Atlantis: Chapter 1 |
“Come, Greek.” The words hissed out of the
darkness as the attendant lit his torch from one of the doorway fires, its
leaping flame revealing a lithe, wiry physique clad only in a loincloth. As he
padded ahead, the bobbing flame was the only mark of his progress. As usual, he
stopped at the entrance to the inner sanctum and waited impatiently for the old
man, whose stooped form followed behind through the antechamber. The attendant
had nothing but contempt for this hellenos, this Greek, with his
bald head and unkempt beard, with his endless questions, who kept him waiting
in the temple every night far beyond the appointed hour. By writing on his
scrolls, the Greek was performing an act properly reserved for the priests.
Now the
attendant’s contempt had turned to loathe. That very morning his brother Seth
had returned from Naucratis, the busy port nearby where the brown flood-water
of the Nile debouched into the Great Middle Sea. Seth had been downcast and
forlorn. They had entrusted a batch of cloth from their father’s workshop in
the Fayum to a Greek merchant who now claimed it was lost in a shipwreck. They
were already full of suspicion that the wily Greeks would exploit their
ignorance of commerce. Now their foreboding had hardened to hatred. It had been
their last hope of escaping a life of drudgery in the temple, condemned to an
existence little better than the baboons and cats that lurked in the dark
recesses behind the columns.
The
attendant peered venomously at the old man as he approached. Lawmaker, they
called him. “I will show you,” the attendant whispered to himself, “what my
gods think of your laws, you Greek.”
The scene
within the inner sanctum could not have been in greater contrast to the
forbidding grandeur of the antechamber. A thousand pinpricks of light, like
fireflies in the night, sprang from pottery oil lamps around a chamber hewn
from the living rock. From the ceiling hung elaborate bronze incense burners,
the wispy trails of smoke forming a layer of haze across the room. The walls
were set with recesses like the burial niches of a necropolis; only here they
were filled not with shrouded corpses and cinerary urns but with tall,
open-topped jars brimming over with papyrus scrolls. As the two men descended a
flight of steps, the reek of incense grew stronger and the silence was broken
by a murmur that became steadily more distinct. Ahead lay two eagle-headed
pillars which served as jambs for great bronze doors that opened towards them.
Facing them through the entrance were
orderly rows of men, some sitting cross-legged on reed mats and wearing only
loincloths, all hunched over low desks. Some were copying from scrolls laid out
beside them; others were transcribing dictations from black-robed priests,
their low recitations forming the softly undulating chant they had heard as
they approached. This was the scriptorium, the chamber of wisdom, a vast
repository of written and memorized knowledge passed down from priest to priest
since the dawn of history, even before the pyramid builders.
The attendant withdrew into the shadows of
the stairwell. He was forbidden from entering the chamber and now began the
long wait until the time came to escort the Greek away. But this evening,
instead of whiling away the hours in sullen resentment, he took grim
satisfaction in the events planned for the night.
The old man pushed past in his eagerness
to get on. This was his final night in the temple, his last chance to fathom
the mystery that had obsessed him since his previous visit. Tomorrow was the
beginning of the month-long Festival of Thoth when all newcomers were barred
from the temple. He knew that an outsider would never again be granted an
audience with the high priest.
In his haste the Greek stumbled into the
room, dropping his scroll and pens with a clatter which momentarily distracted
the scribes from their work. He muttered in annoyance and glanced around
apologetically before collecting together his bundle and shuffling between the
men towards an annex at the far end of the chamber. He ducked under a low
doorway and sat down on a reed mat, his previous visits giving him the only
intimation that there might be another seated in the darkness before him.
“Solon the Lawmaker, I am Amenhotep the
high priest.”
The voice was barely audible, little more
than a whisper, and sounded as old as the gods. Again it spoke.
“You come to my temple at Saïs, and I
receive you. You seek knowledge, and I give what the gods will impart.”
The formal salutations over, the Greek
quickly arranged his white robe over his knees and readied his scroll. From the
darkness, Amenhotep leaned forward, just enough for his face to be caught in a
flickering shaft of light. Solon had seen it many times before, but it still
sent a shudder through his soul. It seemed disembodied, a luminous orb
suspended in the darkness, like some spectra leering from the edge of the
underworld. It was the face of a young man suspended in time as if mummified;
the skin was taut and translucent, almost parchment-like, and the eyes were
glazed over with the milky sheen of blindness.
Amenhotep had been old before Solon was
born. It was said that he had been visited by Homer, in the time of Solon’s
great-grandfather, and that it was he who told of the siege of Troy, of
Agamemnon and Hector and Helen, and of the wanderings of Odysseus. Solon would
have dearly loved to ask him about this and other matters, but in so doing he
would be violating his agreement not to question the old priest.
Solon leaned forward attentively,
determined not to miss anything in this final visit. At length Amenhotep spoke
again, his voice no more than a ghostly exhalation.
“Lawmaker, tell me whereof I spoke
yesterday.”
Solon quickly unraveled his scroll,
scanning the densely written lines. After a moment he began to read,
translating the Greek of his script into the Egyptian language they were now
speaking.
“A mighty empire once ruled
the larger part of the world.” He peered down in the gloom. “Its rulers lived
in a vast citadel, up against the sea, a great maze of corridors like nothing
seen since. They were ingenious workers in gold and ivory and fearless
bullfighters. But then, for defying Poseidon the Sea God, in one mighty deluge, the citadel was swallowed beneath the waves, its people never to be seen
again.” Solon stopped reading and looked up expectantly. “That is where you
finished.”
After what seemed an interminable silence,
the old priest spoke again, his lips scarcely moving and his voice little more
than a murmur.
“Tonight, Lawmaker, I will tell you many
things. But first let me speak of this lost world, this city of hubris smitten
by the gods, this city they called Atlantis.”
Many hours later the Greek put down his
pen, his hand aching from continuous writing, and wound up his scroll.
Amenhotep had finished. Now was the night of the full moon, the beginning of
the Festival of Thoth, and the priests must prepare the temple before the
supplicants arrived at dawn.
“What I have told you, Lawmaker was here,
and nowhere else,” Amenhotep had whispered, his crooked finger slowly tapping
his head. “By ancient decree we who cannot leave this temple, we high priests,
must keep this wisdom as our treasure. It is only by command of the astrologos,
the temple sees, that you are able to be here, by some will of divine Osiris.”
The old priest leaned forward, a hint of a smile on his lips. “And, Lawmaker,
remember: I do not speak in riddles, like your Greek oracles, but there may be
riddles in what I recite. I speak a truth passed down, not a truth of my own
devising. You have come for the last time. Go now.” As the deathly face receded
into the darkness Solon slowly rose, hesitating momentarily and looking back
one last time before stooping out into the now empty scriptorium and making his
way towards the torchlit entranceway.
Rosy-fingered dawn was coloring the
eastern sky, the faint glow tinting the moonlight which still danced across the
waters of the Nile. The old Greek was alone, the attendant had left him as
usual outside the precinct. He had sighed with satisfaction as he passed the
temple columns, their palm-leaf capitals so unlike the simple Greek forms, and
glanced for the last time at the Sacred Lake with its eerie phalanx of obelisks
and human-headed sphinxes and colossal statues of the pharaohs. He had been
pleased to leave all that behind and was walking contentedly along the dusty
road towards the mud-brick village where he was staying. In his hands, he
clutched the precious scroll, and over his shoulder hung a satchel weighed down
by a heavy purse. Tomorrow, before leaving, he would make his offering of gold
to the goddess Neith, as he had promised Amenhotep when they first spoke.
He was still lost in wonderment at what he
had heard. A Golden Age, an age of splendor even the pharaohs could not have
imagined. A race who mastered every art, in fire and stone and metal. Yet these
were men, not giants, not like the Cyclops who built the ancient walls on the
Acropolis. They had found the divine fruit and picked it. Their citadel shone
like Mount Olympus. They had dared defy the gods, and the gods had struck them
down.
Yet they had lived on.
In his reverie, he failed to notice two
dark forms that stole out from behind a wall as he was entering the village. The
blow caught him completely unaware. As he slumped to the ground and darkness
descended, he was briefly aware of hands pulling off his shoulder bag. One of
the figures snatched the scroll from his grasp and tore it to shreds, throwing
the fragments out of sight down a rubbish-strewn alley. The two figures
disappeared as silently as they had come, leaving the Greek bloodied and unconscious
in the dirt.
When he came to he would have no memory of
that final night in the temple. In his remaining years, he would rarely speak of
his time in Saïs and never again put pen to paper. The wisdom of Amenhotep
would never again leave the sanctity of the temple and would seem lost forever
as the last priests died and the silt of the Nile enveloped the temple and its
key to the deepest mysteries of the past.
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