• Home
  • Rebecca Lochlann
  • The Year-god's Daughter: A Saga of Ancient Greece (The Child of the Erinyes Book 1)

The Year-god's Daughter: A Saga of Ancient Greece (The Child of the Erinyes Book 1) Read online




  Table of Contents

  THE YEAR-GOD’S DAUGHTER

  BOOK ONE

  Epigraph

  THE PROPHECY

  Chapter One: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Two: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Three: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Four: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Five: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Six: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Seven: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Eight: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Nine: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Ten: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Eleven: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Twelve: Moon of Field Poppies

  Chapter Thirteen: Moon of Winemaking

  Chapter Fourteen: Moon of Winemaking

  THE BEGINNING

  Chapter One: Moon of Laurel Leaves

  Chapter Two: Moon of Laurel Leaves

  Chapter Three: Moon of Mead-making

  Chapter Four: Moon of Mead-making

  Chapter Five: Moon of Mead-making

  Chapter Six: Moon of Mead-making

  Chapter Seven: Moon of Mead-making

  Chapter Eight: Moon of Mead-making

  Chapter Nine: Moon of Mead-making

  Chapter Ten: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Eleven: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Twelve: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Thirteen: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Fourteen: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Fifteen: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Sixteen: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Seventeen: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Eighteen: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Nineteen: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Twenty: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Twenty-One: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Twenty-Two: Moon of White Light

  Chapter Twenty-Three: Moon of White Light

  Historical Notes

  About the Author

  Acknowledgements

  THE THINARA KING

  BOOK TWO

  Chapter Two: Moon of Figs and Acorns

  THE YEAR-GOD’S DAUGHTER

  The Child of the Erinyes

  Rebecca Lochlann

  Published by Erinyes Press

  Copyright © by Rebecca Lochlann 2011

  Internal design © Rebecca Lochlann 2014

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted, or shared in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher or author.

  ISBN: 0-9838-2771-0 Electronic Book

  ISBN-13: 978-0-9838277-1-9

  ISBN-0-9838-2770-2 Trade Paperback

  ISBN-13: 978-0-9838277-0-2

  Library of Congress Control Number 2011914448

  Cover designs, crescent moon & necklace images, and Erinyes Press logo by Lance Ganey www.freelanceganey.com

  Cover photos The Year-god’s Daughter and The Thinara King via Shutterstock

  Labrys Axe graphic © "Labrys-symbol". Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Labrys-symbol.svg#mediaviewer/File:Labrys-symbol.svg

  For Paul Raymond

  BOOK ONE

  THE CHILD OF THE ERINYES SERIES

  MAIDEN

  Epigraph

  “Zeus the Father will have no great Earth-goddess, Mother and Maid in one, in his man-fashioned Olympus, but her figure is from the beginning, so he re-makes it; woman, who was the inspirer, becomes the temptress; she who made all things, gods and mortals alike, is become their plaything, their slave, dowered only with physical beauty, and with a slave’s tricks and blandishments. To Zeus, the archpatriarchal bourgeois, the birth of the first woman is but a huge Olympian jest.”

  —Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion, Jane Harrison

  Cambridge University Press 1903

  THE PROPHECY

  Chapter One: Moon of Field Poppies

  The bull was so much bigger than she expected. His pitiless eyes sucked her breath away. The musky stench of his body obliterated the stands, the screaming audience, even the crushing hammer of heat.

  In her mind, the invocation began as a whisper and grew into song.

  O fierce Bringer of Light and Dark

  One smiting hoof churns seas and mountains

  Head low, he delivers terror

  His horn appoints life or death—

  She’d been told not to freeze— to always keep moving. She leaped to the side, but the bull cut her off. The tip of his horn grazed her ribs like a caress, ran down them gently, one, two, three; then, snorting, he brought his head up, hooking her like a speared fish. With a contemptuous jerk, he flung her into the air.

  Time slowed. The ground fell away. The beast’s hot breath huffed against her stomach. But she felt no pain. No fear.

  A thousand throats gave voice in a deafening roar as gravity coaxed her back to earth.

  How many of those in the stands begged Goddess Athene to spare her life? How many hoped she would die?

  I failed you, Lady.

  She’d expected glory, praise, awe. Not an undignified, sprawling tumble before this vast, shrieking audience who would never forget.

  Hands touched her shoulders and turned her toward blistering sunlight. She kept her eyes shut, afraid of seeing pity or loathing in the faces of those who bent over her, and hoped she wouldn’t throw up.

  “Aridela.” She recognized the voice. Isandros, her half brother.

  His accusing tone wrenched her out of vertigo’s spin. She blinked and met his gaze, unable to tell if he was angry or afraid.

  “Curse you for talking me into this. You’d better not die.”

  Agony finally seared as she drew breath to speak. Far worse than the scratch of sand or scorch of light, all she could do in its throes was gasp and send out a short prayer.

  Save me, Immortal Mother.

  They hoisted her onto a swath of sailcloth. The sensation of being lifted, supported between four strong, sweat-sheened boys, intensified the nausea.

  Closer shouts, filtering through the wordless howl from the stands, caught her attention.

  There stood the bull, one of a breed called aurochs, so wild and contentious they couldn’t be used for anything outside the ring. Heavy black head lowered, he scraped the sand with one massive hoof. His horn had punctured skin and tasted blood. Now he raged for the mangle of bones and flesh.

  His will follows her will.

  Moon bull, king bull, lord bull

  Dance with me.

  Three boys and two girls, clad in white loincloths and bracelets of silver and gold, stretched out their arms and spun around him, risking their lives to confuse him and delay another charge until a ready cow could turn his intent from killing to love.

  Her blood darkened one of those lyre-curved horns. How could this happen? She had been certain that she, the queen’s adored, sanctified daughter, would achieve glory beyond reckoning, beyond any other in history.

  “The Lady told me to dance with this bull,” she cried, angry at the weak petulance in her voice
. “She commanded it.”

  A shadow blocked the glare. Looking up, she met the gaze of the queen’s royal healer, who pursed her lips and glanced, frowning, at the gore wound.

  The woman stilled. Her eyes widened then narrowed and grew blank.

  Aridela saw what the healer tried, too late, to mask.

  The indulged, pampered child, she who always got her way, who scorned rules and restrictions, who was fathered by a god and beloved of the people, was going to die.

  Chapter Two: Moon of Field Poppies

  The king of Mycenae sired many bastard children in the course of his long life, but he acknowledged and elevated just one. Menoetius, ‘He who defies his fate.’

  Now seventeen and in the prime of youthful manhood, Menoetius stood upon Cretan soil for the first time. He savored his anticipation as he placed one foot, then the other, on the sloped, fitted stones of the only paved road he’d ever seen, and turned his gaze southward, toward Knossos.

  Soon he would look upon the legendary palace-temple of Labyrinthos, ‘House of the Double Axe.’ At last, he would learn if the tales about this fabulous structure were true. Supposedly, it contained as many chambers underground as above, and ingenious pipes, capable of providing clean water and carrying away waste. Not wanting to stand out as a foreigner, he tried to mimic the bland countenances around him, but he couldn’t help a quickening of his heartbeat as he merged with the crowd, leaving the stink and noise of the harbor behind.

  He regretted now that he hadn’t paid more attention when his slave tried to teach him the language of the Cretans. But it was hard to sit beneath a tree’s leafy branches learning how to say “octopus” and “bread” in a foreign tongue when his father’s warriors were performing battle maneuvers and shouting for him to join in. It was hard to practice pronunciation when the sun gleamed upon riotous ferns, waterfalls and grottoes beckoned, lions roared in the distance, and new Thessalian stallions needed gentling.

  A goat’s protesting bleat returned Menoetius to the hot Cretan evening and his present path, which grew more crowded the farther south he walked. Merchants, peasants, and livestock vied for space and overflowed onto the dry dirt, raising a dust cloud that blurred the horizon in every direction. Men carrying ornate litters shouted for passage and made free use of whips. Menoetius glimpsed languid women reclining inside the litters, dimly visible behind protective draperies. Some were bare-breasted. All were adorned with gold. He’d never seen so much gold in such a short space of time, though he came from the richest citadel ever to be erected on stony Argolis. No surprise that undercurrents of jealousy tinged every word his father spoke concerning this wondrous place.

  Peering beyond the crowd toward the dust-soft edge of the city, he discovered one rumor he’d heard was true. There were no walls, gates, or guards to keep out enemies. Well-worn paths meandered from a thousand different sources like the branches on a tree to converge with the paved road. Choosing one of many winding side lanes, he wove among the throng, glancing into workshops where master potters, metal workers, ivory carvers, seal craftsmen and sculptors fashioned the wares that made Crete’s trade ships ride low as they fanned out to every surrounding country. Scents permeated the air— the metallic tang of bronze being cut, the cloying dust of filed clay, the burning smoke of melted tin, gold, and copper being poured into molds, and, in these close quarters, the usual stench of urine, excrement, and unwashed bodies.

  The stifling, dirty lanes widened; the crowd thinned. Shops and other structures grew bigger, cleaner, farther apart. The air freshened. Tall dark cypress and olive groves stretched outward, lined between extravagant villas like spokes on a wheel.

  Above and beyond flower-draped courtyards and palm trees, Menoetius glimpsed the upper stories of an enormous building. He knew instantly it was the famed temple of Labyrinthos. His slave, a natural storyteller who loved embellishment, possessed a willing listener in the king’s bastard son. From the moment Menoetius could understand simple words, he’d filled the boy’s head with fantastic tales of Crete. Menoetius grew up with vivid descriptions of the magnificent palace, along with equally captivating tales of bull leapers flying as high in the air as two spears laid end to end, of mountains so tall they never lost their capes of snow, of gorges so deep they could swallow a city, and of the Earth Bull’s terrifying bellow when he caused the land to yaw. But there was one tale he loved more than any other.

  Once a month, Alexiare told him, the moon slips away to Crete, leaving the night sky dark. Elemental waters within a concealed cave restore her, giving her the strength to return to the heavens and dazzle us again in beauty. Only the queen of Crete knows the location of this cave, for Crete’s queen and the moon are sisters.

  As the years passed and Menoetius left his childhood behind, he realized his servant had invented the tales merely to entertain him. Such things weren’t real.

  He wished they could be.

  The old, cherished stories ran through his mind as he walked. Nearer now, sprouting off the summit of a hill that elevated it above the city, a maze of porticoes, balconies and terraces rose ever higher, story after story. Some dubbed Labyrinthos a palace, a home for Crete’s royalty. Others insisted it was a temple dedicated to Athene, and still others, including Menoetius’s slave, called it a city complete unto itself. Perhaps it was all three.

  These multi-storied villas on either side of the road must be the private homes of those in high favor with the island’s rulers. He heard the splatter of a fountain and peered through the stone arch of the nearest into its courtyard. Painted clay pots, bursting with blooms, adorned every corner. Climbing ivy and scarlet blossoms decorated the walls, cooled by shade from the leafy branches of a twisted old plane tree. A maidservant, pulling loaves of bread from ovens built into the wall, tore off a generous hunk and brought it to him. He thanked her in Cretan, and returned to the road.

  She probably judged him a beggar, but he hadn’t eaten all day. He devoured the warm bread in two ravenous bites and settled his gaze again on the palace.

  Sunlight glinted against terracotta walls, white balustrades, and monumental pillars painted a bold fire-red. Pennants of green, ochre, blue, even opulent purple, fluttered from numerous stories, all bearing the famous Cretan insignia of the hallowed olive tree. Subtle lavender shadows beckoned from walkways and overhangs. High above at the edge of an open terrace stood two women, arms resting on a stone retaining wall. One, when she noticed him peering at her, giggled and blew him a kiss.

  Menoetius, acknowledged son of the mainland’s most powerful king, forgot his efforts to appear nonchalant. He stopped in the middle of the road and stared like a desert nomad getting his first glimpse of civilization. “As many rooms as there are stars,” he said, quoting a common saying about this venerable edifice, and stiffened when a passerby turned and offered an amused sideways grin.

  “I’ve lived here all my life,” the man said, “yet on occasion I still get lost.” His feminine voice and fleshy cheeks marked him a eunuch; his white pleated robe designated him a priest. Accenting his comment with a lift of his painted brow, he turned and disappeared into the crowd outside the palace entryway.

  Two giant pairs of bull’s horns, carved from alabaster, guarded each side of the narrow avenue. To access the formidable dwelling of Helice, Queen of Crete, one must possess courage enough to venture between them.

  Shouting and wails erupted from ahead. Those in front of Menoetius jostled and pushed.

  A youth of about Menoetius’s age, garbed in the traditional Cretan loincloth and leather belt pockmarked with bronze studs, muttered an impatient curse as he shoved past.

  “Has something happened?” Menoetius seized his arm and spoke in hesitant Cretan. “I am a stranger here.”

  “A bull gored our princess.” He frowned at Menoetius, his black eyes made exotic with lavish paint. “They’re bringing her from the ring.” Jerking free, he fought his way through the ever-thickening press.

  Menoetius, taller a
t seventeen than most of the men around him, looked over the horde and spotted a line of women near the corridor leading into the palace precincts. Their layered skirts boasted bright dyes and spangles in sky blue, flashing silver, crimson and purple. Maidservants struggled to keep fancy sunshades propped above their mistresses’ heads as the women displayed their grief. Several seemed on the verge of fainting.

  The lad slipped through fissures in the crowd and Menoetius sprinted behind him, hoping the boy would lead him to the source of the trouble.

  A distracting profusion of ranks and nationalities surged along with them. Dark-skinned Egyptians in blazing white robes pushed at bronze armored, bearded Achaeans from the mainland, who shoved bejeweled merchants from a myriad of countries.

  Menoetius’s soldiering skills helped him absorb all these details while translating the tangles of gossip around him.

  “Why was she in the ring?” asked an old-timer, his eyes obscured behind wrinkled skin and thick wiry brows.

  The man he spoke to shook his head. “I’ll wager her mother didn’t know anything about it. She dotes on her girls.”

  A curtained litter, draped with green pine boughs and woven grapevines, rested on the ground near the hysterical onlookers. Armored men guarded it, the butts of their spears set against their toes, points extended outward. A woman, dressed in amber-colored robes, knelt next to the litter and a man beside her held a large clay bowl, overflowing with bloody cloths. A few steps away two more women clung to each other, weeping. Others milled, scratching their cheeks, turning up their faces, shrieking to the skies.

  Since he couldn’t see what lay inside the litter, he observed the two ladies, who seemed to attract sympathy and respect from everyone around them. The younger woman’s dress and hair affirmed her importance. One long black ringlet dangled in front of each ear; the rest was tucked beneath a conical shaped ceremonial hat. Her face was drawn, careworn; when a nearby baby screamed, Menoetius saw her startle.