Oย NE DAY IN THE NINTH YEAR, A GIRL MOUNTED THEย dais. There was a bruise on her cheek, spreading like spilled wine down the side of her face. Ribbons fluttered from her hairโceremonial fillets that marked her as servant to a god. A priestโs daughter, I heard someone say. Achilles and I exchanged a glance.
She was beautiful, despite her terror: large hazel eyes set in a round face, soft chestnut hair loose around her ears, a slender girlish frame. As we watched, her eyes filled, dark pools that brimmed their banks, spilling down her cheeks, falling from her chin to the ground. She did not wipe them away. Her hands were tied behind her back.
As the men gathered, her eyes lifted, seeking the sky in mute prayer. I nudged Achilles, and he nodded; but before he could claim her, Agamemnon stepped forward. He rested one hand on her slight, bowed shoulder. โThis is Chryseis,โ he said. โAnd I take her for myself.โ Then he pulled her from the dais, leading her roughly to his tent. I saw the priest Calchas frowning, his mouth half-open as if he might object. But then he closed it, and Odysseus finished the distribution.
Iย T WAS BARELY A MONTHย after that the girlโs father came, walking down the beach with a staff of gold-studded wood, threaded with garlands. He wore his beard long in the style of Anatolian priests, his hair unbound but decorated with bits of ribbon to match his staff. His robe was banded with red and gold, loose with fabric that billowed and flapped around his legs. Behind him, silent underpriests strained to heft the weight of huge wooden chests. He did not slow for their faltering steps but strode relentlessly onwards.
The small procession moved past the tents of Ajax, and Diomedes, and Nestorโclosest to the agoraโand then onto the dais itself. By the time Achilles and I had heard, and run, weaving around slower soldiers, he had planted himself there, staff strong. When Agamemnon and Menelaus mounted the dais to approach him, he did not acknowledge them, only stood there proud before his treasure and the heaving chests of his underlings. Agamemnon glowered at the presumption, but held his tongue.
Finally, when enough soldiers had gathered, drawn from every corner by breathless rumor, he turned to survey them all, his eyes moving across the crowd, taking in kings and common. Landing, at last, on the twin sons of Atreus who stood before him.
He spoke in a voice resonant and grave, made for leading prayers. He gave his name, Chryses, and identified himself, staff raised, as a high priest of Apollo. Then he pointed to the chests, open now to show gold and gems and bronze catching the sun.
โNone of this tells us why you have come, Priest Chryses.โ Menelausโ voice was even, but with an edge of impatience. Trojans did not climb the dais of the Greek kings and make speeches.
โI have come to ransom my daughter, Chryseis,โ he said. โTaken unlawfully by the Greek army from our temple. A slight girl, and young, with fillets in her hair.โ
The Greeks muttered. Suppliants seeking ransom knelt and begged, they did not speak like kings giving sentence in court. Yet he was a high priest, not used to bending to anyone but his god, and allowances could be made. The gold he offered was generous, twice what the girl was worth, and a priestโs favor was never something to scorn. That word,ย unlawful, had been sharp as a drawn sword, but we could not say that he was wrong to use it. Even Diomedes and Odysseus were nodding, and Menelaus drew a breath as if to speak.
But Agamemnon stepped forward, broad as a bear, his neck muscles twisting in anger.
โIs this how a man begs? You are lucky I do not kill you where you stand. I am this armyโs commander,โ he spat. โAnd you have no leave to speak before my men. Here is your answer: no. There will be no ransom. She is my prize, and I will not give her up now or ever. Not for this trash, or any other you can bring.โ His fingers clenched, only inches from the
priestโs throat. โYou will depart now, and let me not ever catch you in my camps again,ย priest,ย or even your garlands will not save you.โ
Chrysesโ jaw was clamped down on itself, though whether from fear or biting back a reply we could not tell. His eyes burned with bitterness. Sharply, without a word, he turned and stepped from the dais and strode back up the beach. Behind him trailed his underpriests with their clinking boxes of treasure.
Even after Agamemnon left and the men had exploded into gossip around me, I watched the shamed priestโs distant, retreating figure. Those at the end of the beach said that he was crying out and shaking his staff at the sky.
That night, slipping among us like a snake, quick and silent and flickering, the plague began.
Wย HEN WE WOKEย the next morning, we saw the mules drooping against their fences, breaths shallow and bubbling with yellow mucus, eyes rolling. Then by midday it was the dogsโwhining and snapping at the air, tongues foaming a red-tinged scum. By the late afternoon, every one of these beasts was dead, or dying, shuddering on the ground in pools of bloody vomit.
Machaon and I, and Achilles too, burned them as fast as they fell, ridding the camp of their bile-soaked bodies, their bones that rattled as we tossed them onto the pyres. When we went back to the camp that night, Achilles and I scrubbed ourselves in the harsh salt of the sea, and then with clean water from the stream in the forest. We did not use the Simois or the Scamander, the big meandering Trojan rivers that the other men washed in and drank from.
In bed, later, we speculated in hushed whispers, unable to help but listen for the hitch in our own breath, the gathering of mucus in our throats. But we heard nothing except our voices repeating the remedies Chiron had taught us like murmured prayers.
Tย HE NEXT MORNINGย it was the men. Dozens pierced with illness, crumpling where they stood, their eyes bulging and wet, lips cracking open and bleeding fine red threads down their chins. Machaon and Achilles and Podalerius and I, and even, eventually, Briseis, ran to drag away each newly dropped manโdowned as suddenly as if by a spear or arrow.
At the edge of the camp a field of sick men bloomed. Ten and twenty and then fifty of them, shuddering, calling for water, tearing off their clothes for respite from the fire they claimed raged in them. Finally, in the later hours, their skin broke apart, macerating like holes in a worn blanket, shredding to pus and pulpy blood. At last their violent trembling ceased, and they lay puddling in the swamp of their final torrent: the dark emptying of their bowels, clotted with blood.
Achilles and I built pyre after pyre, burning every scrap of wood we could find. Finally we abandoned dignity and ritual for necessity, throwing onto each fire not one, but a heap of bodies. We did not even have time to stand watch over them as their flesh and bone mingled and melted together.
Eventually most of the kings joined usโMenelaus first, then Ajax, who split whole trees with a single stroke, fuel for fire after fire. As we worked, Diomedes went among the men and discovered the few who still lay concealed in their tents, shaking with fever and vomit, hidden by their friends who did not want, yet, to send them to the death grounds. Agamemnon did not leave his tent.
Another day then, and another, and every company, every king, had lost dozens of soldiers. Although strangely, Achilles and I noted, our hands pulling closed eyelid after eyelid, none of them were kings. Only minor nobles and foot soldiers. None of them were women; this too we noticed. Our eyes found each otherโs, full of suspicions that grew as men dropped suddenly with a cry, hands clutching their chests where the plague had struck them like the quick shaft of an arrow.
Iย T WAS THE NINTH NIGHTย of thisโof corpses, and burning, and our faces streaked with pus. We stood in our tent gasping with exhaustion, stripping off the tunics we had worn, throwing them aside for the fire. Our suspicions tumbled out, confirmed in a thousand ways, that this was not a natural plague, not the creeping spread of haphazard disease. It was something else, sudden and cataclysmic as the snuffing of Aulisโ winds. A godโs displeasure. We remembered Chryses and his righteous outrage at Agamemnonโs blasphemy, his disregard for the codes of war and fair ransom. And we remembered, too, which god he served. The divinity of light and medicine
and plague.
Achilles slipped out of the tent when the moon was high. He came back some time later, smelling of the sea.
โWhat does she say?โ I asked, sitting up in bed. โShe says we are right.โ
Oย N THE TENTH DAYย of the plague, with the Myrmidons at our backs, we strode up the beach to the agora. Achilles mounted the dais and cupped his hands to help his voice carry. Shouting over the roar of pyres and the weeping of women and the groans of the dying, he called for every man in camp to gather.
Slowly, fearfully, men staggered forward, blinking in the sun. They looked pale and hunted, fearful of the plague arrows that sank in chests like stones into water, spreading their rot as ripples in a pond. Achilles watched them come, armor buckled around him, sword strapped to his side, his hair gleaming like water poured over bright bronze. It was not forbidden for someone other than the general to call a meeting, but it had never been done in our ten years at Troy.
Agamemnon shouldered through the crowd with his Mycenaeans to mount the dais. โWhat is this?โ he demanded.
Achilles greeted him politely. โI have gathered the men to speak of the plague. Do I have your leave to address them?โ
Agamemnonโs shoulders were hunched forward with shame-sprung rage; he should have called this meeting himself long ago, and he knew it. He could hardly rebuke Achilles for doing it now, especially not with the men watching. The contrast between the two had never seemed more sharp: Achilles relaxed and in control, with an ease that denied the funeral pyres and sunken cheeks; Agamemnon with his face tight as a miserโs fist, louring over us all.
Achilles waited until the men had assembled, kings and common both. Then he stepped forward and smiled. โKings,โ he said, โLords, Men of the Greek Kingdoms, how can we fight a war when we are dying of plague? Itโs timeโpast timeโthat we learn what we have done to deserve a godโs anger.โ
Swift whispers and murmurs; men had suspected the gods. Was not all great evil and good sent from their hands? But to hear Achilles say so openly was a relief. His mother was a goddess, and he would know.
Agamemnonโs lips were pulled back to show his teeth. He stood too close to Achilles, as if he would crowd him off the dais. Achilles did not seem to notice. โWe have a priest here, among us, a man close to the gods. Should we not ask him to speak?โ
A hopeful ripple of assent went through the men. I could hear the creaking of metal, Agamemnonโs grip on his own wrist, the slow strangle of his buckled gauntlet.
Achilles turned to the king. โIs this not what you recommended to me, Agamemnon?โ
Agamemnonโs eyes narrowed. He did not trust generosity; he did not trust anything. He stared at Achilles a moment, waiting for the trap. At last, ungratefully, he said, โYes. I did.โ He gestured roughly to his Mycenaeans. โBring me Calchas.โ
They towed the priest forward, out of the crowd. He was uglier than ever, with his beard that never quite filled in, his hair scraggly and rank with sour sweat. He had a habit of darting his tongue across cracked lips before he spoke.
โHigh King and Prince Achilles, you catch me unprepared. I did not think thatโโ Those freakish blue eyes flickered between the two men. โThat is, I did not expect I would be asked to speak here before so many.โ His voice wheedled and ducked, like a weasel escaping the nest.
โSpeak,โ Agamemnon commanded.
Calchas seemed at a loss; his tongue swiped his lips again and again. Achillesโ clear voice prompted him. โYou have done sacrifices surely?
You have prayed?โ
โIโhave, of course I have. But . . .โ The priestโs voice trembled. โI am afraid that what I say might anger someone here. Someone who is powerful and does not forget insult easily.โ
Achilles squatted to reach a hand out to the grimed shoulder of the flinching priest, clasping it genially. โCalchas, we are dying. This is not the time for such fears. What man among us would hold your words against you? I would not, even if you named me as the cause. Would any of you?โ He looked at the men before him. They shook their heads.
โYou see? No sane man would ever harm a priest.โ
Agamemnonโs neck went taut as ship ropes. I was suddenly aware of how strange it was to see him standing alone. Always his brother or Odysseus or
Diomedes was near him. But those men waited on the side, with the rest of the princes.
Calchas cleared his throat. โThe auguries have shown that it is the god Apollo who is angry.โ Apollo. The name went through the host like wind in summer wheat.
Calchasโ eyes flickered to Agamemnon, then back to Achilles. He swallowed. โHe is offended, it seems, so the omens say, at the treatment of his dedicated servant. Chryses.โ
Agamemnonโs shoulders were rigid.
Calchas stumbled on. โTo appease him, the girl Chryseis must be returned without ransom, and High King Agamemnon must offer prayers and sacrifices.โ He stopped, his last word gulped down suddenly, as if he had run out of air.
Agamemnonโs face had broken into dark red blotches of shock. It seemed like the greatest arrogance or stupidity not to have guessed he might be at fault, but he had not. The silence was so profound I felt I could hear the grains of sand falling against each other at our feet.
โThank you, Calchas,โ Agamemnon said, his voice splintering the air. โThank you for always bringing good news. Last time it was my daughter. Kill her, you said, because you have angered the goddess. Now you seek to humiliate me before my army.โ
He wheeled on the men, his face twisted in rage. โAm I not your general? And do I not see you fed and clothed and honored? And are my Mycenaeans not the largest part of this army? The girl is mine, given to me as a prize, and I will not give her up. Have you forgotten who I am?โ
He paused, as if he hoped the men might shoutย No! No!ย But none did. โKing Agamemnon.โ Achilles stepped forward. His voice was easy,
almost amused. โI donโt think anyone has forgotten that you are leader of this host. But you do not seem to remember that we are kings in our own right, or princes, or heads of our families. We are allies, not slaves.โ A few men nodded; more would have liked to.
โNow, while we die, you complain about the loss of a girl you should have ransomed long ago. You say nothing of the lives you have taken, or the plague you have started.โ
Agamemnon made an inarticulate noise, his face purple with rage.
Achilles held up a hand.
โI do not mean to dishonor you. I only wish to end the plague. Send the girl to her father and be done.โ
Agamemnonโs cheeks were creased with fury. โI understand you, Achilles. You think because youโre the son of a sea-nymph you have the right to play high prince wherever you go. You have never learned your place among men.โ
Achilles opened his mouth to answer.
โYou will be silent,โ Agamemnon said, words lashing like a whip. โYou will not speak another word or you will be sorry.โ
โOr I will be sorry?โ Achillesโ face was very still. The words were quiet, but distinctly audible. โI do not think, High King, that you can afford to say such things to me.โ
โDo you threaten me?โ Agamemnon shouted. โDid you not hear him threaten me?โ
โIt is not a threat. What is your army without me?โ
Agamemnonโs face was clotted with malice. โYou have always thought too much of yourself,โ he sneered. โWe should have left you where we found you, hiding behind your motherโs skirts. In a skirt yourself.โ
The men frowned in confusion, whispered to each other.
Achillesโ hands were fisted at his sides; he hung on to his composure, barely. โYou say this to turn attention away from yourself. If I had not called this council, how long would you have let your men die? Can you answer that?โ
Agamemnon was already roaring over him. โWhen all of these brave men came to Aulis, they knelt to offer me their loyalty. All of them but you. I think we have indulged your arrogance long enough. It is time, past timeโโhe mimicked Achillesโโthat you swore the oath.โ
โI do not need to prove myself to you. To any of you.โ Achillesโ voice was cold, his chin lifted in disdain. โI am here of my own free will, and you are lucky that it is so. I am not the one who should kneel.โ
It was too far. I felt the men shift around me. Agamemnon seized upon it, like a bird bolting a fish. โDo you hear his pride?โ He turned to Achilles. โYou will not kneel?โ
Achillesโ face was like stone. โI will not.โ
โThen you are a traitor to this army, and will be punished like one. Your war prizes are hostage, placed in my care until you offer your obedience
and submission. Let us start with that girl. Briseis, is her name? She will do as penance for the girl you have forced me to return.โ
The air died in my lungs.
โShe is mine,โ Achilles said. Each word fell sharp, like a butcher cutting meat. โGiven to me by all the Greeks. You cannot take her. If you try, your life is forfeit. Think on that, King, before you bring harm to yourself.โ
Agamemnonโs answer came quickly. He could never back down in front of a crowd. Never.
โI do not fear you. I will have her.โ He turned to his Mycenaeans. โBring the girl.โ
Around me were the shocked faces of kings. Briseis was a war prize, a living embodiment of Achillesโ honor. In taking her, Agamemnon denied Achilles the full measure of his worth. The men muttered, and I hoped they might object. But no one spoke.
Because he was turned, Agamemnon did not see Achillesโ hand go to his sword. My breath caught. I knew that he was capable of this, a single thrust through Agamemnonโs cowardly heart. I saw the struggle on his face. I still do not know why he stopped himself; perhaps he wanted greater punishment for the king than death.
โAgamemnon,โ he said. I flinched from the roughness of his voice. The king turned, and Achilles drove a finger into his chest. The high king could not stop theย huffย of surprise. โYour words today have caused your own death, and the death of your men. I will fight for you no longer. Without me, your army will fall. Hector will grind you to bones and bloody dust, and I will watch it and laugh. You will come, crying for mercy, but I will give none. They will all die, Agamemnon, for what you have done here.โ
He spat, a huge wet smack between Agamemnonโs feet. And then he was before me, and past me, and I was dizzied as I turned to follow him, feeling the Myrmidons behind meโhundreds of men shouldering their way through the crowd, storming off to their tents.
OWERFUL STRIDES TOOK HIMย swiftly up the beach. His anger was incandescent, a fire under his skin. His muscles were pulled so taut I was afraid to touch him, fearing they would snap like bowstrings. He did not stop once we reached the camp. He did not turn and speak to the men. He seized the extra tent flap covering our door and ripped it free as he passed.
His mouth was twisted, ugly and tight as I had ever seen it. His eyes were wild. โI will kill him,โ he swore. โI will kill him.โ He grabbed a spear and broke it in half with an explosion of wood. The pieces fell to the floor.
โI almost did it there,โ he said. โI should have done it. Howย dareย he?โ He flung a ewer aside, and it shattered against a chair. โThe cowards! You saw how they bit their lips and did not dare to speak. I hope he takes all their prizes. I hope he swallows them one by one.โ
A voice, tentative, outside. โAchilles?โ โCome in,โ Achilles snarled.
Automedon was breathless and stuttering. โI am sorry to disturb you.
Phoinix told me to stay, so I could listen and tell you what happened.โ โAnd?โ Achilles demanded.
Automedon flinched. โAgamemnon asked why Hector still lived. He said that they do not need you. That perhaps you are notโ what you say you are.โ Another spear shaft shattered in Achillesโ fingers. Automedon swallowed. โThey are coming, now, for Briseis.โ
Achilles had his back to me; I could not see his face. โLeave us,โ he told his charioteer. Automedon backed away, and we were alone.
They were coming for Briseis. I stood, my hands balled. I felt strong, unbending, like my feet pierced through the earth to the other side of the world.
โWe must do something,โ I said. โWe can hide her. In the woods orโโ
โHe will pay, now,โ Achilles said. There was fierce triumph in his voice. โLet him come for her. He has doomed himself.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
โI must speak to my mother.โ He started from the tent.
I seized his arm. โWe donโt have time. They will have taken her by the time you are back. We must do something now!โ
He turned. His eyes looked strange, the pupils huge and dark, swallowing his face. He seemed to be looking a long way off. โWhat are you talking about?โ
I stared at him. โBriseis.โ
He stared back. I could not follow the flicker of emotion in his eyes. โI can do nothing for her,โ he said at last. โIf Agamemnon chooses this path, he must bear the consequences.โ
A feeling, as if I were falling into ocean depths, weighted with stones.
โYou are not going to let him take her.โ
He turned away; he would not look at me. โIt is his choice. I told him what would happen if he did.โ
โYou know what he will do to her.โ
โIt is his choice,โ he repeated. โHe would deprive me of my honor? He would punish me? I will let him.โ His eyes were lit with an inner fire.
โYou will not help her?โ
โThere is nothing I can do,โ he said with finality.
A tilting vertigo, as if I were drunk. I could not speak, or think. I had never been angry with him before; I did not know how.
โShe is one of us. How can you just let him take her? Where is your honor? How can you let him defile her?โ
And then, suddenly, I understood. Nausea seized me. I turned to the door. โWhere are you going?โ he asked.
My voice was scraped and savage. โI have to warn her. She has a right to know what you have chosen.โ
Iย STAND OUTSIDEย her tent. It is small, brown with hides, set back. โBriseis,โ I hear myself say.
โCome in!โ Her voice is warm and pleased. We have had no time to speak during the plague, beyond necessities.
Inside, she is seated on a stool, mortar and pestle in her lap. The air smells sharply of nutmeg. She is smiling.
I feel wrung dry with grief. How can I tell her what I know?
โIโโ I try to speak, stop. She sees my face, and her smile vanishes.
Swiftly, she is on her feet and by my side.
โWhat is it?โ She presses the cool skin of her wrist to my forehead. โAre you ill? Is Achilles all right?โ I am sick with shame. But there is no space for my self-pity. They are coming.
โSomething has happened,โ I say. My tongue thickens in my mouth; my words do not come out straight. โAchilles went today to speak to the men. The plague is Apolloโs.โ
โWe thought so.โ She nods, her hand resting gently on mine, in comfort. I almost cannot go on.
โAgamemnon didnโtโhe was angry. He and Achilles quarreled.
Agamemnon wants to punish him.โ
โPunish him? How?โ I asked, my voice trembling.
Now she notices something in my eyes, and her face tightens, bracing itself. โWhat is it?โ
โHeโs sending men. For you.โ
Her eyes flash with panic, though she tries to mask it. Her fingers grip mine tightly. โWhat will happen?โ
The shame burns through me, a searing agony that feels like a waking nightmare. I expect, with every passing moment, to wake up and find it all a terrible dream. But there is no wakingโthis is reality. He will not help.
โHeโโ I struggle to continue, unable to say more.
Thatโs enough. She understands. Her right hand clutches at her dress, chapped and raw from days of harsh work. I stumble through feeble reassurances about how weโll get her back, how everything will be fine. Lies. We both know what awaits her in Agamemnonโs tent. Achilles knows, too, and sends her anyway.
My mind reels with visions of cataclysm and disaster. I long for earthquakes, eruptions, floodsโanything grand enough to contain my rage and grief. I want the world overturned, shattered like a bowl of eggs, shattered at my feet.
A trumpet sounds outside. She touches her cheek, brushing away tears. โGo,โ she whispers. โPlease.โ
				




