Fire From Heaven

Fire From Heaven Read Free

Book: Fire From Heaven Read Free
Author: Mary Renault
Tags: Fiction, Historical, Generals, Kings and rulers
Ads: Link
stairs. The door flew open. King Philip crashed it behind him, and without a glance at the bed started taking off his clothes.
    Olympias had pulled up the blanket. The child, eyes round with alarm, had for a moment been glad to lie hidden. Then, cowered in the womb of soft wool and scented flesh, he began to feel horror of the danger he could not confront or see. He worked down a fold to make a peephole; it was better to know than to guess.
    The King stood naked, one foot up on the cushioned stool of the toilet-table, loosing his sandal strap. His black-bearded face was cocked sideways to see what he was doing; his blind eye was towards the bed.
    For a year or more, the child had run in and out of the wrestling-ground, when anyone dependable would take him off the women’s hands. Bare bodies or clothed, it was all one, except for being able to see men’s war-scars. Yet his father’s nakedness, seldom seen, always disgusted him. Now, since one eye had been blinded at the siege of Methone, he had become frightful. At first he had kept it covered with a bandage, from which blood-tinged tears had stained a track down into his beard. Then these had dried, and the bandage had come off. The lid, which the arrow had pierced on its way in, was puckered and streaked with red; the lashes were gummed with yellow matter. They were black, like his good eye and his beard, and the mats of hair on his shins and forearms and chest; a track of black hair led down his belly to the bush, like a second beard, between his loins. His arms and neck and legs were seamed with thick scars, white, red or purple. He belched, filling the air with the smell of stale wine, and showing the gap in his teeth. The child, glued to his peephole, knew suddenly what his father looked like. It was the ogre, one-eyed Polyphemos, who had picked up Odysseus’ sailors and crunched them raw.
    His mother had risen on one elbow, with the clothes pulled up to her chin. ‘No, Philip. Not tonight. It is not the time.’
    The King took a stride towards the bed. ‘Not the time?’ he said loudly. He was still panting from the stairs on a full stomach. ‘You said that half a month ago. Do you think I can’t count, you Molossian bitch?’
    The child felt his mother’s hand, which had been curved around his body, clench into a fist. When she spoke again it was in her fighting voice. ‘Count, you wineskin? You’re not fit to know summer from winter. Go to your minion. Any day of the month is the same to him.’
    The child’s knowledge of such things was still imperfect; yet he had a feeling of what was meant. He disliked his father’s new young man, who put on airs; he loathed the secrets he sensed between them. His mother’s body had tightened and hardened all over. He held his breath.
    ‘You cat-a-mountain!’ said the King. The child saw him rush upon them, like Polyphemos on his prey. He seemed to bristle all over; even the rod that hung in his black bushy crotch had risen by itself and was thrusting forward, a sight of mysterious horror. He pulled back the bedclothes.
    The child lay in his mother’s arm, his fingers dug into her side. His father started back, cursing and pointing. But it was not at them; the blind eye was still turned that way. The child perceived why his mother had not been surprised to feel his new snake beside her. Glaukos had been there already. He must have been asleep.
    ‘How dare you?’ panted Philip hoarsely. He had had a sickening shock. ‘How dare you, when I forbade it, bring your filthy vermin in my bed? Sorceress, barbarian witchÉ”
    His voice stopped. Drawn by the hatred in his wife’s two eyes, his one eye had moved that way, and he had seen the child. The two faces confronted one another: the man’s empurpled, with the wine, and with anger heightened now by shame; the child’s as brilliant as a jewel set in gold, the blue-grey eyes fixed and wide, the skin transparent, the delicate flesh, taut with uncomprehended agony,

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