"Come in," I managed.
And the men entered.
Together, we sat down and I asked:
"Where did you get the coin?"
"At Cos..."
"You are from Cos?"
"Yes, I came from Cos."
"He came on one of my ships," Charaxos said.
I could not look at either man.
"He came from Cos," I said.
"Phaon died on the island...he and others...thrown on the beach...we have rocky shores...he was injured in the big storm...you see, we found him, my wife and son and I. He gave us the coin and sent me to you...he..."
So, he died after that storm, I told myself, and I got up, wondering where I could go: I saw the castaway's blazing eyes and torn clothing and the greedy face of my brother:
"Stay at my house...as long as you like," I said. "I will send servants to look after you. I will..."
What will I do? I asked myself.
Will I take the coin and sleep with it? Will it burn my bed? Will I place it on my desk or hurl it out my window? And I opened my fingers to see if the bronze was on fire.
Now, you have seen me grief-stricken, I thought, as I gazed at Charaxos. You may go and tell your friends. Tell them, Sappho is beaten. Tell them...
I excused myself and retreated to my room.
Far at sea, I saw a dot: Phaon's ship, and I opened my hand and laid his drachma on the windowsill.
Beauty, is he dead?
What has been gained by taking him from me?
Shall I go to Xerxes, and hold him to his promise? Couldn't there be a mistake? Better to find Xerxes and say to him, "Remember your promise," and take his powder. This is my inheritance, from parents, Cercolas, friends, this degree of misfortune, final degradation. Was love a mirage, or this?
Libus sat beside my bed, his hands alleviating the pain that dragged at every nerve: his hands warmed me, crossing my back and shoulders, assuaging with their mirage the storm that seemed everywhere inside me, bursting my throat, my brain, my chest, shattering my reason.
Yet, as he helped me, he reasoned:
"I hoped he would be back early enough for Kleis' wedding...he said something to me about getting back early... I hoped you two would go on...you know all of us watched you...our hearts were yours...it was like that.
"I've always thought your pride deserved love, Phaon's kind, free of politics. Yes, I know Alcaeus was sufficient, years ago; then our island women adopted you; then Phaon. It was his luck to give you what you needed..."
"My coin didn't bring luck to him," I said.
"A coin means what? Metal can't tell us about life...only we can tell...to one another..."
"What have I told you through the years?"
He paused a while, hands motionless.
"Beauty..."
"And now?"
"Another kind...in the making. I know your ancestral line...losses become gain...I recognize bravery."
His hands and thoughts continued their palliative, now the fingers, now the voice, as servants replaced lamps and closed windows, moving as slowly as if below the sea, finally to leave us alone again, the ocean's voice mixing with the crickets.
"Kleis will bring Phaon back to me," I said.
"Theirs is a curious resemblance...I agree."
"What will happen to his house?"
"It will be hers," he said.
"But she'll never live in town."
"No...she won't change her ways."
"Have you ever liked his house? I haven't."
"No," he said.
"Libus, why doesn't Alcaeus come to me?"
"He's not thinking of your problem."
"He doesn't know about Phaon?"
"He knows...but can't come."
"Shall I go to him?"
"Wait...for a while," he said.
My girls seldom leave me: Atthis, Gyrinno, Anaktoria, each brings flowers and gifts, bringing them surreptitiously or with a hint of jollity-sometimes compassion. Old Exekias pats my hands, kisses my skirt or turns away, tears unchecked.