aura all around me, they all disappeared like the thread of smoke from a candle. I was in my tent again, and the sun was rising on the day when the spoils of Troy would be divided, and the gods would receive their sacrifices of beasts and men.

 

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