City of the Dead (Part III)
by Robert Sheckley It became a scandal, the way
the penniless dead were piling up on the earthside shore.
Charon was a stickler for form. He charged for the sake of form,
not for the money. He had no use for peoples obols. He had a great
stack of them that he kept in his locker back in Styxville, in the
boathouse where he brought his houseboat in for repairs from time to
time and as occasion demanded. For there are dangers even to
crossing the Styx and if you think dead is the last word dangerwise,
that just shows you havent seen what can go wrong after youre
dead.
The famous people among the dead had no trouble getting across,
whether they had money or not. No one was going to stop a famous
courtesan like Lais of Corinth, or Sappho, who was said to be able
to discourse more cleverly than Socrates. By the time Rome became a
power, the custom of putting an obol in the mouth of the dead had
fallen into abeyance, not least for the lack of obols that a
bankrupt and discredited Greece no longer sent forth into the world.
But the old obol-in-the-mouth construct still remained. But it
didnt matter, no one was going to keep a Roman empress out of hell
just because her tiny white teeth were not clenched over a copper
coin.
It had taken Tantulus a while to get used to visits from Roman
Empresses who hadnt even been gleams in their daddys eyes back in
his day. They came to visit him because he was one of the sights,
and they asked him questions all respectful-like because Tantulus
was one of the old ones, one of the first settlers, one of the
original population of Hell, The First Damned, they called
themselves, the worlds first criminals,
Tantulus had seen a lot of changes going on over the years that
he had been here. What the hell, he used to tell the new recruits
who came to him for advice, it isnt so bad a place. You can get
used to anything. Even hell. Maybe even especially hell. Because
when the worst has befallen you, there really is nothing else to
fear.
SISYPHUS
The camera swung into action again, forefront of the
shockwave of recognition, speeding down long dusty corridors with
the reflected light gleaming off them, and, in its ingratiating
manner, stopped to point out that Tantulus had some old friends down
here. Take Sisyphus, for example, and we cut to a big bald old guy
with a beard, condemned to carry a boulder up the side of a steep
mountain, then, when he reached the top, roll it back to the bottom
again.
That was all right as far as it went. Trouble is, no one said how
long he should keep on doing it. Sisyphus continued to roll his
boulders down the mountainside long after his punishment ought to
have been over, long past the time when he should have been released
on his own recognizance.
But no, they kept Sisyphus
working. Sisyphus got a lot of wear but he didnt wear out because
human spirit is eternal and a good thing too, it needs all the
longevity it can get. Sisyphus used to go through a lot of boulders.
Letting boulders fall back down the mountain was part of his job, so
he cant be accused of wanton destruction. Its just that no one had
thought through the ecological consequences. Because when he was on
the mountaintop he would release the stone and it would roll down
the mountain, what could be simpler. But they kept on having to
bring him fresh boulders, and they finally even had to change his
mountain, because he simply wore it away with his boulder-rolling.
Sisyphus boulders cut deeper and deeper paths into the
mountainside, wearing a scalloped path and finally wearing it all
away. So the people in charge of that sort of thing had to go all
over trying to find suitable boulders for him to carry up. The
boulder couldnt be just any slab or rock; it had to be quite round
otherwise it wouldnt roll all the back way down to the bottom,
except that sometimes it broke into pieces before it got there. And
that also took its toll.
The camera swings into view again and considers for our
delectation the mechanism of temptation. We dolly back to Tantulus
in the nicest way we know how. We get serious for a moment. We
knowwhat need to tell us again?that the earthly vision consisted
of fruits and roasted meats and other good things dangled from the
branches of trees above Tantulus headtantalizinglywhich they
jerked back out of his reach when he reached for them. So of course
after a while he didnt reach for them any more. But no one thought
about that.
In any event, all that food had to be renewed almost daily, just
the same as if he had made a meal of it. Because you cant tempt a
man with a moldy roast and a bunch of rotten grapes. So you could
say that in order for there to be a punishment, Tantulus, though he
never tasted a morsel, still went through a hell of a lot of food.
And as times changed, and new certainties came and went, the
style of his meals changed, also.
In the beginning they tempted him with simple fare: oat cakes,
radishes and onions, and an occasional bit of roasted lamb. When a
new administration came in, some thinking was done about all this.
This classical hell of ours, one of the chief administrators
pointed out at a recent meeting, is an important interstellar
tourist attraction. Millions of people come here nightly in their
dreams. Millions more are brought here in one way or another. Even
alien peoples come to visit us. We are an important exhibition, I
could almost say a diorama of mans spirit. And it is necessary for
us to put on a good show.
This became law and there was a great hustle and bustle in the
halls of the administration of ancient halls and monuments.
Everything had to be refurbished. In Tantulus case, the whole
exhibit was to be spruced up and this meant new menus. Cooks were
trained to prepare the newer more modern meals that the menus called
for, volunteers were not in sufficient supply so some people who
were not actually cooks by any stretch of the imagination were
especially condemned to do this work. But after a while the job
acquired some panache and the finest chefs in the world vied to cook
for Tantulus.
Tantulus found hanging from the branches of his tree items that
he had never dreamed of before. In fact, special guides had to be
assigned to explain to him what the offerings were, otherwise he
wouldnt know what he was missing and his punishment would lose both
efficacy and symbolic value. So they told him, This is smoked boar
in aspic, and this is pears bel Helene, and this is a compote of
rare fruits. And so on and so on. And they waited anxiously to see
how he responded to all this, and took notes, because Tantulus,
after all, was the standard by which temptation was judged.
Tantulus quickly got into the spirit of connoisseurship that his
work required. He knew he was an important cultural artifact. It was
not small potatoes to realize that all temptation was to be judged
by the effect it had on him. He was like the Smirnoff Man of the
ancient world. He grew captious and difficult to please. With the
succession of feasts that were put in front of him day after day, he
became very knowledgeable in the preparation of foods. He didnt
have to taste to know good from bad. He would complain bitterly when
he detected by some means known only to himself that a spice was
missing. This turbot is entirely too peppery. This lamb, too bland
by half, and adorned with the wrong kind of honey. This sauce, it
has a bitter taste underneath it.
The cooks used to grow very angry at Tantulus. How, they asked,
could he judge the food without tasting it? For of course the
hellish mechanism made sure he never tasted anything. And Tantulus
told them he did it first of all by the aroma, which he made sure to
sniff, and secondly by the sheer powers of discrimination which had
developed in his mind. For look you, gentlemen, actually tasting
these foods dulls the senses. I wouldnt taste your food if I were
able to! But what Im here for is to judge it, and I have to tell
you that this meal was not up to snuff.
And that was the end of
Persephones reply to Hades, and she got back into the bullock wagon
and let Demeter carry her back to the upper world. No eyewitnesses
exist who can tell us what happened to the pomegranate seed she had
had in her hand. But it is a fact that she returned to Hell and to
her spouse, Hades, every fall, just as the world was turning dark
and cold. Winter with tiny snow flakes came and went and soon the
hounds of spring appeared in the upper valleys. I sat on my throne
in hell and had dinners with Achilles and Helen and waited for
Persephone to return. What was she doing, I wondered. What about
that pomegranate seed? And just before she came back, at the very
last possible instant, when I had used up all my hope and I had
grown tired of thinking about the inhabitants of hell, I thought to
myself, what I want is my Persephone. Its the beginning of winter
now, and as I sit there on my iron throne, the taste of ashes in my
mouth, I hear the faint sound of bells. And I know it heralds a
blessed event, the arrival of my beloved, though you can never be
sure.
Odysseus, the man of infinite stratagems, was in a tight place.
The wily Greek hero had offended Poseidon, and the god was
relentless in his pursuit. He had followed Odysseus across Attica
and through the Dodecanese. Whenever Odysseus turned away from the
islands, inland, trying to find a place where the sea and its ways
were unknown, the sea god sent up powerful winds to drive him back
down to the seas edge. Nor was that all. He also sent cunning
Thoughts, which pleaded with Odysseus as if they were he himself,
and led him back to the waters edge. Here he was again where he
would rather not be, on the strip of sand between the mountains and
the water. It was here that Odysseus was to play out his final game.
For this time the god of the sea had death in mind. He had postponed
swatting this sucker long enough. It was time to press on with the
killing.
The boom of the surf on the lonely sea beach.
The lilac line where sea and sky met.
Our last snapshot of Odysseus shows him as the heroic man, limbs
dripping water, hair in his eyes, head bent, on all fours, with the
wind ruffling his hair. As appetizing a sight as Nausicaa had ever
seen.
Apparition at noon on the lone sea beach. Nausicaa and her
maidens. Stopped dead in their tracks. Staring at the naked man.
Where am I? Odysseus said.
This is Phaecea, Nausicaa said.
God she was cute.
Cute and deadly, unless I miss my guess.
Just the way I like them.
Odysseus shook his head irritably. Another romance shaping
upjust what he didnt need! And besides, hadnt all this happened
before? Hadnt his whole life happened before? Hadnt everything
happened that could happen? And all of it before?
Odysseus tried to remember, but all he could recall was the time
to come. His future lives rushed past his eyes like albino bats
floating in a thin turpentine solution. Then there was a sound
behind him. The man of infinite wiles turned and his body stiffened.
His will inflated with the power derived from his thumos. He
considered quickly who he should be this afternoon.
Dimly, through the coils of his self-preoccupation, came the
knowledge, ineluctable, and strangely cold, that he was in a
situation.
And the situation called for instant response.
He was not... Yet he was. Words were incumbent upon him. Indeed,
he had known no extremity so extreme as this need to set forth his
identity.
Irving Spaghetti, at your service, he said. Ridiculous! But
perhaps it would work out all right.
It wasnt the playing of the game that was so difficult. It was
having to play the game not for the first time, but again. And this
when you arent sure of the results from the first time. What on
earth had happened that first time? He assumed that the first time
through he had gotten it right, though he couldnt remember. Gotten
it right more or less. Or had that been the second time?
Nausicaa. Still there. Terminally cute. But what was he supposed
to do with her?
Married life with Nausicaa came faster than he had expected. He
supposed he would be able to recapitulate the in between at some
later date. It usually worked that way. The courtship, for example.
Had they gone on dates? What had he said to her?
A sudden alarm filled his head. He was safe. Here inside the warm
little apartment with her. But that wasnt what he was paid for. He
had taken a wrong turning somewhere.
All of this of course was just before the stranger moved into
town. Because once he was there, that sinister figure with his
fiddle and his faddle and his fiddle fiddle faddleIm sorry, Im
trying to be a reliable narrator but my blood simply boils when I
think of the stranger and I cant be blamed for what I sayand next
Ill lose my train of thought if I dont watch outeverything
changed and nothing was ever the same again. Not that we expected
it. Not after the curse of the woodland pygmies was uttered,
bringing with it its curious aftermath. But I am getting ahead of
myself.
First there was Odysseus. Lets be very clear about that. Clarity
is not so easy here in the pit with the stinking fish-heads and the
rotting ordure of corpsey bodies falling slowly through the slewy
air forlorn. But we persevere, we and our fellows, for someone must
tell the story otherwise our silence will shriek to the stars. Im
sorry, I didnt mean to get excited.
END
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