Authors: Marek Halter
âModest Antinoes!' Parysatis chuckled.
Again there were sounds of water, and women's laughter. Antinoes heard the Queen giving orders, demanding clothes and drink. Her voice came closer. He could hear the rustling of cloth. She must be standing quite close to him behind the screen.
âSo you want to marry her?'
âYes, my queen.'
âShe tells me you made her a promise.'
âYes, my queen. We were children, but we haven't changed.'
âHow can that be? You, the son of my beloved Artobasanez! Your father let you run around with that Jewish girl?'
âHe loved her like a daughter, and I like a sister.'
Parysatis laughed. âDon't lie, soldier. You don't love her like a sister. Is it true that Jewish women are quite inventive when they make love? That's what I've heard.'
âI don't know, my queen. I've never known any other woman.'
âOh, Antinoes!' Her laughter echoed. âAntinoes! No Greek woman, no Assyrian woman, not even a girl from the mountains?'
Antinoes sensed that the eunuchs who were watching him were smiling. He did not move a muscle of his face, sure that whatever expression it showed â whether of fear, composure or anger â would be reported to Parysatis and would be circulating throughout the Citadel by evening.
âNo, my queen,' he admitted.
âSo,' Parysatis whispered, âyou love her.'
Antinoes heard a sound like the cooing of a pigeon, then realized that Parysatis was laughing again.
âA hero of the King of Kings in love with a Jewish woman! That's a rare occurrence in these parts! But you're not a child any more, Antinoes. Childhood promises are doomed to die with childhood.'
There was nothing he could say to that, so he said nothing.
âIt's true, then,' Parysatis said, amused. âYou
are
brave. You don't dare say, “Yes, my queen.”'
Again, he said nothing.
âDo you know that if you marry this Jewish woman, you'll become the son of a chariot-maker?'
âYes, my queen.'
âCome now, don't be stupid! Don't answer, “Yes, my queen.” Say, “No, my queen, it's impossible. I, a future satrap, cannot marry a Jewish woman.” If you can't live without her, make her your concubine. A hero of the King of Kings, a future satrap, can have as many concubines as he wishes.'
âMy queen, you speak the truth. I love Lilah. She is my lover, and the woman I have promised to marry.'
âOh, how foolish you are.' There was no laughter in Parysatis' voice now: it was cold and hard.
Proud as he was, Antinoes could not stop his breathing becoming faster and more irregular. He could not stop sweat pouring down his brow â and not only because of the stifling air.
âWhat have you to say to me, Antinoes?'
He closed his eyes. âMy queen, I obey my king in everything. I have deposited the tablet announcing my marriage, as an officer must.'
On the other side of the screen, there was a long
silence. Then a loud handclap. The eunuchs rushed forward and, in the twinkling of an eye, moved aside one of the canvas panels.
Stunned, Antinoes now saw the pool of warm, transparent water, in which half a dozen young girls were swimming. And close to him, on a bed, a pale-faced eunuch massaging Parysatis' small, oiled body.
She was lying on her stomach, naked, her eyes closed. Pressed against the bed, her face seemed more strangely crumpled and aged than ever. Antinoes bowed low and remained in that position.
âNot many people, Antinoes,' Parysatis said caressingly, âhave seen Parysatis in her bath and lived to tell the tale. Stand up and let me look at you.'
He did as he was told, pressing his hands to his thighs to stop them shaking. Parysatis opened her eyes and looked closely at the young warrior's face, while the eunuch continued his massage. Then, with a sudden gesture, she pushed him away and sat up, revealing her youthful breasts.
She clapped her hands. The girls hastened out of the pool and lined up next to her. The oldest was not yet fifteen, while some were still children. Their smiles concealed neither their embarrassment nor their fear.
âParysatis' nieces,' the Queen said, her mouth smiling but her eyes still icy. âYou may choose. Antinoes â Parysatis' nephew. I'd like that.'
Antinoes said nothing. Parysatis grunted and clicked her fingers at the girls, who quickly got back in the pool.
âSince when have warriors talked about love, O hero of the King of Kings? You'll be the laughingstock of the Apadana if this gets out.'
She stood up and ordered her handmaids to rub her body with scented oils. Antinoes lowered his eyes.
âYou're a child, Antinoes. You have no idea what's serious and what isn't. Fortunately, this Jewish girl of yours has more brains than you do. She knows what it means to be sensible.'
The girls were laughing and splashing each other now. Parysatis frowned angrily and screamed to them to get out. Her command echoed against the vault of the bath-house. The armed eunuchs ran alongside the pool, driving back the Queen's nieces with the tips of their spears. With squeals of terror, the girls disappeared into a narrow tunnel at the other end of the room.
âI could feed your Lilah to my lions,' Parysatis said in a low voice, when calm had been restored. âThen you would be released from your promise. But something strange has happened, Antinoes. I've started to like this Jewish girl. She pleases me. And she's sensible enough not to have any desire to keep her promise.'
Parysatis' cooing laughter mingled with the thick steam of the pool. She pushed away her handmaids, walked up to Antinoes, took hold of his chain and raised his head. âDon't you want to know why?'
Antinoes held the Queen's gaze and said nothing.
âPlace your lips on mine, hero of the King of Kings,' she ordered, âthat I may know what your Jewish girl tastes.'
Carefully, Sarah opened the door of Lilah's bedchamber. Axatria, who was changing the linen, jumped. âYou startled me, Mistress.'
âIsn't Lilah here?'
Axatria's face lit up. âShe ran to Antinoes' house,' she said, in a low, conspiratorial tone. âShe couldn't contain her impatience. They haven't seen each other for four days. She has many things to tell him.'
Excited, Sarah closed the door of the chamber behind her. âIs that it? Has she spoken to Ezra?'
Axatria stuffed the dirty linen into a basket, and shook her head. âShe spoke to him, yes, but not in the way you think.'
âDon't be so mysterious!' Sarah said in annoyance. âTell me.'
âLilah says Ezra must go to Jerusalem.'
âTo Jerusalem?'
âYes, with men from Susa and Babylon, to finish
the work of the sage Nehemiah. She says he's the only one who can do it.'
âWhat are you talking about, girl?'
Axatria had to tell her the whole story: Lilah's visit to the lower town, the encounter with the man named Zachariah and, word for word, or as near as made no difference, what Lilah had said to Ezra.
Sarah had to sit on the bed to listen to the end without fainting. When Axatria finished, she remained still.
Axatria had no intention of allowing anything to spoil her joy. âI always knew Ezra would become a great man,' she said proudly. âLilah says the God of heaven will convince the King to send Ezra to Jerusalem. She knows it. And I believe her.'
Sarah looked at Axatria sadly. But then words broke through the wave of desolation that had submerged her. âYou aren't even Jewish,' she said, with a sharp laugh, âbut you're going to teach me what Ezra is worth and what the Everlasting expects of him?' And with that she left the bedchamber.
When night fell, Mordechai sent for Axatria. She had been weeping, and her red-rimmed eyes showed that she was ready to pick a quarrel. But Mordechai was gentle with her, and she repeated what she had told Sarah.
He listened carefully. Now he, too, fell silent,
puzzled by what he had heard. âAre you sure of what you're saying?' he asked at last. âLilah said that, in spite of everything, she was going to marry Antinoes?'
With a sigh of exasperation, Axatria repeated Lilah's words. â“I shall marry him, Axatria. I promise.” That's what she said.'
âLilah's mad. We're worried sick about her marriage, and all she can do is proclaim Ezra the saviour of Jerusalem.'
âIf she says Ezra can do it, she's right!' Axatria protested, her voice trembling with resentment. âShe knows it better than you do.'
Mordechai raised his hand to demand silence. He was smiling. âOur Lilah has more than one trick up her sleeve. She's thought this out carefully. When he's in Jerusalem, Ezra won't be too bothered about who she marries.'
Axatria and Sarah looked at each other pensively.
Sarah was not very convinced, but she nodded. âMay the Everlasting hear you,' she sighed.
Antinoes' mouth was sweet and warm. Lilah abandoned herself to it. As his hands swept her up in his caresses, the anxieties of the last few days fell away from her, like scales.
With kisses, she led him on the waves of desire. They breathed as one, although he was impatient
while she lingered between their embraces, stretching the time as if it should never end.
At last they rolled apart, and lay side by side, catching their breath, hair tangled, hips still touching, lips bruised, hands incapable of ceasing their caresses.
Antinoes' bedchamber was heated by braziers, and lit by a single oil lamp. Lilah listened to the rain hammering on the leaves in the garden. She heard a door slam and, in the distance, fragments of conversation, a handmaid's voice. She was not accustomed to the sounds of Antinoes' house.
âThe other day, at your uncle's house,' he murmured, âyou didn't tell the truth. Parysatis is refusing to let us marry.'
A shudder went through Lilah, as if the cold air from outside had entered the room. It was over: the truth was out, as clear as daylight. She closed her eyes, as if that could protect her for a few moments more.
âShe sent for me this morning,' Antinoes said. âI was in her bath-house.' He could see Parysatis' mocking face behind his closed eyelids.
Lilah turned on to her side, kissed his lips, then placed her fingers over them. âNo,' she whispered, âI didn't tell the truth. But how could I tell you? I still felt too ashamed. The way she looked at me! And not only that â she touched me too. I was wearing a
tunic that left me almost naked before her. I had to listen to her telling me who I could and couldn't love. I was afraid of the lions, but there was at least a moment when I thought it would be better to be eaten by them than humiliated by Parysatis.'
Lilah stopped and smiled. Antinoes tried to speak, but again she pressed a finger on his lips to silence him.
âThen the idea came to me.' She sat up, leaning against Antinoes' hip. She stroked the back of his neck, his powerful shoulder muscles. She was still smiling, but without joy.
âThere I was, before Parysatis. “What am I going to do with you?” she said. “What can I do with a Jewish girl?” She threatened me. “I could do anything I like with you. Make you my handmaid. Feed you to the lions. I could make you my slave. That's something we don't have in this palace: a beautiful Jewish girl who's a slave to our every whim. I could give you to my monkeys if I felt like it. There's only one person I wouldn't give you to, and that's the man you chose â that Antinoes you like so much.”'
Lilah was still trying to smile through her tears. Antinoes held her close to stop her shaking. But she continued speaking, forcing out the words as if extracting them from stony ground.
âIt wasn't only cruel. It was unjust. I wasn't listening to her. We can't listen to such things.
Hatred closes our ears. We become deaf. What is this kingdom where a mad queen has the power of life and death? I thought. She soils the air we breathe. She soils the very thing that makes us man and woman. She besmirches the love between husband and wife. What is more unjust than the power of the strong when it's unchecked?'
She shivered, and clenched her teeth. Antinoes sat up, drew her to him and laid his head between her breasts. Through the beating of her heart, he heard the words throbbing in her chest.
Lilah took a deep breath and went on: âIt was then that I thought of Ezra. Not precisely of him, but of what he's been saying since he started living in the lower town: that the Everlasting has given us a Law so that His people can live without oppression, so that the sons and daughters of Israel can hold their heads high and not have to submit to the insults and whims of the kings of Babylon and the pharaohs with their false gods. But we have stopped following Yahweh's decrees. We have broken our vow, broken the Covenant that protected us from the powerful and their idols. Because of that, we no longer have Yahweh's hand over us but Parysatis' hand.'
She stopped, almost breathless, and dug her nails into Antinoes' skin.
âParysatis is mad,' he said softly, âbut she's the
only one. The Jews are respected in Artaxerxes' kingdoms. You live among us like any other people. I'm a Persian and you're in my arms.'
She kissed him and caressed him. No, her words were not directed against him. There was no greater love than theirs. But he had to understand.
âAntinoes, Parysatis' power has no limits. It will corrupt everything. You saw her today â don't tell me, I don't want to hear it. I can imagine, and what I can't imagine I sensed earlier in the taste of your first kiss. You, the son of a lord of Susa, who tomorrow will be one of those before whom the peoples of Persia and all Artaxerxes' kingdoms will bow down, were humiliated by her just as I was. I know.'
Antinoes did not contradict her.
âAs I was saying, the idea came to me,' Lilah went on. âEzra must go to Jerusalem while there is still time. He must complete Nehemiah's work, and give us back a land where no one will humiliate us. He must accomplish what he was born for. And we must help him. Nehemiah left with the support of Artaxerxes the First. Ezra must leave with the support of Artaxerxes the Second.'