Read Kabuki-West Page 6


  Photo by Jorge Lascar: Amphitheater at Kourion, Cyprus

  ACHILLES

  .

  First we see only Briseis, the narrator, isolated in a pin spot. Up-scrim unseen is a chorus of Greek soldiers led by Patroklos, speaking like a whispered echo

  .

  BRISEIS

  I am Briseis

  only a woman

  .

  And so

  my grasp of truth

  is in shadow

  my story, only a part

  You will forgive me?

  .

  In all of my life before

  I knew

  its purpose was living

  but one day I grew

  to know

  the purpose of life

  is war

  .

  SOLDIERS (Whispered)

  ...is war

  the purpose of life

  is war

  .

  (Very gradually, the soldiers become visible in dim silhouette)

  .

  BRISEIS: When the war started

  .

  SOLDIERS: or why

  .

  BRISEIS: no one knows

  .

  SOLDIERS: No one knows.

  .

  BRISEIS: They say it was a woman...

  .

  SOLDIERS: Helen!

  .

  BRISEIS

  ...running from her husband

  with the second son of Priam

  the king

  .

  So she

  though a queen before

  in the end will be

  like me

  .

  no more

  than a prize of war

  .

  SOLDIERS: (Strong) A prize of war.

  .

  BRISEIS

  My life before

  was a garden-

  fine parents ruling the valley

  three brothers standing

  like tassled grain

  so tall-

  .

  but all

  were cut down

  cut clean

  one dark summer's eve

  when I

  became the prize

  of Achilles

  .

  (Space opens with night behind scrim; Chorus may create crickets, owl, stillness. As Briseis' story goes on, goat bleats, neighing horse, isolated sounds of a raid punctuate her description.)

  .

  BRISEIS

  A goat bleat

  in midnight air

  came first

  Then came the clash of bronze

  .

  BRISEIS and SOLDIERS: (Whisper) What moves on the mountain?

  .

  (Briseis, or shadows on scrim, may mime waking her husband, and etc- )

  .

  BRISEIS

  I touched

  my soft-breathing husband

  gathered a fleece

  round my shoulders

  stepped to the door

  .

  Torch light

  flickered

  on white walls below

  Voices rose

  startled

  from sleep

  .

  I saw my brother

  slight in his tunic

  struggling with another

  all armed

  .

  SOLDIERS: Another all armed

  .

  BRISEIS

  Then a grunt and a fall-

  a sword blade came free

  laying open the deep belly

  of my brother

  there on white stones

  .

  SOLDIERS

  As the others came running

  too late for all three

  .

  BRISEIS

  My throat

  opened to scream

  but a hand sealed my mouth-

  my sweet husband breathing

  "Be still. Stay still"

  and seizing his sword from the wall

  .

  (Chorus creates sounds of raid - donkey brays, swords clashing, muffled yells)

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Donkeys brayed

  Armor came clanking

  .

  BRISEIS

  "No," I cried, "Stay!"

  but too late

  Already a torch blazed

  cross his face

  Gleaming silver filled our door

  I staggered

  my eyes frozen open

  .

  A sword's point

  caught my sweet's chin

  uprooting his teeth

  splitting his tongue

  twisting up into his brain

  .

  Blood rushed down that sword

  I saw it and then saw no more

  But I heard as I fell

  a soft voice

  .

  PATROKLOS

  "Don't weep, pretty child

  I'll see you married now

  to a prince, a young god?

  .

  SOLDIERS and PATROKLOS

  ?the finest

  in all the world wide"

  .

  BRISEIS

  That voice was Patroklos

  the kindest of men

  .

  SOLDIERS: And the silver death-bringing god...

  .

  BRISEIS:?was Achilles

  .

  (Immediate shout from the soldiers, with drum beat)

  .

  SOLDIERS: Achilles. Call Achilles!

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Achilles the champion

  Our fastest, our best

  Achilles!

  .

  (Soldiers sway with drum beat, becoming fully lit upstage of scrim, Agamemnon at their head)

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Nine long years of seige

  but Troy's wall

  still stands

  (Shout)

  Agamemnon!

  .

  Nine long years of seige

  but Troy's wall

  still stands

  Agamemnon!

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Men and ships came

  All the kingdoms of Greece

  for Agamemnon

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Nine long years of seige

  but Troy's wall

  still stands

  Agamemnon!

  .

  PATROKLOS

  We came for the woman

  came for revenge

  with Agamemnon!

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Agamemnon

  King of Mycenae

  golden kingdom of Greece

  .

  PATROKLOS

  We came with Agamemnon

  came for his brother's wife

  for Helen of Sparta

  .

  SOLDIERS: Now Helen of Troy!

  .

  BRISEIS:

  The armies were bored

  they had nothing to show

  .

  SOLDIERS: No reward!

  .

  BRISEIS: So they ravished our mountain

  .

  SOLDIERS

  We ravished the mountain

  for prizes

  nights of pleasure

  a dancing feast

  .

  BRISEIS

  Now I am the prize of Achilles

  but Patroklos

  dear friend

  promised true

  .

  Achilles took me

  not rudely

  without anger

  through my tears

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Nights of pleasure

  spoil and prizes

  a dancing feast

  .

  BRISEIS

  Still, the best prize

  is Agamemnon's
>
  .

  SOLDIERS

  The blushing daughter

  of a powerful priest!

  .

  (Sudden bright image, upscrim, of Chryseis, the priest's daughter)

  .

  (Chorus: noisy partying gradually overwhelmed, stilled by single ominous tone as dawn rises)

  .

  PATROKLOS

  But at dawn

  when the rose-flame ball

  lifts through the mist

  its trail burning purple

  straight across waves

  straight up the sand

  .

  SOLDIERS

  But at dawn

  something new

  breaks on land

  .

  (Chryseis' image is disappearing)

  .

  BRISEIS:

  A whisper

  a fearful word

  comes wafting

  from tent into tent

  .

  (Soldiers begins whispers that will swell)

  .

  PATROKLOS

  A whisper

  wakens the living

  to quiver

  to hide

  to draw tent-flaps tight

  .

  BRISEIS: But too late

  .

  SOLDIERS: (Barely audible) The plague...the plague

  .

  BRISEIS and PATROKLOS

  The whisper

  the fearful word

  still hurries on

  licentiously curling

  like mist before dawn

  .

  SOLDIERS: The plague. It's the plague!

  .

  (The scrim lifts; the Soldiers, plague-stricken, swarm - a living fresco of victims. Briseis, surrounded, moves upstage, hidden behind Soldiers who writhe-)

  .

  SOLDIERS (Individuals and Chorus)

  Some god has sent us this

  Infection!

  Stay away!

  What can we do?

  Stay away!

  No, save us! Save us!

  Stay away!

  .

  (Achilles entering; Soldiers swarm to the side, giving Achilles a grand entrance)

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Achilles! Call Achilles!

  Achilles the champion

  the fastest, the best

  Call "Achilles"

  and all Trojans

  even Hector the mighty

  hide behind walls

  Achilles!

  .

  (Achilles is within reach; some gasping victims try to reach him, while others hold them back. Soldiers plead-)

  .

  Help us, save us, heal us please!

  .

  (Achilles stops, aware of their reaching for him: instant silence)

  .

  ACHILLES

  They are soldiers

  Do not hold them from me

  .

  (A hesitation, then one soldier speaks)

  .

  SOLDIER

  Great Achilles

  They have the plague

  .

  (Loud murmuring, as soldiers verify their condition)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Then their need is great

  Do you think I fear plague?

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Great Achilles

  fleet as wind

  loved by the gods

  Tell Agamemnon

  Beg him for us

  You can speak

  and you can save

  .

  It is Agamemnon

  the omens tell us

  it is he

  who brought the plague

  .

  (Agamemnon enters self-satisfied, leads Chryseis the priest's daughter, her eyes shyly averted)

  .

  (Achilles gestures sharply; soldiers surround him. He bends to listen to them. Agamemnon stops, imperiously)

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  What is this howling

  this chaos?

  And who says

  I am the cause!

  .

  SOLDIERS: Help us, save us, heal us, please!

  .

  SOLDIER

  Great Agamemnon

  leader of the armies

  they have the plague!

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  I can see what they have

  Clean it up

  whatever it takes!

  No attack can be launched

  not even defense

  in this state

  .

  (The soldier bows, but looks helplessly to Achilles)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Great leader

  a way has been whispered

  .

  AGAMEMNON: To rid us of this plague?

  .

  ACHILLES

  One way

  But the soldiers have fear

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Damn their fear!

  What is the way?

  .

  ACHILLES: A beautiful girl

  .

  AGAMEMNON: (Startled, but pleased) My prize?

  .

  ACHILLES: She's the daughter of a priest?

  .

  AGAMEMNON: And amazingly adept

  .

  ACHILLES: Her father came to beg for her?

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Pathetic, yes

  He offered ransom

  .

  ACHILLES: And you refused?

  .

  AGAMEMNON: I threw him out

  .

  ACHILLES

  You refused

  And we have plague

  .

  AGAMEMNON: What?

  .

  ACHILLES and SOLDIERS: And so we have plague

  .

  (Agamemnon swells with anger, eyes flashing with rage)

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  No!

  Damnable priests

  They prophesy

  nothing but evil!

  It cannot be so

  .

  ACHILLES: There is one way to know

  .

  AGAMEMNON: (Explodes) No!

  .

  (The soldiers, dismayed, groan, cough, seem worse. Agamemnon, looks them over, then at Chryseis, knowing the omen is true)

  .

  ACHILLES: Send her home

  .

  (Agamemnon is furious, anguished, but draws himself up proudly)

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Let no one say

  Agamemnon

  does not tend his troops

  .

  (Chryseis looks up hopefully, steps forward)

  .

  If she must go

  I'll let her go

  .

  (The soldiers rouse feebly, joyful. Chryseis bows gratefully to Achilles)

  .

  AGAMEMNON (Furious)

  But you

  must find me another!

  .

  (Achilles, mild until now, turns on Agamemnon, suddenly angry)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Insatiate dog

  How!?

  We have no standing pool

  of women

  .

  (From the soldiers, Patroklos steps toward Achilles, worried, a restraining hand out, while Achilles goes on raging)

  .

  ACHILLES

  All prizes

  have been given

  Do you intend

  to take one back?

  .

  (Agamemnon smiles at Patroklos, nods toward Chryseis)

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Release her

  Send her home

  Accept no ransom

  .

  (Joy from all. Two soldiers make a way for Chryseis as she begins to move out. But Ach
illes, wary, senses Agamemnon's intention)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Return her

  to her father now

  and get another

  when we ravish Troy

  .

  Unless you think

  we never will?

  .

  (Agamemnon, still smiling, ignores Achilles' challenge. Chryseis is gone)

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  So you keep your prize

  while I give up mine?

  No. Let the Greeks

  find me another...

  .

  or I take Briseis

  .

  (Achilles, restrained until now, explodes)

  .

  ACHILLES

  My prize?!

  Arrogant snake

  You're full of nothing

  but lust and greed

  Why should I fight for you?

  I'll leave!

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Then leave!

  What do I need

  with a strutting

  acid-tongued pup?

  You set yourself

  equal to me?

  Now feel the power of Agamemnon

  King of kings

  Give her up!

  .

  (Enraged, Achilles roars and draws his sword. But just as he raises it to strike, his head jerks backward; he is frozen in dazzling light)

  .

  VOICE OF ATHENA: (Amplfied) Stop your sword!

  .

  (Light and sound projections as Briseis narrates the supernatural moment)

  .

  ACHILLES: (To the light) Let go!

  .

  BRISEIS

  Down swept Athena

  golden daughter of Zeus

  unseen by all

  but her dear Achilles

  With her terrible eyes

  ablaze

  she yanked his fiery hair

  .

  VOICE OF ATHENA

  Put back your sword

  Slash him only with words

  Another day

  he will pay

  Obey!

  .

  (Achilles head is released. Alarmed, Patroklos has his hand on Achilles as he speaks to Agamemnon. Achilles lowers his sword, still gazing upward)

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Wise Agamemnon

  Though you have more power

  do not take the girl

  that was given to him

  And Achilles, you...

  .

  ACHILLES

  The Goddess stopped my hand.

  I would have killed him, Patroklos

  .

  (Agamemnon stands calm, smiling)

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Soft-voiced Patroklos

  this quarrelsome boy

  does not deserve you

  .

  (Achilles whirls on Agamemnon)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Wine-sot! Dog-face

  without any gut!

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Achilles, please

  You owe him allegiance!

  .

  ACHILLES

  He's not my Lord!

  I am a Prince!

  .

  (Challenging Agamemnon)

  .

  Do you ever

  stand in frontlines

  of the battle?

  When do you venture

  on a raid?

  .

  AGAMEMNON: (Warmly, to Patroklos) Why not leave him?

  .

  ACHILLES

  Never!

  Never do you dare

  a fight!

  .

  PATROKLOS (Sadly)

  Achilles

  You're making

  the Trojans rejoice

  .

  ACHILLES (Spins on Patroklos)

  I have no quarrel with Trojans!

  What have Trojans done to me?

  Have they raided my cattle, my horses

  Have they cut my harvests

  from off the rich plain?

  No!

  I came to battle

  for this man's revenge

  and he, he alone

  offends me

  .

  (Achilles whirls on Agamemnon in a towering rage, raising his scepter in the air. Soldiers cower, terrified at Achilles' rage)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Thief!!

  By this scepter

  which will nevermore sprout leaf

  or shoot or bud

  being once carved from its tree

  I swear

  in the day of your distress

  when you come to fall

  at the hand of Hector

  you will look and not find me

  you will know not what to do

  you will tear your heart with rage

  for the day you insulted

  the greatest of the Greeks

  .

  (Achilles hurls his scepter to the ground. Stunned pause. Soldier who took Chryseis away runs on excited, but stops, frightened by the stony silence)

  .

  SOLDIER (Announcing)

  His daughter is delivered

  safe to the priest

  .

  (Soldiers straighten, feeling beginning of relief from plague, but all still riveted on Achilles' glare at Agamemnon)

  .

  AGAMEMNON (Looking at Achilles)

  Patroklos?

  Give me his girl

  .

  (Patroklos looks at Achilles, who doesn't flinch)

  .

  ACHILLES (Softly)

  Yes

  It is fit

  .

  It was you who first

  brought her to me-

  .

  Bring Briseis

  .

  (Patroklos troubled, moves to get Briseis. Soldiers part, and Briseis is revealed happily approaching Achilles, who looks longingly at her, then turns away)

  .

  (Patroklos holds out his hand and Briseis steps forward to go with him, but when she sees she's where he's leading her, she sadly turns to gaze back at Achilles when she is handed to Agamemnon)

  .

  (Achilles refuses to watch as Agamemnon exits with Briseis, in grand procession. The soldiers, relieved the plague is lifting, follow Agamemnon, cheering)

  .

  (The stage grows darker and darker while Achilles is left alone; he is now at the edge of the sea in a storm. Sounds of waves crashing, and rolling surf)

  .

  (Alone, a gigantic roar erupts from Achilles. When he has roared to the peak of his anguish, he weeps. When his weeping becomes deep and loud, he calls-)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Thetis. (Waits) Thetis!

  .

  (The surf becomes louder, and Achilles calls his loudest-)

  .

  Mother!!

  .

  (Sudden quiet, then softer wave music. Then, out of dark sea and mist, Thetis comes dancing. A grand, mysterious entrance. Sea may be created only by lighting and sound, or by colored streamers, flowing fabric, and mime)

  .

  (When Thetis sings, the Chorus may echo her, singing from offstage. When he sees Thetis coming, Achilles joins her dancing beside the waves)

  .

  THETIS

  Seek no answer

  from the sea

  The rolling mother of all

  knows not why

  she needs no reason

  to be

  .

  She only flows

  bounded by

  dappled sway

  deep streaming light

  dancing bright

  through indigo

  turquoise

  marine

  .

  Seek no answer

  from the sea

  she knows
not why

  she needs no reason

  to be

  .

  Only flow

  in tomorrow

  Let it embrace you

  leaving no trace

  of today

  .

  Seek no answer

  from the sea

  Only flow

  Be still and know

  your future

  in her endless

  sigh

  .

  (Thetis teases Achilles back and forth with the dance, says laughing-)

  .

  THETIS

  There once was a boy

  who ran off to the sea

  Was it you?

  .

  But he ran and he ran

  so fast

  faster than even the wind

  had seen

  a boy run

  .

  Then he sang and he sang

  so well

  better than even the birds

  had heard

  a boy sing

  .

  So they whispered

  he must be a God...

  What does this boy

  want with me?

  .

  (Achilles, drawn away from his sorrow, laughing, suddenly remembers his anguish, and sits abruptly, rude-)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Why do you ask

  what you know?

  .

  THETIS

  You seldom call

  You've become such a man

  .

  ACHILLES: Agamemnon...

  .

  THETIS: He's no one beside you

  .

  ACHILLES

  He dishonored me!

  He stole my Briseis

  The woman. My prize

  .

  (Thetis suddenly frightened, leans to stroke Achilles)

  .

  THETIS

  Calm. Oh, be calm

  Not too much anger

  dear son

  born in pain

  only to die

  do not choose

  to be taken too soon

  by the greedy God

  ruby-stained War

  Calm. Oh, be calm

  .

  ACHILLES

  Like waves at dusk, Mother

  I'm glass-smooth

  And I will not fight

  .

  THETIS (Joyful)

  You'll leave the war?

  You'll go home!

  .

  ACHILLES

  Perhaps I will

  but first I need

  a deed you alone

  can do

  .

  (She is over-joyed, embraces, cradles him)

  .

  THETIS

  I can save you from all

  but death

  .

  ACHILLES

  It's a promise, then?

  You'll do this favor for me?

  .

  THETIS: Whatever you need

  .

  ACHILLES

  Then make sure

  the Greeks lose

  .

  THETIS: (Frightened) Your own side lose?

  .

  ACHILLES: Someone must lose

  .

  THETIS: Then Hector wins

  .

  ACHILLES: Hector is worthy

  .

  THETIS

  But I fear him

  Him beyond all

  .

  (As though from out of her mind, Hector appears, upstage, a powerful, mysterious figure. She sways, beginning her exit)

  .

  THETIS

  Seek no answer

  from the sea...

  .

  ACHILLES: Is he stronger than me?

  .

  THETIS: None is stronger than you

  .

  ACHILLES: (Bitterly) No one mortal

  .

  THETIS

  But him

  you must fear

  .

  ACHILLES: I must fear?

  .

  THETIS

  Soon after he dies

  so will you.

  .

  ACHILLES (Sharply)

  But I have your promise?

  The Greeks will lose

  .

  THETIS (Sad, vanishing)

  You do

  I know not why

  the Trojans will rise

  I only flow

  Be still and know

  .

  (A bold battle cry, and Trojan soldiers come running on, to surround Hector)

  .

  TROJAN SOLDIERS: (Marching chant) Hector! Hector!

  .

  (Upstage of them, in kingly state, appears Priam, looking on. In great spirits, they take battle stances, tumble, march)

  .

  THETIS (Voice amplified)

  With the ancient pride

  of Priam their King

  the Trojans will rise

  and a thousand spears clash

  with one trumpeting voice

  to boldly rejoice

  .

  PRIAM

  My brilliant son, Hector-

  Rejoice!

  .

  (Thetis and Achilles are gone)

  .

  HECTOR

  My honored father

  We Trojans strike harder than Greeks

  here under the eyes

  of our children

  and wives

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Hector! Hector! Hector!

  His face grows dark

  as sudden night

  his eyes flash fire

  like lightening in a storm

  as we strike

  in a raging pack

  close on the cry

  of Hector

  .

  PRIAM

  Strike as you will

  fulfilling

  my ancient pride

  for Achilles

  sits coolly

  aside!

  .

  (A great cheering battle cry; then sounds of battle, as the stage darkens and the soldiers swirl into the fight. Last seen - roaring Hector as Priam salutes him)

  .

  (Isolated light on Briseis. Behind her, the tent of Achilles is swirled into place)

  .

  BRISEIS

  A prize is passed on

  and no one asks

  Is there a difference

  'tween tent and tent?

  Oh yes

  .

  The tent of Achilles

  yes, I remember

  .

  If I woke with pain

  on my heart

  for the arbor of clustered grapes

  over my hearth-room door

  or the three olive trees

  on the hill

  there came music

  soft from beyond the drape

  delicate music

  smoothing my tear-stained face

  .

  (Achilles may enter like a dream)

  .

  Light gathered round

  his face and limbs

  moving on him

  like an easy cloud

  .

  I shied

  like a kid

  behind its mother

  In the sunset's wash

  of orange gold

  the murmur and sudden laugh

  of old stories told

  new politics and plans

  were never denied me

  .

  He minded not

  my listening

  would even stop

  to explain

  though I

  was only a woman

  .

  (Dawn. Achilles sits alone, playing a harp, in his tent)

  .

  BRISEIS

  But now I am gone

  and he sits with his harp

  alone...


  .

  (Scene expands to Achilles' idle soldiers sluggishly cleaning their weapons)

  .

  BRISEIS

  ...while his soldiers

  grow old

  their purpose in life

  no longer sharp

  out of battle

  .

  (Briseis disappears when the soldiers speak, surly and bored)

  .

  SOLDIER 1

  Watch where you swing

  that thing

  .

  SOLDIER 2

  Aw, go soak yours

  in brine

  .

  SOLDIER 3

  You, pretty face

  were in my dream

  .

  SOLDIER 1: And you in mine

  .

  SOLDIER 3

  That old watchdog at home

  was screwing your wife

  .

  (They fight, but Achilles strikes a strong chord and begins a story-song-)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Sing a song

  of Peleus

  chosen by the gods

  .

  SOLDIER 2: Chosen for what?

  .

  ACHILLES

  To play a slippery game

  under a blistering

  moon

  .

  SOLDIER 3: Chosen why?

  .

  ACHILLES

  Why is a long

  winding tale

  Why is a falling

  of stars

  .

  SOLDIER 1

  Then sing "Peleus"

  the song of your father

  .

  SOLDIER 2

  Sing Peleus

  sire to Achilles

  .

  ACHILLES

  Deep beneath

  flowing crystal

  way down under

  clear green waves

  quietly was born

  a thing of such grace

  that the king of the gods

  came near to lose his place

  .

  SOLDIER 3: That isn't Peleus

  .

  SOLDIER 1

  That's Thetis

  his mother

  .

  ACHILLES

  She knew only

  the melody of waters

  the wisdom of the sands

  no trace of the powers

  her grace could command

  .

  Old man of the ocean

  he saw Thetis first

  could barely contain

  the mighty thirst

  she aroused

  He wanted marriage

  .

  SOLDIER 3: That's Poseidon?

  .

  ACHILLES

  But already his brother

  the king of the skies

  had seen the lightning

  in Thetis' eyes

  She must be his bride

  .

  SOLDIER 1

  That's Zeus

  but come to Peleus!

  .

  ACHILLES

  The stage was set for battle

  rival kings of sea and sky

  while the female

  commanding all

  cared for nothing

  but the tides

  .

  But before

  the sky-god winner

  could claim Thetis

  for his bride

  a potent sign

  swept down to drown

  these love-crazed rites

  .

  SOLDIER 3 (Boldly, as oracle)

  A son of Thetis

  will be mightier

  than his father!

  .

  SOLDIER 2: Hah. That will limp his stick!

  .

  ACHILLES

  If Zeus so wed

  the poor sky-god

  would live in dread

  of being overthrown

  by his own

  son

  He could not have her

  .

  And furthermore

  to be sure

  he must forestall

  by any means at all

  Thetis from bearing sons

  of power

  .

  SOLDIER 3: Get Peleus!

  .

  ACHILLES

  Yes, Peleus

  A fine man

  but mortal

  A son greater

  than Peleus

  would threaten

  no god

  .

  (Soldiers begin to mime the story; it may be danced in silhouette on the scrim)

  .

  SOLDIER 1

  So the gods

  showed this mortal

  .

  SOLDIER 2: Peleus!

  .

  SOLDIER 3: Where to wait

  .

  ACHILLES

  Behind a jutting rock

  on a tiny island

  unknown to men

  Sandy cove

  cave underwater

  inlet sparkling

  turquoise

  "She'll come naked

  to bathe at noon"

  they told him

  so Peleus would wait

  .

  They had warned him

  to blind his eyes

  for in seeing her

  he would lose

  the strength to attack

  .

  When she came swimming near

  he did not forget

  and pulled a weed-clogged net

  before his eyes

  When he heard Thetis climb

  onto the rock

  he dived

  and caught her by surprise

  She struggled mightily

  turning first...

  .

  SOLDIER 2: Into a dolphin!

  .

  ACHILLES: Huge, leaping off the rock

  .

  SOLDIER 3: But he clung fast

  .

  ACHILLES

  She turned next

  into an octopus

  squeezing

  the life from him

  .

  SOLDIER 1: But he still breathed

  .

  ACHILLES

  She turned then into

  a slippery serpent

  then a spiny clawing lobster

  then an ink-spitting fish

  .

  So for hours and hours

  he clung gasping

  sticky, stung

  covered with ink

  until she yielded

  lying at last

  herself

  within his arms

  and they slaked passion then

  rolling foam-tossed

  in the waves

  .

  SOLDIER 2: Come to the wedding gifts now

  .

  SOLDIER 3: Come to the son!

  .

  (Achilles looks up suddenly, seeing Patroklos exhausted, at the tent's entrance)

  .

  SOLDIER 1: Patroklos!

  .

  SOLDIER 2: How goes the war?

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Not well

  .

  (Soldiers cheer)

  .

  For the Greeks

  .

  SOLDIER 1: (Confused) What?

  .

  SOLDIERS: Tell! Tell!

  .

  PATROKLOS: I don't have that much breath

  .

  ACHILLES: But they'd like to hear

  .

  PATROKLOS

  How can they hear?

  Roaring surf

  against the dry shore

  is not so loud

  as the deafening scream of death

  released by our armies

  .

  ACHILLES: That's well.

  .

  (Soldiers gasp, staring at Achilles)

  .<
br />
  PATROKLOS: Achilles, you must come to fight!

  .

  (Achilles turns away)

  .

  SOLDIER 1: Was Hector there?

  .

  PATROKLOS: Hector ran

  .

  SOLDIER 2: He ran?

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Close on the heels

  of our fleeing Greeks

  like a lion snapping their backs

  butchering the last

  spurring the rest

  with terror

  .

  (Achilles laughs. Soldiers shrink from Achilles toward Patroklos-)

  .

  SOLDIER 2 and 3: Tell, tell!

  .

  PATROKLOS

  I saw Chromios caught in his buttock

  The spearhead drove

  past pelvis bone

  into his bladder

  .

  He dropped to his knees

  with a gasp

  then extending like a worm

  let his dark blood

  drench the earth

  .

  SOLDIERS: (Reacting lustily) Uuuhaah!

  .

  PATROKLOS (To Achilles)

  That was Chromios

  composer of sweet verses

  Do you still laugh?

  .

  (Achilles does not respond; Patroklos presses-)

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Abas, only joy of his father

  was struck on the forehead

  over the nose

  smashing the bones

  so both eyes dropped

  and lay in the dirt

  at his feet

  .

  (Soldiers terrified, but afraid to cry, giggle like children at a horror movie)

  .

  ACHILLES: Patroklos, what are you doing?

  .

  (But Patroklos expands, like a comic giving his audience more-)

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Hector even speared Phaistos

  planter of seedlings

  who stumbled

  on the rim of his own shield

  running

  to get to the ships

  so "pop" - with nothing but his belly

  Phaistos received Hector's spear

  then like a helpless turtle

  squirmed

  .

  (Soldiers' laughter explodes, but Patroklos breaks down. Stunned silence, except his weeping)

  .

  ACHILLES

  What is it

  Has your father died?

  Or mine?

  You look like a child

  who's run after his mother

  begging to be held

  pulling on her dress

  .

  PATROKLOS: People are dying!

  .

  ACHILLES: It's a war

  .

  PATROKLOS

  They're our friends!

  Gods save me

  from anger like yours

  .

  ACHILLES

  What's wrong with dying?

  Life is only a moment

  we all will lose

  .

  PATROKLOS

  You feel nothing!

  You're not human

  Don't tell me

  your father was Peleus

  It was the grey sea

  smashed

  on towering rocks

  that bore you

  in the image of a man

  Where is your loyalty?

  .

  ACHILLES: I am alone.

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Not when you've pledged

  to fight with the armies!

  Where is your honor?

  .

  ACHILLES

  Ask Agamemnon!

  It is he

  who took it from me

  .

  PATROKLOS

  The Trojans

  have reached our ships

  and you sit

  pouting like a child!

  Will you fight?

  .

  (No response)

  .

  Then let me!

  .

  (Startled, Achilles looks sharply at Patroklos. Briseis and Thetis apart, alarmed)

  .

  BRISEIS: No...

  .

  THETIS: (Amplified whisper) No...

  .

  ACHILLES: You?

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Let me go fight!

  With your men

  .

  ACHILLES (Roars)

  With men

  who whine and grumble

  behind my back?!

  .

  (Patroklos scared, freezes. But Achilles suddenly laughs, magically playful)

  .

  ACHILLES

  You call me

  a pouting child?

  Then let's play-

  Pretend you're me!

  .

  Stand here, my friend

  and prepare

  to wear a gift

  from the gods

  Bring me Peleus' wedding gifts!

  .

  (The Soldiers at first surprised, then run to bring Achilles' gleaming armor. Briseis and Thetis, as though in Achilles mind, try to intervene-)

  .

  BRISEIS: This is wrong, Achilles.

  .

  THETIS: The god Apollo loves Hector

  .

  BRISEIS and THETIS: Do not let him go to the fight!

  .

  (Achilles seems not to hear them, as Patroklos is ritually dressed in his armor)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Patroklos-

  it was you at my side

  when I held my first sword

  you as the guide

  when I took my first run

  through the edging tide

  Now

  you will wear

  my armor

  .

  (Achilles handles the armor with affection)

  .

  This came to Peleus

  my father

  with great gratitude

  on the day he married

  the goddess of the sea

  All the gods rejoiced

  now she was bedded safe

  that Thetis' progeny would be

  no more dangerous

  than me

  .

  Wear it in health

  beloved friend

  .

  THETIS: Don't let him go!

  .

  ACHILLES

  When you stride out alone

  the sight of you

  upon the hill

  will chill the Trojans' bones

  They'll think you're me

  .

  Fear will take hold of them

  while your spirit will fly

  Unleashed by

  my armor

  you'll do amazing deeds

  You'll push them back

  from off the ships!

  Then come back here

  .

  Do not chase them cross the plain

  Do not venture to the walls

  Do not engage great Hector

  He is meat for me

  The sun god fights for him

  So let him be

  .

  (In spot, in Achilles' armor, Patroklos strikes a battle pose; light brightens, isolating him; soldiers gather eagerly and sweep away the tent)

  .

  CHORUS (Whispering on the fly)

  Achilles?

  Achilles?

  Is it Achilles!

  .

  PATROKLOS: Now this is life!

  .

  (As Achilles backs away, watching, battle begins. Patroklos and soldiers give battle cry, turn to attack a swarm of Trojan soldiers who run in to fight them. Briseis, isolated in light, narrates-)

  .

  BRISEIS
>
  As out of clear air

  shrieking

  the hurricane comes on

  so loud was the scream of battle

  .

  CHORUS (As fight begins)

  Is it Achilles?

  Is it Achilles?

  .

  BRISEIS

  Brave Patroklos

  touched by the spirit of Achilles

  Achilles whom he worships

  Achilles whom he longs to be

  .

  (All fight. Patroklos' energy phenomenal; Trojans begin to be beaten back. Briseis speaks at regrouping times, between actions)

  .

  BRISEIS

  Patroklos wheels

  All Trojans turn about

  seeking only to escape

  screaming death

  .

  (Trojans are pushed back. Briseis cries out to Patroklos-)

  .

  BRISEIS

  They're on the run

  They've left the ships!

  Return now

  Go back and tell Achilles

  Do not chase them cross the plain

  Do not venture to the walls

  Do not engage...

  .

  (But Patroklos' fury only grows, he leads soldiers chasing the Trojans)

  .

  BRISEIS

  Brave Patroklos

  touched by the spirit of Achilles

  Achilles whom he worships

  Achilles whom he longs to be

  Plain Patroklos

  beloved of the boy god

  older, wiser than Achilles

  now feels life-purpose

  surging to its peak

  .

  (Trojans, fighting for their lives, escape through their city wall - and create the closed barrier by lining their tight wall of shields against Patroklos)

  .

  BRISEIS: Do not venture to the wall!

  .

  (But Patroklos storms the shield-wall)

  .

  BRISEIS

  But oh the sparkle

  of excellence sublime

  of clear soaring spirit

  like Achilles

  Oh...to be pure hero

  however alone

  like Achilles

  .

  (As he climbs the wall, Patroklos' head is suddenly thrown back, frozen in dazzling light, and he topples down.)

  .

  BRISEIS

  Three times Patroklos climbed

  Three times he fell to earth

  but as he rose to try a fourth

  high atop the wall

  the sun-god Apollo stood blazing

  and hurled him down.

  .

  GOD VOICE (Apollo amplified)

  Proud fool

  Troy will not crumble

  for you

  .

  (As Patroklos falls again, Achilles' helmet topples to the ground. Patroklos stands bewildered, panting, but undaunted. The shield-wall parts slightly and through it comes Hector. The wall, in chorus, keeps repeating Achilles' order-)

  .

  CHORUS

  Do not engage great Hector...

  Just let him be!

  .

  (As Patroklos tries to gather his strength, a Trojan darts out, stabbing him in the back. Though Patroklos still fights ferociously, Hector bears down on him, throws him to the ground, stabs him in the belly, still gripping his sword)

  .

  HECTOR

  Achilles sent you to kill me

  and your fool's heart

  agreed?

  .

  PATROKLOS (Gasping)

  No need

  Patroklos is no one

  but you do name

  your angel of death:

  Achilles

  .

  HECTOR: Unless I am his

  .

  (Hector jerks his sword out of Patroklos.)

  .

  PATROKLOS: (Dying cry) Achilles!!

  .

  (The instant of Patroklos death, Achilles stands, hearing his cry...

  ...and Hector lifts Achilles' helmet over his own head...

  ...the action freezes in a MIE pose...

  ...an unearthly cry of fury and anguish echoes far away)

  END ACT ONE

  ACT TWO

  Briseis, alone. Soldiers behind. Dark. Lights play on the scrim and mimed shadows of the actions described may appear.

  .

  BRISEIS

  It was a long time

  before I knew

  the kindest of men

  was gone

  Sweet Patroklos

  If he gave his life

  to war-

  War must be a great god

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Patroklos no longer knew

  either sun or rain

  as Trojans swarmed

  like locusts

  upon him

  tearing off the armor of Achilles

  .

  BRISEIS

  Bold Hector longed

  to slice Patroklos' gentle head

  from its soft neck

  to thrust it up

  atop a stake

  to fling his mutilate body

  to ravenous dogs

  .

  SOLDIERS: But Greeks came screaming down

  .

  BRISEIS

  So like two screeching vultures

  clash

  above a single prey

  .

  SOLDIERS

  The armies met and clawed

  above Patroklos

  One hitched his foot

  to a shield

  whipping its sling

  fast round his tendons

  to drag him away

  .

  But that one was hit

  through the cheek of his helmet

  and so

  with soft brain bleeding

  down the spear

  through his eyehole

  he fell as well

  upon Patroklos

  .

  BRISEIS

  Only the horses

  given by gods

  to Peleus

  stood aside

  refused to move

  leaned their heads along the ground

  .

  SOLDIERS: ...and wept warm tears

  .

  BRISEIS: ...for Patroklos

  .

  SOLDIERS

  Ranged in a circle

  the armies pulled

  pulled in all directions

  pulled Patroklos

  as at the stretching of an oxhide

  stretching till it's flat

  till the moisture squeezes out

  and the fat soaks in

  so the armies leaned and pulled

  and there was slaughter

  on both sides

  until the earth ran with blood

  beneath Patroklos

  .

  BRISEIS and SOLDIERS

  Until a sound

  struck the air above

  that made them all stop still

  a sound so strange

  unearthly

  piercing not the ear

  but down beneath

  the root of life

  a wail

  that wedged new terror

  even in the boldest throat

  of all who heard

  .

  (Battle sounds build until air is split with a SCREAM heard as high as Olympus and down to the depths of the sea. Briseis and soldiers fade back. Achilles stumbles on screaming, and throws himself down flailing and groaning)

  .

  (Thetis entering, draws Achilles into a violent dance to match his raging heart)

  .

  THETIS (Urging in rhythm)

  Speak...you must speak

  Let it go

  or the heart will break

  .

  (Achilles will not speak, only dances mor
e wildly)

  .

  THETIS

  I would Peleus had wed

  a mortal

  instead of me

  For you, my son

  are much too great

  Too great in grief

  Too great in love

  Too great in arrogance

  in bravery

  in anger

  .

  ACHILLES: (Scream) Aaaaahh!

  .

  THETIS: Too great in anger.

  .

  (Tortured Achilles finally collapses. Thetis catches and cradles him)

  .

  THETIS: Speak, speak...

  .

  ACHILLES

  Sweet sweet anger

  As dripping honey

  slows the wind

  it swarms like smoke

  until it chokes

  my heart

  .

  I sat

  a barren burden

  on the land

  and let my friend

  be butchered!

  .

  Was this why

  you feared

  the monster Hector?

  .

  THETIS: No

  .

  ACHILLES: He wears my armor now

  .

  THETIS: You said you would leave this land

  .

  ACHILLES

  Soon

  .

  Mother

  you must get me

  what I need:

  a new armor

  .

  (Thetis alarmed, backs away)

  .

  THETIS: You must not meet Hector

  .

  ACHILLES: Why? If I am the stronger

  .

  THETIS

  Your destiny is clear my son

  Two ways

  lie there for you

  You may choose life

  or glory

  .

  ACHILLES

  What life?!

  The gods have life

  not I

  No man can choose

  Life is only a thing he will lose

  .

  And my second choice is glory?

  But what will glory mean

  Perhaps a sweet release-

  Until I kill

  the demon Hector

  I will have no peace

  .

  THETIS

  If you kill him

  you will die

  Let Hector be

  .

  ACHILLES

  Unless I kill him

  I cannot live

  So get the armor

  for me

  .

  (Achilles raises his hand; Thetis bows, dance of armor begins. The chorus mimes assembling the armor made by the Fire God for Achilles)

  .

  THETIS

  Peleus

  in wedding me

  could not make me

  mortal

  But you

  in childbed

  have done it

  even so

  .

  The mortal mother

  coils a line of woe

  no goddess knows

  It grapples her

  with his first cry

  and binds her

  evermore

  A pull

  from him to her

  command inexorable

  to abandon earth and sky

  upon that cry

  saying

  .

  I am the cause

  of his life

  and I

  must keep him in it

  Try as he will

  to die

  .

  Let the armor woo you

  away from war

  It celebrates sweet life

  fashioned by the God of Fire

  to hold no limbs but yours

  .

  (Achilles moves, eager to wear his new armor, but the Chorus wants to sing of it)

  .

  CHORUS

  The fire-god etched

  the earth upon it

  and the sky

  the great sea's water

  and the tireless sun

  the moon waxed full

  and all the constellations

  .

  And in great beauty spread

  two glorious cities

  with marriages and festivals

  a council and a court

  herds of cattle

  sheep and shepherds

  soft fields tilled

  and teams with plows

  A great ox slaughtered

  grape-bearers dancing

  girls and boys

  and all

  upon an Ocean River

  binding strong the outward rim

  .

  (As Achilles receives his glittering armor, drumming signals a procession coming)

  .

  SOLDIERS (Off)

  Nine long years of seige

  but Troy's wall still stands

  Agamemnon!

  .

  THETIS

  The god did these carvings

  of this earth before

  there was war

  .

  SOLDIERS (Off)

  Massed armies of Greece

  are beaten down by this land

  Agamemnon!

  .

  THETIS (Disappearing)

  Choose life, my son

  choose life

  .

  (A partition screens Achilles from delegation moving toward him; he, donning his new armor, occupies one side; wounded soldiers, led by Agamemnon, also limping, on the other. Soldiers catching sight of Achilles are dazzled, shield their eyes from his brilliance. They may be cloaked to under-dress Trojan uniforms.)

  .

  ACHILLES (Amazed, to himself)

  I feel the armor work

  Life spilling

  its feast of joy

  filling my veins until

  all my fury is distilled

  to gentle wisdom

  and now I see it all

  like a god

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  A long time away

  great Achilles!

  .

  (Agamemnon waits on his side, but Achilles does not respond)

  .

  Too long, may I say?

  Petty quarrels

  shouldn't keep us from...

  Perhaps you'd like news

  of the war?

  .

  (Silence)

  .

  Often I've thought

  our angry words were...

  .

  ACHILLES (Interrupts)

  Enough!

  Your news: the war?

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Well, we...

  Difficulties come upon us

  Hector rages irresistibly, and...

  .

  ACHILLES: I have some word of that

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  And so many of us gone

  and of those still alive

  the bravest

  lie down among the ships

  all hit by arrow or by spear

  .

  ACHILLES: Yet you are here

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Because I want...

  we want...

  We need you back, Achilles

  And there are gifts

  I wish to offer you

  in restitution

  for your injury

  .

  ACHILLES: Agamemnon...

  .

  AGAMEMNON (Loud, insisting-)

  Seven unfired tripods

  Ten talents' worth of gold

  .

  ACHILLES

  You dishonored me

  What does it matter now?

  .

  AGAMEMNON: And twenty shining cauldrons...

  .

  ACHILLES

 
You took

  the bride of my heart...

  Now what did we come here for

  Helen, was it not?

  .

  AGAMEMNON: Twelve horses - racers all!

  .

  ACHILLES

  Yes, it was Helen

  Each man

  loves his own

  as I loved mine

  .

  AGAMEMNON: And seven women of Lemnos...

  .

  ACHILLES

  If you gave me

  twenty times what you possess

  as many gifts

  as there are grains of sand

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  Their handwork is superb

  and their beauty...

  .

  ACHILLES

  I would still go home

  .

  My father Peleus

  will give me a bride

  My one desire

  is to enjoy with her

  the pleasures

  of my own sweet land

  .

  (Agamemnon, astonished and dismayed, plays his last card)

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  I've brought one

  who misses you more

  Achilles

  .

  ACHILLES

  All the fabled majesties of Troy

  cannot be worth my life

  Cattle and sheep can be had

  for the lifting

  and tripods can be won

  and tawny heads of horses

  but a man's life cannot be lifted

  or won again

  once it has crossed the line

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  I return her to you now

  and before all gods

  I swear that she

  never has been touched

  by me

  .

  (Agamemnon pulls Briseis forward, beautifully adorned, and pushes her across toward Achilles. Briseis lifts a hand to him. Seeing her, Achilles is moved, reaches to her, then stops himself-)

  .

  ACHILLES

  She should have died

  before I took her

  for all the pleasure

  she can give me now

  .

  (Briseis stung, twists away, looking for the kind man she misses)

  .

  BRISEIS

  Where's my friend?

  Where is Patroklos?

  .

  (Achilles - struck by her words as if they were a dagger - roars, all his pain and rage rekindled. He strikes down the screen, and Agamemnon sees him bright in his armor. The soldiers cheer, and Achilles' roar winds him straight into battle. Briseis, stepping away from the tumult, narrates. The tent is swirled away)

  .

  BRISEIS

  Like a lion

  when spear-hit

  spins

  foam breaking on his teeth

  Then deep in his chest

  his mighty heart groans

  and lashing his ribs with his tail

  he rears-

  so Achilles' eyes raged

  full glazed

  for the fight

  .

  (Drums. Fighting. A crush of Trojans Achilles whips like a whirlwind, killing one after another)

  .

  BRISEIS

  In fury

  Achilles swept - like fire

  raised by whirling wind

  blazing

  through a dry wood mountain -

  while the black earth ran blood

  .

  (Soldiers fall in heaps and begin to fill the River - which may be presented by a long blue cloth stretched across the stage; shaken, to ripple and flow by Koken)

  .

  BRISEIS

  The noble River

  full with corpses

  heaved in anguish

  unable at last

  to cast his waters

  into the sparkling sea

  so congested was he

  with the Trojan dead

  Achilles killed

  so brutally

  .

  (Achilles grabs an unarmed boy-soldier stumbling past him; the boy slips to the ground, clutching Achilles' knees in supplication)

  .

  LYCAON: Achilles!

  .

  (Achilles pulls the boy's head by his hair and recognizes Priam's son, Lycaon)

  .

  ACHILLES

  How is this?

  The Trojans I killed

  long ago

  rise up to face me

  .

  LYCAON: My life must be charmed

  .

  ACHILLES

  You silly child of Priam

  could the grey sea not hold you?

  I scraped you from a hedge before

  and sold you off in Lemnos

  .

  LYCAON

  Great Achilles, I escaped

  and I'm weary of the fight

  What is it worth?

  You see I've stripped my helmet off

  and thrown down my sword

  .

  ACHILLES: Then feed the earth

  .

  (Achilles casts his spear, but the boy squirms away, then scrambles back, clinging again to Achilles' knees)

  .

  LYCAON

  You got a hundred oxen for me!

  Spare me now

  You've cut the throats

  of both my brothers

  My mother

  was not Hector's!

  Spare me

  Only spare me

  .

  ACHILLES

  You cry?

  Why?

  Patroklos is dead

  who was better than you

  And even I

  splendid, invincible

  with a mother immortal

  will die

  .

  (Lycaon lets go of Achilles, lifting his hands to screen himself. Achilles kills him and flings him into the river, which bellows up angrily)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Lie where fishes

  caring not for anyone

  can feed

  on the shining fat

  of Priam's son

  .

  (The River lurches, the armor of the floating dead clang together)

  .

  BRISEIS

  The rushing water

  spewed

  masses of armor

  cresting bodies

  sputtering foam and blood

  until the River itself

  enraged

  rose on its precious flood

  to curse Achilles

  .

  RIVER GOD (Chorus amplified)

  Brutal man

  do not kill more!

  My living flow is choked

  with your glut of death

  .

  (As though rising, the dead challenge Achilles from within the swirling river. Angry at the challenge, Achilles jumps in to fight the River)

  .

  ACHILLES

  All Trojans die!

  Or give Hector to me

  No howling river

  can save you

  .

  BRISEIS

  Achilles leapt to the middle

  Deep-swirl

  of boiling surge heaved-

  beating down his shield

  with its swallowing waves

  .

  (Achilles is overwhelmed by the river, and disappears within it)

  .

  BRISEIS

  Achilles swept off his feet

  catching at branches

  of an uprooted elm

  dragged the whole cliff away

  The waters ran above him

  and fiercely beneath

  rolling the soil

  from under his feet

  .

  (Achilles struggles to get free as water wraps round him. He tries to run, but the Rive
r runs after with soldiers making a huge roar, and River falling on his shoulders. He falls and twists to fight back, surfaces gasping, screams-)

  .

  ACHILLES: Gods save me!

  .

  (Red (fire) now streams from the sky, to overwhelm the River)

  BRISEIS

  When Achilles cried out

  all the gods heard

  so down swept the Fire-god

  hurling gales of flame

  to fight

  the heaving River

  .

  (Flowing streamers - red for fire, blue for water - whipped by Chorus/Koken into undulating curliques that fight for dominance amid loud fire and water sounds)

  .

  (Gasping Achilles, still fighting, is finally freed, exhausted, when the blue of the River retreats, followed by the red of the fire, and he turns to look across the plain, where a Wall of Shields has formed)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Great Wall of Troy

  will even you

  do battle?

  .

  (The Wall - chorus members behind each shield - is screaming like a crowd in terror, then through the Wall steps Hector in Achilles' old armor)

  .

  (The Wall screams, tries to pull Hector back inside. Above the Wall, the head of an old man appears, pleading-)

  .

  PRIAM

  Hector, my son

  stay inside our wall

  Have mercy on me

  We all will die

  if you fall

  .

  A young man

  can lie butchered

  still in beauty

  But an old king

  his white hair smeared

  with dung

  and eaten by dogs

  is pitiful

  .

  (Hector salutes his father, but stays rooted, in armor he stripped from Patroklos, to fight Achilles alone. Achilles sees Hector, rears roaring, begins a slow advance. Wall emits a low tone that builds as Achilles moves closer)

  .

  ACHILLES

  You died

  the moment

  you drew the blood

  of my beloved

  Patroklos

  .

  Still there you stand

  brazen

  in armor stripped

  from my dearest friend

  .

  Now it will sear your skin

  till flesh and metal blend

  for in stealing it

  you stole my honor

  .

  My spirit sears you now

  It can't release

  and fly to me

  until it sees you

  to your end

  .

  (Just as Achilles comes within striking distance, and both brace for the impact, Hector spins and evades Achilles by running away)

  .

  (Startled at first, Achilles sharply laughs, and runs after Hector. They may run in place with the wall moving opposite, behind them)

  .

  BRISEIS

  As in a dream

  a man is not able

  to catch one who runs

  nor the one who runs

  to get away

  .

  As when a hawk

  swoops for a dove

  but she slips loose

  and flies

  while he

  shrill screaming

  close after

  plunges again and again

  furious

  to take her...

  .

  so Hector would make for the gate

  and Achilles race ahead

  to prevent him

  and on and on

  one, two, three times

  round all the great walls

  Until at last Hector froze

  .

  (Suddenly Hector's head is flung back, frozen in dazzling light. Achilles stops)

  .

  BRISEIS

  For down swept

  golden Athena

  who loved Achilles well

  but to Hector she said

  .

  GOD VOICE (Athena tricking Hector)

  Run no more!

  Stand

  and we'll take him

  together

  .

  HECTOR (Amazed, to the air)

  You'll fight with me?

  Then Achilles

  die!

  .

  (Hector signals Achilles with an upraised arm. Achilles faces him, waiting)

  .

  HECTOR

  Let us swear an oath:

  If I kill you

  I will strip your sword and armor

  but give your body

  to your friends

  Will you swear the same?

  .

  ACHILLES

  What oath

  can there be

  'tween a lion

  and a man?

  .

  Did you swear

  such kind words

  for Patroklos?!

  .

  (Achilles attacks viciously. They fight. Hector, loosing, looks frantically about)

  .

  HECTOR

  Athena, help me!

  Where are you?

  .

  (Hector is bewildered. Achilles strikes)

  .

  ACHILLES

  The goddess tricked you

  She fights for me!

  .

  (At Hector's vulnerable moment, dazzling light strikes them both. But Achilles, his head thrown back, realizing the choice he's making, shouts as he strikes Hector's neck at his collarbone)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Take my life, then!

  I choose glory!

  .

  (Hector chokes, falls, lies dying with Achilles over him)

  .

  HECTOR

  As you love

  your parents

  do not fling my corpse away

  .

  ACHILLES

  Hah!

  Dogs strip your flesh

  until their fangs tire

  then birds rip what's left

  off your bones

  To see you eaten raw

  is my greatest desire

  .

  (Achilles pulls his spear roughly out of Hector, roaring-)

  .

  ACHILLES

  If this is glory

  it's not enough!

  .

  (A moan rises when Hector dies, but Greek soldiers swarm to celebrate, picking Hector's corpse, tearing off the armor. They cheer and shout, but, as armor disappears in pieces, they quiet awestruck, because Achilles still roars, still stabbing and kicking the corpse of Hector.)

  .

  BRISEIS (Apart, in darkness)

  As soldiers swarmed

  to stab the corpse

  again, again and again

  Achilles ripped his bloody armor

  off of Hector

  pierced his ankles

  lashing rawhide through the tendons

  and whipping horses to a run...

  .

  (Uneasy, soldiers back away. The actor Hector has been replaced by a dummy corpse, which Achilles begins, laboriously, to drag, screaming as he does so)

  .

  ...began to drag great Hector heavily across

  the dry and rocky ground

  Round and round the walls

  his bare head thumped on stones

  .

  (Now horrified, the soldiers run off. As Achilles drags the corpse, red ribbons stream from its mouth, trailing longer and longer as they go round and round a large circle)

  .

  Achilles, in his grief and rage

  Every day for twelve long days

  dragged dead Hector

  'mid billowing dust

  face down

  .

  (Full darkness now, except for Briseis isolated in ligh
t)

  .

  BRISEIS

  So Achilles embraced

  his purpose in life

  Did he grow

  into a man

  or beast?

  .

  I know only

  the night of killing

  is long

  before the soft dawn

  offers peace

  .

  (Dim light on Achilles, alone, perched over the corpse of Hector like a beast of prey, guarding it. Frightened Trojan soldier sneaks to edge and bows low)

  .

  SOLDIER

  Do not strike, great Achilles

  In deep secret

  honored Priam

  King of Troy

  begs to approach

  .

  (From distance, Priam, disguised and filthy, shuffles hesitantly. Achilles snarls. Priam stops, still far off. His attendant, terrified, runs away. Priam begins a story-)

  .

  PRIAM

  I sing a song

  of the king of sorrows

  Do you know any such king?

  .

  (Priam takes a step to approach, but Achilles stirs, ominous, and Priam stops)

  .

  PRIAM

  This king once stood proud

  atop his golden city

  of the shining towers

  brimming with riches of earth

  .

  And best among his riches

  he counted

  his fifty fine sons

  And the greatest, the kindest

  among all the fifty

  was Hector

  .

  (Priam, watching Achilles, creeps closer, but Achilles snarls, rearing)

  .

  PRIAM

  King of sorrows

  he loses them one by one

  his riches, his sons

  and knows

  when Hector

  the best, is lost

  he'll have none

  .

  (Priam stops his song, goes on humming. Pause. Achilles sharp-)

  .

  ACHILLES

  That king was a fool

  to look for more

  from the gods

  than pain

  A mortal's life

  is spun with sorrows

  though it's true

  he untwines

  evil and good

  by turns

  .

  PRIAM

  Such a mortal I heard of

  named Peleus...

  .

  (Achilles startled, glares at Priam, who goes on humming)

  .

  PRIAM

  ...with only one

  brave son

  who cares not for him

  in his age

  but stays

  far from home

  .

  (Achilles painfully reacts to his own story)

  .

  ACHILLES

  ...robbing other old men

  of their sons

  .

  (Gives a harsh laugh, nearly weeping)

  .

  So Peleus' boy has grown

  .

  (Priam dares a move to Achilles, close enough to stretch his beseeching hand)

  .

  PRIAM

  Let me only

  touch

  my son

  .

  (Achilles screeches like a hawk, shoots up threatening to strike, but Priam dives to catch Achilles' trailing hand)

  .

  PRIAM

  This is the hand

  that killed

  the best

  of my sons

  Is it the hand

  of a lion

  or only

  a man?

  .

  (Then slowly, watching Achilles, Priam draws this hand to his lips and kisses it. Achilles crumbles, sobbing. Priam cradles Achilles. They weep together)

  .

  PRIAM: Why have we war?

  .

  (Achilles looks up at Priam. Long pause)

  .

  ACHILLES

  We'll eat

  and then sleep

  I've gone many days without.

  You as well?

  .

  (Priam looks at him, and nods "yes," then-)

  .

  PRIAM

  First let me

  see

  my son

  .

  (Achilles springs up, sharply-)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Do not dare

  to anger me!

  .

  (Achilles strides away. Now begins a procession of dead and living witnesses- Hector, Lycaon, Patroklos, Agamemnon, soldiers. They gather round Achilles)

  .

  (Priam is separate, waiting, does not see Achilles lift high the corpse of Hector, then ritually cleanse, gently prepare the son for the father. The others slowly sway)

  .

  ACHILLES

  A man

  may gash and tear

  the animal flesh

  of another

  letting spill

  the precious nectar

  of his breathing fluids

  out over the earth

  .

  And this is called

  glory

  .

  SOLDIERS: And this is called glory

  .

  (An animal is raised; Achilles cuts its throat. Priam's fallen asleep where he sits)

  .

  ACHILLES

  I give it back

  Though I cannot choose

  life

  I return

  to the gods

  their glory

  .

  (Lights, sound and company move, as though in a dark whirlwind. Thetis appears; all characters gather to witness the story's end)

  .

  BRISEIS

  So deep into the night

  the father and the son

  honored each other

  with feasting

  and at last

  fell into sleep

  which both had refused

  for many terrible

  nights and days

  .

  CHORUS

  Thetis

  deep in the sea

  do not weep

  that he

  is only a man

  and not a god of the sky

  .

  (Thetis raises her arms in a blessing)

  .

  ACHILLES

  Though weak of body and brain

  I claim

  the courage

  of lions

  to die

  without knowing why

  .

  (Achilles lifts his helmet to arm himself, all others watch; Briseis questions them. They answer, singly and together as a whole society trying to understand)

  .

  BRISEIS: So he must die?

  .

  AGAMEMNON: When the war started

  .

  ALL: or why

  .

  AGAMEMNON: no one knows

  .

  BRISEIS: Forgive me

  .

  ALL: (Murmuring) no one knows

  .

  BRISEIS

  I must try

  to understand

  .

  PATROKLOS

  Man

  is no more

  than man

  .

  LYCAON

  War is a game

  the gods play!

  .

  HECTOR

  We men

  are its pitiful pieces

  .

  AGAMEMNON

  They flick us

  from off their board

  .

  ALL: with a laugh

  .

  PATROKLOS: caring not

  .

  ALL: that our lives drip away

  .

  THETIS (Amplified, as a god)
r />   War is a game

  the gods play

  .

  Child of man

  can grow

  only high as a man

  has no choice

  but to die

  .

  BRISEIS

  Still I know

  man's glory can fill

  the whole sky...

  .

  (A loud god-laugh that echoes from the whole sky. Priam wakes, hearing the god-laugh, stands, confused, looks at the others, then answers the laugh)

  .

  PRIAM

  Man's glory can fill

  the whole sky...

  .

  (The others join him, and their combined answer gets louder)

  .

  PRIAM and ALL (Softly under Priam)

  ...when he stands

  gazing

  full in the eyes

  of another

  saying-

  .

  ACHILLES: You are as I

  .

  PRIAM: You are as I

  .

  ALL: You are as I

  END OF PLAY