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“I was waiting for you,” said Hector.

“Good! Then let me give him the news.” Smiling nastily, Aleksandros said to me, “You may tell fat Agamemnon that King Priam rejects his insulting offer. Moreover, by this time tomorrow our chariots will be riding through your camp, burning your boats and slaying your white-livered Achaians until nothing is left but ashes and bones. Our dogs will feast well tomorrow night.”

I kept my face immobile.

Hector made the tiniest shake of his head, then laid a restraining hand on his brother’s blue-cloaked shoulder. “Our father is not feeling well enough to see you again. And although my brother’s hot words may seem insulting, the answer that we have for Agamemnon is that we reject his offer of peace.”

“And any offer that includes returning my wife to the barbarian!” Aleksandros snapped.

“Then we will have war again tomorrow,” I said.

“Indeed we will,” said Aleksandros.

“Do you really think you are strong enough to break through the Achaian defenses and burn their fleet?”

“The gods will decide,” Hector replied.

“In our favor,” added Aleksandros.

I was beginning to dislike this boastful young man. “It is one thing to fight from chariots on this plain,” I gestured toward the battlefield bounded by the beach, the two rivers, and the bluff on which the city stood. “It is another to break into the Achaian camp and fight their entire host on foot. That will not be a battle of hero against hero. Every man in the Achaian camp will be fighting for his life.”

“Don’t you think we’re fighting for our lives?” Aleksandros retorted. “And the lives of our wives and children?”

“I don’t think you can wipe out the Achaians,” I insisted. “Not with the forces I see camped on the plain.”

Aleksandros laughed. “You are looking in the wrong direction, barbarian. Look there, instead!”

He pointed inland, toward the distant wooded hills and the mountains that bulked beyond them, “There lies the empire of the Hatti,” Aleksandros said. “It spreads from this shore far to the east and south. The Hatti High King has fought wars with the Egyptians, Orion. And won them! He is our ally.”

I drew the obvious conclusion. “You expect help from him.”

“It is already on the way. We put up with the Achaian raids on the farms and towns nearby, but when pompous Agamemnon landed his army here, we sent a delegation to the High King of the Hatti, in his capital at Hattusas.”

Hector said calmly, “I saw that city when I was a lad, Orion. It could swallow Troy ten times over. It is immense, and the power of the Hatti makes it so.”

I said nothing.

“So far we have fought the Achaians only with the help of our neighbors, the Dardanians and other peoples of the Troad,” Aleksandros resumed. “But when the Hatti send their troops to aid us, Agamemnon’s army will be utterly crushed.”

“Why are you telling me this?” I asked.

Before Aleksandros could answer, Hector said, “Because we have decided to make Agamemnon a counter offer, Orion. We did not seek this war. We prefer peace, and the gentler arts of commerce and trade, to the blood and fire of battle.”

“But we don’t fear battle!” Aleksandros insisted.

Silencing his brother with a stern glance, Hector continued, “King Priam offers a simple plan for peace. If Agamemnon will remove his army and return to Achaia, my father the king offers to negotiate a new treaty of friendship and trade that will allow Mycenae free passage of the Hellespont.”

“Mycenae?” I asked. “What about the other Achaian cities: Ithaca, Nestor’s Pylos, Tiryns…”

“Mycenae,” repeated Hector. “As High King, Agamemnon can make his own agreements with the other Achaian cities. As long as the trade is carried in Mycenaean boats, Troy will make no objection.”

A masterful stroke of diplomacy! Dangle the carrot of free passage through the straits to Agamemnon, and to him alone, so that he will have a commanding position among the other Achaian powers. At the very least, it should set up an argument among the various Achaian petty kings that will destroy their ability to make a united war against Troy. Masterful.

“I will take this message to Agamemnon,” I lied.

“Do that,” snapped Aleksandros. “And tell the greedy High King that if he does not accept our offer by dawn tomorrow, his body will be feeding kites and dogs by sunset.”

I stared at him. He tried to meet my gaze, but after a moment he looked away.

“We will expect an answer by sunrise tomorrow,” Hector said. “If our offer is not accepted, we will force the Achaian camp. Even if we are not successful in that, it is only a matter of a few days before the Hatti army reaches us.”

“We’ve had messages from smoke signals,” Aleksandros boasted. “Their army has been seen within a three-day march of our walls.”

I looked back to Hector. He nodded and I believed him.

“There has been enough killing,” Hector said. “It is time to make peace. Agamemnon can return to Mycenae with honor. We make him a generous offer.”

“But Helen stays with me!” Aleksandros added.

I had to smile at that. I could hardly blame him for wanting to keep her.

Hector gave me a four-man guard of honor that escorted me out the same Scaean gate I had entered the night before. Now I could see the massive walls of Troy close-up. Almost I could believe that gods had helped to build them. Immense blocks of stone were wedged and fitted together to a height of more than nine meters, with high square towers surmounting them at the major gates and corners. The walls sloped outward, so that they were thickest at ground level.

Since the city was built on the bluff overlooking the plain of Ilios, the attacking army would have to fight its way uphill before ever reaching the walls.

I returned to the Achaian camp to find old Poletes waiting at the makeshift gate for me.

“What news do you bring?” he asked me eagerly. I realized that his voice, though thin and grating, had none of the rasping and wheezing quality that had afflicted Priam.

“Nothing good,” I said. “There will be battle tomorrow.”

Poletes’s skinny shoulders slumped beneath his worn tunic. “The fools. The bloody fools.”

I knew better, but I did not reveal it. There would be battle tomorrow because I would not let the two sides know that each side was prepared to make peace.

I went straight to Odysseus, with Poletes skipping beside me, his knobby legs working overtime to keep pace with me. Soldiers and noblemen alike stared at me, reading in my grim face the news I brought from Troy. The women looked too, then turned away, knowing that tomorrow would bring blood and carnage and terror. Many of them were natives of this land, and hoped to be freed of bondage by the Trojan soldiery. But they knew, I think, that in the frenzy and bloodlust of battle, their chances of being raped and put to the sword were much more likely than their chances of being rescued and returned to their rightful households.

Odysseus’s quarters were on the deck of his boat. He received me alone, dismissing his aides and servants to hear my report. He was naked and wet from his morning swim, rubbing himself briskly with a rough towel. Sitting on a three-legged stool, he rested his back against the boat’s only mast. The musty canvas that had served as a tent when it had been raining was folded back now that the hot sun was shining, but his bearded face was as dark and foreboding as any storm cloud as I told him that Priam and his sons rejected the Achaian peace terms.