"Bova, Ben - Orion 07 - Vengeance of Orion" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bova Ben)

Chapter 3
WE were given a bowl of thin barley gruel and then set to work with wooden
shovels on the earthworks defending the beach.
While the warriors ate a leisurely breakfast of mutton and flat bread, and their
men-at-arms yoked horses to chariots and sharpened swords and spears, we
lumbered out through one of the makeshift gates in the low rampart that had been
heaped up along the beach. Our task this fine, windy morning was to deepen the
trench in front of the mound and pile the diggings atop it. This would make it
even harder for Trojan troops or chariots to reach the ships.
We worked a good part of the morning. The sky was a sparkling bowl of wondrously
clear, cloudless blue, dotted by screeching white gulls soaring above us. The
sea was an even deeper blue, restless with flecks of white-foamed waves. Grayish
brown humps of islands rose above the distant horizon. In the other direction,
Troy's towers and beetling walls seemed to glower down at us from across the
plain. Beyond it the distant hills were dark with trees and beyond them rose the
hazy mountains.
The wind strengthened into a brisk gusting breeze as the sun rose higher,
helping to keep us cool as we dug and emptied our shovels of sandy soil into
woven baskets that were carried to the top of the mound by other thetes.
As I dug and sweated, I thought about my memories of the night. It was no dream,
I was certain of that. The Golden One really existed, whether he called himself
Apollo or some other name from an earlier existence. I dimly remembered knowing
him from another time, another eraЧhim, and a dark, brooding hulking presence.
The one he called Ahriman, I thought. And the goddess, the woman I loved. The
woman who was dead. The Golden One said I was responsible for her death. Yet I
knew that he had set in motion the train of events that ended with our starship
exploding. He had killed her, killed us both. Yet somehow he had revived me,
placed me here in this time and place, alone and bereft of memory.
But I did remember. A little, anyway. Enough to know I hated the Golden One for
what he had done to me. And to her. I tightened my callused hands on the shovel,
anger and the hollow empty feeling of heartsickness driving me. None of the
other thetes were pushing themselves and the work went slowly, mainly because
the whipmaster and the other overseers ignored us, spending their time at the
top of the mound where they could ogle the camp and the noblemen in their
splendid bronze armor.
Achaians, they called themselves. I heard it from the men laboring around me. It
would be another thousand years before they began to think of themselves as
Greeks. They were here besieging Troy, yet they seemed worried that the Trojans
would break through these defenses and attack the camp. There is trouble among
the Achaians, I thought.
And the Golden One said that the Trojans were going to beat off their besiegers.
Poletes had been picked to carry baskets of dirt from down where we were digging
up to the top of the rampart. At first I thought this was too much of a burden
for his skinny old legs, but the baskets were small and carried only a light
load, and the overseers were lax enough to let the load-carriers meander up the
slope slowly.
The old man spotted me among the diggers and came to me.
"All is not well among the high and mighty this morning," he whispered to me,
delighted. "There's some argument between my lord Agamemnon and Achilles, the
great slayer of men. They say that Achilles will not leave his tent today."