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Worlds That Weren't [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket]
eBook by Harry Turtledove & Walter Jon Williams & S. M. Stirling

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eBook Category: Alternate History/Science Fiction
eBook Description: In this collection of novellas, four masters of alternate history turn back time, twisting the facts with four brilliant excursions into what might have been.

eBook Publisher: Penguin Group/Roc
Fictionwise Release Date: April 2007


16 Reader Ratings:
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Available eBook Formats [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket - What's this?]: SECURE MOBIPOCKET FORMAT [289 KB], SECURE EREADER (RECOMMENDED) FORMAT [284 KB]
All formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED
Mobipocket Reader ISBN: 9781429501972
eReader ISBN: 9785551582106

GEOGRAPHIC RESTRICTIONS: Available to customers in: US, CA  What's this?


THE DAIMON
HARRY TURTLEDOVE

SIMON the shoemaker's shop stood close to the southwestern corner of the Athenian agora, near the boundary stone marking the edge of the market square and across a narrow dirt lane from the Tholos, the round building where the executive committee of the Boulê met. Inside the shop, Simon pounded iron hobnails into the sole of a sandal. His son worked with an awl, shaping bone eyelets through which rawhide laces would go. Two grandsons cut leather for more shoes.

Outside, in the shade of an olive tree, a man in his mid-fifties strode back and forth, arguing with a knot of younger men and youths. He was engagingly ugly: bald, heavy-browed, snub-nosed, with a gray beard that should have been more neatly trimmed. "And so you see, my friends," he was saying, "my daimon has told me that this choice does indeed come from the gods, and that something great may spring from it. Thus, though I love you and honor you, I shall obey the spirit inside me rather than you."

"But, Sokrates, you have already given Athens all she could want of you," exclaimed Kritias, far and away the most prominent of the men gathered there and, next to Sokrates, the eldest. "You fought at Potidaia and Delion and Amphipolis. But the last of those battles was seven years ago. You are neither so young nor so strong as you used to be. You need not go to Sicily. Stay here in the polis. Your wisdom is worth more to the city than your spear ever could be."

The others dipped their heads in agreement. A youth whose first beard was just beginning to darken his cheeks said, "He speaks for all of us, Sokrates. We need you here more than the expedition ever could."

"How can one man speak for another, Xenophon?" Sokrates asked. Then he held up a hand. "Let that be a question for another time. The question for now is, why should I be any less willing to fight for my polis than, say, he is?"

He pointed to a hoplite tramping past in front of Simon's shop. The infantryman wore his crested bronze helm pushed back on his head, so the cheekpieces and noseguard did not hide his face. He rested the shaft of his long thrusting spear on his shoulder; a shortsword swung from his hip. Behind him, a slave carried his corselet and greaves and round, bronze-faced shield.

Kritias abandoned the philosophic calm he usually kept up in Sokrates' company. "To the crows with Alkibiades!" he burst out. "He didn't ask you to sail with him to Sicily for the sake of your strong right arm. He just wants you for the sake of your conversation, the same way as he'll probably bring along a hetaira to keep his bed warm. You're going for the sake of his cursed vanity: no other reason."

"No." Sokrates tossed his head. "I am going because it is important that I go. So my daimon tells me. I have listened to it all my life, and it has never led me astray."

"We're not going to change his mind now," one of the young men whispered to another. "When he gets that look in his eye, he's stubborn as a donkey."

Sokrates glanced toward the herm in front of Simon's shop: a stone pillar with a crude carving of Hermes' face at the top and the god's genitals halfway down. "Guard me well, patron of travelers," he murmured.

"Be careful you don't get your nose or your prong knocked off, Sokrates, the way a lot of the herms did last year," somebody said.

"Yes, and people say Alkibiades was hip-deep in that sacrilege, too," Kritias added. A considerable silence followed. Kritias was hardly the one to speak of sacrilege. He was at least as scornful of the gods as Alkibiades; he'd once claimed priests had invented them to keep ordinary people in line.

But, instead of rising to that, Sokrates only said, "Have we not seen, O best one, that we should not accept what is said without first attempting to learn how much truth it holds?" Kritias went red, then turned away in anger. If Sokrates noticed, he gave no sign.

* * *

I am the golden one.

Alkibiades looked at the triremes and transports in Athens' harbor, Peiraieus. All sixty triremes and forty transport ships about to sail for Sicily were as magnificent as their captains could make them. The eyes painted at their bows seemed to look eagerly toward the west. The ships were long and low and sleek, lean almost as eels. Some skippers had polished the three-finned, bronze-faced rams at their bows so they were a gleaming, coppery red rather than the usual green that almost matched the sea. Paint and even gilding ornamented curved stemposts and sternposts with fanlike ends.

Hoplites boarded the transports, which were triremes with the fittings for their two lower banks of oars removed to make more room for the foot soldiers. Now and then, before going up the gangplanks and into the ships, the men would pause to embrace kinsmen or youths who were dear to them or even hetairai or wives who, veiled against the public eye, had ventured forth for this farewell.

A hundred ships. More than five thousand hoplites. More than twelve thousand rowers. Mine. Every bit of it mine, Alkibiades thought.

He stood at the stern of his own ship, the Thraseia. Even thinking of the name made him smile. What else would he call his ship but Boldness? If any one trait distinguished him, that was it.

Every so often, a soldier on the way to a transport would wave to him. He always smiled and waved back. Admiration was as essential to him as the air he breathed. And I deserve every bit I get, too.

He was thirty-five, the picture of what a man—or perhaps a god—should look like. He'd been the most beauti ful boy in Athens, the one all the men wanted. He threw back his head and laughed, remembering the pranks he'd played on some of the rich fools who wanted to be his lover. A lot of boys lost their looks when they came into manhood. Not me, he thought complacently. He remained every bit as splendid, if in a different way—still the target of every man's eye…and every woman's.

Copyright © Walter Jon Williams, 2002.


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