Alexander (Vol. 3) (Alexander Trilogy)

Read Alexander (Vol. 3) (Alexander Trilogy) Online

Authors: Valerio Massimo Manfredi

BOOK: Alexander (Vol. 3) (Alexander Trilogy)
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T
O
C
HRISTINE

 

Contents

 

1

 

2

 

3

 

4

 

5

 

6

 

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8

 

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12

 

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Epilogue

 
 
1
 

T
HE
K
ING SET OFF
again across the desert, taking another route that led from the Oasis of Ammon directly to the banks of the Nile near Memphis. He rode alone for hours and hours astride his Sarmatian bay, while Bucephalas galloped alongside wearing no halter or tack at all. Alexander had understood just how long their journey was going to take, and he sought to spare his horse whenever possible, keen to preserve its strength and vigour.

The march took three weeks under the baking hot sun and they suffered much before the thin green line marking the fertile banks of the Nile came into view. However, Alexander seemed to be immune to exhaustion, hunger and thirst, so immersed was he in his thoughts and in his memories.

His Companions tried not to disturb these reveries because they realized he wanted to be alone in the midst of those endless, desert spaces, alone with his feeling of infinity, with his anxious dreams of immortality, with the passions of his soul. Only when evening fell was it possible to approach the King, and occasionally some of his friends would enter the tent to speak to him and keep him company while Leptine bathed him.

One day Ptolemy took him by surprise with a question he had been wanting to ask his King and friend for too long: ‘What did the god Ammon tell you?’

‘He called me “son”,’ replied Alexander.

Ptolemy picked up the sponge that had fallen from Leptine’s hand and returned it to her, And what did you ask him?’

‘I asked him if all of my father’s murderers are dead or whether any of them have survived.’

Ptolemy said nothing. He waited for the King to come out of the tub and then placed a towel of clean linen over his shoulders and began rubbing him dry. When Alexander turned, his friend looked firmly and deeply into his eyes and asked him, ‘So do you still love Philip, your father, now that you have become a god?’

Alexander sighed, ‘If you weren’t here before me now, I would say that this question had come from Callisthenes or Cleitus the Black . . . give me your sword.’ Ptolemy looked at him in surprise, but he did not dare reply. He simply unsheathed his sword and held it out. Alexander took the weapon and cut the skin on his arm with the sharp metal point so that a bright red rivulet started running down it.

‘What is this, Ptolemy, if it is not blood?’

‘It is indeed blood.’

‘Quite. It is not the
icor
which is said to run through the veins of the celestial gods,’ he continued, reciting from Homer. ‘Therefore, my friend, try to understand me, and if you love me then put an end to these pointless gibes.’

Ptolemy understood and apologized for having spoken in that way, while Leptine washed the King’s arm with wine and put a bandage on the wound.

Alexander saw that his friend was truly sorry and invited him to stay for supper, even though there was not much to eat – dry bread, dates and some rather sharp palm wine.

‘What are we going to do now?’ asked Ptolemy.

‘We will travel back to Tyre.’

‘And then?’

‘I do not know. I think Antipater will send me news on what is happening in Greece and our informers will let us know what Darius is planning. At that stage we will take our decision.’

‘I know that Eumenes has given you the bad news regarding your brother-in-law, Alexander of Epirus.’

‘Yes, he has. My sister Cleopatra will be beside herself with grief, and my mother too, for she loved her brother very much.’

‘But I am sure the greatest grief will be your own. Am I not right?’

‘Yes, I believe you are.’

‘What was it that brought the two of you so close together, apart from your family ties?’

‘A great dream we shared. Now the entire weight of that dream lies on my shoulders. One day we will invade Italy, Ptolemy, and we will annihilate the barbarians who killed him.’

He poured some wine for his friend and then said, Would you like to hear some poetry? I have invited Thessalus to keep me company.’

‘Indeed I would.

Which poems have you chosen?’ ‘Works by a variety of poets, all of which are about the sea. These endless sands around us remind me of the great expanse of the sea, and then all this dryness makes me long for it.’

As soon as Leptine had cleared away the two small tables, the actor entered. He wore a stage costume and had make-up on his face – bistre around his eyes, his mouth lined with minium, a red dye to create a bitter expression, like those of the masks from the tragedies. He strummed some subdued chords on his lyre and began:

O breeze, breeze of the sea,

That wafts swift galleys, ocean’s coursers,

Across the surging main!

Where will you bear me, the sorrowful one?
1

 

Alexander listened in the deep silence of the night, enchanted by the voice that was capable of any intonation, capable of resonating through all human feeling and passion, capable of imitating the very wind and the crash of thunder.

They sat up until late in the night listening to the voice of the great actor as it mutated through every shade of feeling, wailing through the tears of women, or rising proud as he gave voice to the heroes. When Thessalus finished, Alexander embraced him, ‘Thank you,’ he said, his eyes moist with emotion. ‘You have evoked the dreams that will come to me this night. Now go and rest – we have a long march ahead of us tomorrow.’

Ptolemy waited up a little longer to drink some wine with Alexander.

‘Do you ever think about Pella?’ he suddenly asked. ‘Do you ever think of your mother and your father, of the days when we were boys and we rode all over the hills of Macedon? Of the shining waters of our rivers and our lakes?’

Alexander considered the question for a moment and then replied, ‘Yes, often, but it’s as though they are distant images, like things that happened many many years ago. Our life is so intense that each hour is like a year.’

‘This means, then, that we will grow old before our time, does it not?’

‘Perhaps, or perhaps not. The lamp which burns brightest in the room is the one that is destined to burn out first, but all those present will remember just how beautiful its light was during its heyday.’

He pulled the door of the tent to one side and accompanied Ptolemy outside. The sky over the desert was filled with a myriad of stars and the two young men lifted their eyes to look.

‘Perhaps this too is the destiny of the stars that shine brightest in the celestial vault. May your night be a peaceful one, my friend.’

‘And yours too,
Aléxandre,’
replied Ptolemy, as he moved off towards his tent on the edge of the camp.

Five days later they reached the banks of the Nile at Memphis, where Parmenion and Nearchus were waiting for them. That same night Alexander saw Barsine again. She was staying in a sumptuous building that had belonged to a pharaoh and her apartments had been arranged on the upper floors. In the evening the northerly winds brought to these rooms a pleasant coolness as they stirred the blue byssus curtains, as light and delicate as butterfly wings.

She waited for him, sitting on an armchair decorated with gold and enamel friezes, dressed in a light gown in the Ionian style. Her black hair with its violet highlights lay loose over her shoulders and she wore light make-up after the Egyptian manner.

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