The Love God
Introduction:
Every god has his day.
âGods should be exempt from human passions.â
-Euripides, âThe Bacchaeâ
***
Eros arrived. He could already tell he had quite a mess on his hands.
There were two of them, a man and a woman, both in love with the other, though neither knew it yet. Eros plucked the string on his bow over and over (an idle gesture that annoyed friends, but helped him concentrate) while the two humans slept and the red numbers of the clock glowed in the dark. Why did he always show up for the hard ones?
The pair were having fitful dreams about each other. He pushed the womanâs hair back with the tip of a golden arrow. She wasnât really pretty, but prettiness was overrated. What could her dreams tell him? âThis one isâŠMia,â he said. âHebrew for âbeloved.â A graduate student. Sheâs married, but separated. Her husband moved to the East Coast last year.
âThey were going to divorce, but now theyâre talking about reconciling. She loves him, but doesnât think heâs really changed and sheâs not sure what she wants. Five days ago, she metâŠâ
He turned to the man.
ââŠAndrew. Greek, meaning âman.â Some kind of artist, I think, but not very good. Heâs been in love with a woman for two years and even bought an engagement ring, but then he lost his nerve. That was four months ago, and now heâs beginning to think theyâre not right for each other.
âHis girlfriend is out of town this week, and a few days ago he went out to a party heâd normally have skipped, not admitting to himself he was hoping to meet a woman. He and Mia hit it off and spent the whole week together, but they didnât so much as kiss until last night, even though they both knew it was inevitable theyâd end up in bed sooner or later. Tomorrow morning theyâll have to deal with what theyâve done.â
He straightened up, adjusted his wings, and whistled. âWell, these two are in some serious shit now. Why donât you all come out and letâs talk about it?â
A decision had to be made. It was Erosâ job to make sure that people ended up with the right lovers. But it wasnât his job alone; everyone who was interested had a say. Four others came.
First was Nu Wa, the ancient Chinese goddess who sculpted the first men and women from clay and taught them to be lovers. She was a marriage goddess, and Eros had never gotten along with her. She called him a bad influence, which was an entirely fair characterization.
Erzulie FrĂ©da, a Voodoo spirit and notorious flirt, came next. She wore three weddings ringsâone for each of her husbandsâand in any love affair she invariably tried to steal the man for herself, although she was easily bored with such efforts. She pretended not to pay attention to Andrew as he slept, which meant she was enamored with him already. It was impossible to predict how this would affect her decision.
Ishtar, ancient goddess of fertility and sex, came, taking the form of a beautiful woman with the talons and wings of a bird. She was the only god around whom even Eros felt downright insecure. She shared his tastes for the illicit and the outrageous, but she was dangerous for him too, because she made no secret that she wanted him for herself, and considered it a favor to be repaid every time she sided with him on anything.
Just the sight of her gave Eros an erection that amounted to torture, but he never accepted her advances. Ishtarâs love was always fatal, even to other gods. Besides, she reminded him of his mother.
Last was Hathor, Egyptian goddess of love and family, appearing as a woman with the head of a calf, a cobra coiled around her brow like a diadem. Eros didnât know her very well, but she seemed like a soft-touch, easily swayed by a good argument, but just as easily bullied by a bad one.
She was big on familyâshe was somehow Raâs mother, daughter, and wife all at the same time, which didnât make any damn sense to himâand tended to favor people settling down. This annoyed Eros, though she was such a bleeding heart he had trouble holding anything against her.
The five love gods stood around the bed in the dark and untidy apartment while the two humans slept on, unaware that anything remarkable was about to happen. The gods would talk, and then they would vote on what was to be done, and Mia and Andrew would have to live with whatever the consequences wereânot that theyâd know the difference.
Eros cleared his throat and plucked his bowstring again. âAll right, here we all are. And hereâs these two. What do we all think of them?â
Nu Wa shifted her coils on the floor. She had the lower body of a beautiful snake and the upper body of a beautiful woman, which Eros found immensely appealing even if she was boring and bourgeois.
âShould these mortals stay with the lovers theyâve had for years and nurture the affairs into marriages that will sustain them for the rest of their lives?â she said.
âOR, should they walk away from tired affairs they never really cared about in favor of something invigorating and new with each other?â said Eros.
He and Nu Wa glared at each other from opposite sides of the bed. No sense pretending to be civil: The battle lines were already drawn.
âYour friend the Wine God had a hand in this,â Ishtar said, picking up an empty bottle from the dresser. âI still think about him whenever I see new grapes on the vine, too green to be plucked. Do you think he still thinks about me?â
Her smile made Eros tense. He already knew she agreed with him, but she might pretend to side with Nu Wa to coerce him into something, and that would mean no end of trouble. But instead she said, âThese two have already fucked, so whatâs the point of debating it? Theyâre never going to forget about each other now. Whatâs done is done: You canât put rain back in the sky.â
âBut if you wait long enough, it goes back on its own,â said Hathor. She looked at Nu Wa in a way that seemed deferential, and Eros knew heâd lost her before this even started. âTheyâve still only known each other a little while. In time, this will seem a fleeting thing. But if they choose one another theyâll break two other hearts, and then their own. Broken hearts last longer than fleeting regrets.â
âThere are worse things to break than a heart,â Eros said. âIf these two forget each other, theyâll regret it. But all right, you two think they should play it safe, and Ish and I think they shouldnât. That meansâŠâ
They realized Erzulie was the only one who hadnât spoken, and each of them groaned. There was an unspoken rule never to let her get into the position of tiebreaker, or else she would milk it all night. She sat with Andrewâs head pillowed in her lap, stroking his hair and making cooing noises.
âHave you ever seen anything like him? Such scrumptious dreams,â she said, sighing. âHeâs sensitive: the heart of a poet. Heâs going to feel so tragically guilty about all of this in the morning. Do you think either of his women are good enough for him, really?â
Ishtar rolled her eyes.
âMaybe we should be finding someone else for him,â Erzulie said. âSomeone as beautiful and noble as he is. Iâll look after him in the meantime. Iâm sure that with a little of the right attentionââ
Ishtar jumped in. âIf sheâs going to do this all night then Iâll switch sides just to shut her up.â
Erzulieâs eyes lit up and soon all of the gods were shouting (except for Hathor, who quietly pleaded for order). Eros pinched his brow. Sometimes he hated this job. Things had been so much easier in the old days. Stupid melting pot.
Eventually, he and Nu Wa managed to get the meeting back in hand between the two of them, though in the meantime Erzulie had suggested three different curses she planned to lay on Ishtar the next time her back was turned, and Nu Wa had accused Eros of âwearing a green hat.â (She obviously meant this as an insult, but evidently it lost something in the translation.)
The argument had at least gotten Erzulie off the stage. Sheâd still be the tiebreaker, and it was still anyoneâs guess which way sheâd jump, but at least she wouldnât go on all night.
Nu Wa settled her coils on the floor again. âWeâve talked long enough. We all have other work to do. Are we at a decision?â
âI sure am,â said Eros.
âMe too,â said Ishtar, already bored. Hathor nodded. Erzulie pouted. In a minute theyâd vote, and whichever way it went would change a handful of human lives forever. Eros looked at the couple, still fast asleep in each otherâs arms.
Well kids, Iâll give it my best shot, he thought. Although to be honest, my best shot isnât what it used to be.
***
Sunlight woke Andrew, and when he rolled over Charlotte threw an arm across his naked chest and curled up against his side. It was a good morning for sleeping in. A good morning forâ
Wait. That wasnât Charlotte. Charlotte was still at that conference in Nevada. And this didnât look like her place. Or his. That meantâŠ
âOh shit.â
Mia stirred but didnât wake. Thatâs right, theyâd stopped for a drink at that new wine bar downtown. They had such a good time theyâd gone in together on a bottle, and then she invited him back to help her drink it. And thenâŠ
âOh shit,â he said again.
He looked at Mir again. In her sleep, she had hugged the covers around herself, like a puffy cocoon, but one round shoulder was still visible. Her complexion was so pale that her white skin seemed luminous. Last night, in the near-dark, sheâd practically glowed. Now the morning sun painted her gold, and his cock stirred to attention for, but he shut that valve as tightly as he could. He was already in enough trouble.
Andrew got up and found his pants. He discovered heâd turned his phone off at some point, which would look suspicious if Charlotte had tried to call him. He held his breath, expecting a barrage of late night texts and voicemails, but there was nothing. That was a relief, at least.
But today was Wednesday, which meant Charlotteâs flight was due back this afternoon. (It also meant heâd slept through his first two classes, but that seemed such a petty problem that it barely counted.) How was he ever going to look her in the face? How was he even going to look at himself in the mirror? Wait a minute, the mirrorâŠ
He ran to the mirror on the closet door, checking himself front and back. All clear: No bites, no scratches, no hickies. Thank God. Then he spotted Miaâs eyes peeping over the covers. She must have seen his routine. He expected her to laugh at him, but she didnât. He crossed his arms over his naked chest. She flopped over on the bed.
âWell,â she said. âIt really happened.â
âYeah.â
She got up and pressed herself against him. It was an odd feeling, sharing a shame only they two had. It made him feel even closer to her, which of course didnât help anything one damn bit.
âI actually donât feel that guilty,â she said. âIs that awful?â
âNo. I mean, why should you feel bad? You didnât cheat on anybody.â
âIan.â
âYouâre not really together. Doesnât count.â
âHey! Who are you to tell me my infidelity doesnât count?â She punched him in the arm. âIâll feel bad if I want to.â
âExcept you donât.â
âBut I could. Just as bad as you.â
âOkay.â A pause. âSheâs coming back today.â
âI remember.â
âSoâŠâ
She shushed him. âI wonât get in the way. You wonât hear from me.â
âItâs not like that.â
âYes it is. And thatâs fine. I knew what I was getting into.â
âWe can still be friends.â
She gave him a look that said, in no uncertain terms, that he wasnât fooling anyone, then kissed him on the cheek. After a second, she kissed him again, on the lips. A few seconds later they were still kissing and then, haltingly, stumbling back to the bed, slowed by the increasingly frantic touches of each otherâs lips.
They landed in a heap and curled around each other. She was still naked; he had only his pants on, which they lost in a hurry. The morning sun had heated the sheets to a crisp, inviting coziness. This is a terrible idea, Andrew thought. Last night was bad enough, but now weâre not even drunk. Charlotteâs plane touches down in five hours. Iâm late for everything, and if we donât stop nowâ
Mia broke off. âDo you want to stop?â
âGod no.â
âMe neither.â
They dove back into each other. This is wrong, Andrew thought. This is really, really wrong. But I donât care.
Andrew pressed Miaâs wrists into the headboard while she squirmed, then buried his face against her neck, kissing and nibbling until she squealed to stop, stop, stop. He kissed her, then retreated, kissed her again and retreated again, making her strain after him until finally giving in and laying a long, slow kiss on her, with the tip of his tongue tickling hers. Even first thing in the morning she smelled and tasted clean and natural. Charlotte always smelled like one thing or another: perfumes, soaps, incense. Mia smelled like Mia. Her skin was hot under his lips.
She rolled him over and climbed on top, using the headboard for leverage to keep him down. He rolled her tiny breasts against his palms, the memory of doing the same thing last night bobbing to the surface. Harder, sheâd told him then, so he did it harder now. He was afraid her pale skin would bruise, but she turned out to be more resilient than heâd have guessed. (Or maybe Iâm just not that strong he thought, suddenly sheepish.) Her dark nipples stood out. She raked her nails down his chest but was juuust careful enough not to leave any telltale marks. Her ass ground in a circle on his lap while his erection throbbed. Life would be easier if we just let downstairs make all the decisions, he thought: no guilt, no regret, no hesitation.
âSlowly, slowly, slowly,â she told him, although she was the one deciding how fast they went, lowering herself down on him a little bit a time. She was amazingly wet. The cool, cloying sensation made the tip of him tingle as they slid together. When she was all the way down she squeezed him between her legs, trying to keep him perfectly still while she moved, first around and around, then up and down, bouncing once or twice to get a feel for it. She was tighter and smoother than he was used to. She rode him with her eyes closed and mouth parted in an O, talking in such a low voice that it sounded like a hum without words. Andrewâs fingers bunched the sheets into knots. Behind her eyelids, Miaâs eyes rolled back. The air trapped between them caught fire.
âFrom behind,” Mia said, turning and gripping the foot of the bed. Andrew rose (somewhat clumsily) to his knees, grabbing her ass and pushing against it, letting the length of him slide between her cheeks before going lower and pushing in again. She buried her face in the mattress.
Andrewâs eyes and fingertips took in her curves and lines, trying to memorize every inch.
This is it, he thought. There wonât ever be another time. I have to remember everything now. Even with that in mind he still couldnât quite put everything he had into it. Guilt, and an irrational sense of being exposed, made him hold back. She responded by grinding into him harder. âMore,â she said.
He reached under, groping her breasts again. Perspiration glistened on her back, like diamonds against her skin. The rush of blood in his ears shut out every other sound (including, mercifully, his own thoughts). Mia was gushing wetter around him and the sensation triggered a surge at the base of his cock that swiftly ran up the length and then spilled over, onto and into her. The strangled elation of the moment grabbed hold of him and didnât let go until both of them fell over, burying themselves in the bedding so that it muffled their cries. He reminded himself to breathe, as normal life and normal thinking swam back into focus. We really should not have done that, he thought. And then: But Iâd do it again.
Their fingers laced together. The pulse in her wrist was still going. He felt his heart break, but he stamped it down. None of that, he told himself. This is hard enough as it is.
***
Eros was unhappy. This wasnât like him. Disappointments, when they came, were always fleeting things, and then he was on to the next prospect. It wasnât in his nature to dwell, but this latest bit of business came with a particular sting.
It was Thursday night, and he fluttered around eavesdropping on Andrew with Charlotte, the woman who, thanks to Nu Wa, would soon be Andrewâs wife. (He still hadnât given her the ring, but he would eventually.) They were having a romantic dinner for two at her place (sushi from Tekka) while she alternated between news about her business trip and assuring him how glad she was to be back with him.
âI think we have a future in that market, I really do,â she said.
âUh huh,â said Andrew.
âTim still isnât convinced, but you know how he is: scared of his own shadow half the time.â
âUh huh.â
âBut heâll come around. Growth attracts growth, am I right?â
Eros looked into her dreams. Charlotte: French for âwoman.â Older than Andrew by four years. They met at the wedding of a mutual friend Andrew barely knew, seated together because heâd arrived without a date and her own had cancelled (appendicitis). At the reception, after too many drinks, sheâd taken him to the gazebo for a little hot and heavy time, and from then on they were an item.
She liked his photography aspirations (even though he wasnât very good). A boyfriend who was some kind of artist made her feel more interesting. And he was low maintenance, there when she needed but easy to do without when she needed time to herself and her career (social media for commercial real estate companies).
She was happy. Andrew was happy (or at least, happy enough). Everyone was happy, except for Eros. It made him miserable.
âWhat about you?â Charlotte said, âwhat did you do while I was gone?â
Andrew didnât even flinch. âThe usual stuff: class, work, shot a little. Mostly just hung out.â Inside, tiny barbs of guilt stabbed him over and over, but he ignored them.
âPoor thing: You must have been lonely.â She fed him slices of sashimi with her fingers. She was a soft, curvy woman, someone who enjoyed soft and pampering things. Andrew could be one of those things: An accommodating accoutrement to make life better. It would be an easy love for them both. Theyâd never fight, rarely disagree, and always say flighty, pleasant things to each other. Theyâd stay as happy as they are now, Eros was sure. But theyâd never be anything more.
Andrew would go his whole life letting someone else take the lead for him. Charlotte would think about herself more and more, because no one would be around to challenge her. In a few years Andrewâs one and only infidelity would become a faded memory of a person he no longer recognized as himself, and that would be that.
The two finished the sushi and started to get cozy. Eros left.
On the other side of the city, Mia was alone at a table in the library, face lit by the white-gray wash of a computer. The screen was full of numbers and lettersâchemistry, Eros thought, although he wasnât sure. He studied chemistry of a different sort.
Now and then sheâd click over to another window, where she exchanged messages with her husband, Ian, in short, tentative phrases that were laden with vulnerability. Ian: Gaelic for âgift.â Theyâd met as teenagers but became lovers later, mostly to satisfy their sense of curiosity about each other. The marriage had been an impulse, and fallen apart when she learned he was having affairs, which she took as permission to have some of her own. They soon blamed each other for their mutual unhappiness and parted.
Ian hadnât changedâin fact, half the reason he was trying to renew things with Mia was for an excuse to leave the woman in Boston he was sleeping with now. In a week or two, Eros was sure heâd propose coming back to California, Mia would accept, theyâd make a big show of reconciliation and be happy for a few months, and then go right back to two-timing each other.
But they wouldnât bother separating again, instead just going back and forth between betrayals and reconciliations for years, and then for decades. In their way, theyâd still love each other, and maybe even feel closer for all the hurt they caused, because theyâd understand one another in a way no one else could.
But theyâd never learn anything. Mia would care less and less about herself and more and more about her work, using her oddball marriage as a crutch to pretend she wasnât neglecting that part of her life. Ian would chase progressively younger women, and get into more and more trouble because nobody would respect him enough to intervene.
Eventually Mia would forget about that one, shy guy she met years ago, who had briefly made her want real affection again but whom sheâd never called because she didnât want to hurt him with all her baggageâŠ
âUnless you call him now,” Eros whispered in her ear. âRight now. If you call, heâll answer. Heâs not brave enough to call on his own, but if you call first heâll definitely pick up.â
Miaâs hand drifted toward her phone, but stopped. Eros, arrow in hand, whispered in her other ear.
âThereâs no harm in a friendly call. Say youâre just checking up on him. Ask if he wants to have coffee on Friday. Tell him to tell Charlotte heâll be home a little late because heâs meeting a friend, and that way he wonât feel like heâs keeping secrets from her. Come on, you want to do it. If you donât call then youâll just keep thinking about himâŠâ
Mia left the library, dialing the number before she was even fully out the door. The night fog had rolled in. She got an answer after two and a half rings. âItâs me,â she said. âIs it okay to talk now? Good. I just wanted to check on you. I was worried about, you know. Everythingâs fine? Good, thatâs good. How isâŠ? Good. Look, IâŠâ
ââI have a little extra time after class tomorrow,ââ Eros said in her ear.
âI have a little extra time after class tomorrow. Do you want to get coffee? Just to talk. Charlotte? Well, tell her youâll be late because youâre meeting a friend. That way itâs not sneaking around. Yeah, sounds good. Six oâclock? See you then.â
She hung up. Eros slung his bow over his shoulder. He shouldnât be doing this, of course. The assembled gods had rendered their judgment, and he lost. He should move on to other things.
But Nu Wa and the others were all busy elsewhere, and not likely to notice him doubling back. Humans cheat all the time, Eros reasoned. Why should they get to have all the fun?
***
The cafĂ© was one Andrew had never been to, a combination wine bar and coffee house, which didnât really make sense to him. Mia sat at the table nearest the door, the first thing he saw when he came in. When she stood up he had a dilemma: What was the proper greeting? Hug? Handshake? Vague wave? She settled it by giving him a chaste kiss on the cheek.
He ordered a latte. He actually hated coffee, but felt like he should order something. Mia was drinking tea and he immediately wished heâd thought of that. At first neither of them knew what to say. She broke the ice with: âIâve missed you. I know itâs only been two days. Is that weird?â
âNo. I mean, probably. But I missed you too.â
âSo weâre weird, then.â
âYes.â
âHow isâŠI already asked that, you said sheâs fine. If youâre going to ask about Ian, heâs fine too.â
âI wasnât really going to ask.â
âThatâs okay, heâs not really fine.â
Andrew held his drink with both hands, feeling the heat on his palms. âIâm glad you called,” he said. âBut Iâm not sure what weâre doing.â
âCan we be friends? I know thereâs a whole thing, but can we ignore that?â
âI guess, yeah. I mean, donât really have a lot of friends. I have a relationship, and thatâs about it.â
âI donât even have that.â
âFriends is not really what you want, is it?â
âNo, but Iâll take it. I donât want to cause trouble. I was going to butt out of your life completely after this week, butâŠI donât know. Something made me change my mind.â
âI tried to get you off my mind but I couldnât.â
âMaybe itâs just not meant to be?â
âOr not not meant to be. How do we decide?â
âFirst we have to be less ambiguous.â
âAmbiguity is our friend right now. If things got more definite, Iâd have to leave.â
At the next table, the server opened a wine bottle with a distinct POP. They both jumped a little.
âGood point,â said Mia. âForget specifics. In fact, forget that weâre even here. Or that we know each other? Who are you, strange man sitting at my table?â
âI forget. Names are too specific anyway.
Unseen, Eros sat the next table, fiddling with his bowstring. He couldnât help but smile. Their little human idiosyncrasies were stupid, but he enjoyed them anyway. He was a sucker like that. Neither of them believed this âjust friendsâ business for a second, but since when was it a crime to lie to yourself? He could just keep arranging innocent get togethers for the two of them, and sooner or later, of their own accordâ
âEROS!â
He jumped. His bowstring snapped. âShit,â he said.
It took him a moment to recognize the woman shouting at him: Hathor. Today she looked like a normal woman, sans calf head. It was a good look for her, although heâd have preferred to see it without the expression of scandalized fury. She practically hauled him up by his ear.
âSo this is where youâve been. Why are you meddling with these two?â
âMeddling is my job.â
âBut you know the rules.â
He shrugged out of her grip, sat down again, and began restringing his bow. âHell with rules. Democracy is a pain in the ass. Who came up with that, anyway?â
âThe Greeks.â
âStill a pain in the ass. Are you going to rat me out?â
Hathor opened her mouth, closed it, opened it again, then closed it again. Eros flexed his wings. âAll right then. Want a drink?â he said.
âJust because Iâm not going to tell on you doesnât mean youâre not in trouble. You have to stop this. Youâll wreck both their destinies if you keep leading them around by the nose.â
âWould that be so bad?â Eros said. âLook at them: You see how natural and lively he is when he talks with her? You see how thoughtful and affectionate she becomes when sheâs with him?”
Hathor looked doubtful.
âWell, all right. But at least MORE lively. MORE affectionate. Itâs a relative thing. Theyâll grow into it. Tell me theyâre not good for each other.â
Hathor considered the couple. They were still talking and teasing. They did look happy. âBut theyâve got no future,â she said. âThis wonât last forever for them.â
âWho needs forever? Why do we always have to be setting people up for forevers? Why canât we just give them something good here and now? Isnât that just as important?”
He could tell by the look on her face she was going to get mad again, so he put up his hands and grinned. âOkay, okay, youâre right: Who am I to tamper with the fate we all decided on? I apologize. I let myself get carried away. Iâll drop it.â
ââŠwhat are you up to?â
âYou donât trust me? Do you want an oath? Fine: I swear on Tartarusâ gate I will not put the two of them into bed ever again. That should satisfy you.â
âIt does,â Hathor said, though she sounded doubtful. In this light, and in her less bovine aspect, she reminded Eros a bit of his mother. Why was he always thinking that when it came to women?
âI just hope you know whatâs good for you,” she said. âNu Wa is a powerful goddess, and sheâs not the only one who has it in for you. Donât go gift wrapping trouble.â
âI didnât know you cared.â
âMe neither. As long as I found you, I could use some help. Tlazolteotl is back in town, and you can imagine the trouble itâs causing. Even Ishtar says sheâs out of control. Everyone else agrees that the best thing to doâŠâ
Eros nodded along, but he wasnât paying attention. Mia and Andrew were still talking, but heâd stopped paying attention to them either. All he was thinking about now was the thing sitting on the next table. It was nothing specialâgarbage, really. But as soon as he saw it, he knew it was the answer to all of his problems.
It was a wine cork.
***
The vineyard of the Wine God isnât hard to find (although finding your way out is another matter altogether). The place hadnât changed since the last time Eros was here: green fields, shade, dancing women dressed in fawn skins.
It wasnât like an earthly vineyard, with plants in straight rows. Constantly inebriated satyrs lolled and sang drunken ballads on the far hills. The realm of the Wine God was a wilderness, thick with overgrowth, and Eros hurried through it. There wasnât much in the world he was afraid of, but he knew what was good for him.
Dionysus himself was tending some of the vines in a far corner of the place when Eros found him. A lion slept nearby, and the Wine God stopped his effortless labors only long enough to pet the creature now and then. He nodded at Eros, as if he were expected.
âCousin. Should I order a revel in your honor? No, I see youâre here for business. You didnât used to be so studious.â
âMy work is making lovers, and lovers make children, and children grow up to be more lovers. The more I do, the more I have to do later. Itâs the way of the world.â
He set down his bow and arrows on a soft spot. The music of the wine press put him at ease, although he knew it was dangerous to relax in this place.
âI was hoping you could help me with something,â he said. A woman brought him wine in a bowl. âIâve got a problem: Two lovers. I lost the judgment, but Iâve decided Iâm going to go over everyoneâs heads on this one.â
âWhy?â
âBecause I damn well want to. Isnât that a good enough reason?â
âIt always has been for me.â Dionysus sat and took wine for himself. The lion moved to his feet and purred as he stroked her head.
âI canât do it alone: Too many big names in the way. But you could do it.â
âItâs true: I fear no love god, great or small, nor any coalition of them. But lovers are your business. Why should I bother?â
Eros considered Dionysus. His divine cousin looked like a beautiful, baby-faced youth, wearing nothing but a crown of ivy, the degree of man still working the taste of his motherâs tit out of his mouth. If you didnât know better, youâd think he was a pushover.
Eros knew better. All gods abided by certain rules, except for the Wine God. He was the god of reveling and divine ecstasy, and no one could bind him. That made him dangerous, because he was a god who would do absolutely anything. Eros chose his words carefully.
âFirst, because you had a small hand getting this couple together to begin with. Second, because Iâm asking you, as a favor between cousins and old friends. Third, because youâre like me: a rule breaker. Too many stuffed shirts are getting their way these days. Itâs time to cut them down to size, and youâre the man to do it. What do you say?â
Dionysus kept his eyes on Eros while he gave his bowl to the woman in the fawn skin to refill. (When his fingers touched hers she cried out, as if in pain.) He drank the entire thing in one go and when he came back up his smile was so bright he nearly glowed.
âAll right, Iâll do itâ he said. âBut for this to work I need to be in a place of power, somewhere in the human realm.â
âA temple? There arenât any temples to gods of our sorts these days.â
The Wine God smiled. âArenât there?â
***
It was a big stage, outdoors, in the eucalyptus grove, and the audience sat on stone benches on the hillside. This was a play of mostly student actors, so the crowd would be a few hundred at best. Still, they seemed enthusiastic. The sun was going down and the stage lights were coming up and the opening night audience buzzed. There was something in the air.
Andrew cradled the camera around his neck. It felt heavier than it ought to. Heâd wanted to bring one of the old non-digital jobs, but he needed to be able to shoot in low light without a distracting flash, so he brought the Nikon Charlotte got him last Christmas. Heâd invited her, but she was working lateâor was it dinner with clients late? Something non-negotiable, apparently. âHave fun without me,â she said.
It was an easy job: Just a few photos of the performance, a favor that paid. No pressure at all. So why did he feel nervous?
Taking a few test shots of the crowd, he noticed everyone else seemed keyed-up too. Everyone was drinking the wine. He took a careful sip from a plastic cop of Resnia and nearly choked: It was so strong it all but popped on his tongue. What was in this stuff?
But once it settled, the wine made him more relaxed than heâd ever been in his life. A thousand pounds of stress eased off his shoulders. He had a few more drinks. That was more like it. Even his shots seemed to come into focus easier now. He felt a touch on his elbow. In the dim twilight it took half a second to recognize Mia peeking at him from over the brim of a cup just like his.
âHey stranger,â she said.
Andrew almost swallowed his tongue. âHi. Wow. Hi. You look nice.â
âThanks. You look the same as always.â
âWhat are you doing here?â
âMy cousin had a ticket, but she came down sick. Actually, I think sheâs just hung over. She offered it to me and, well, Iâm not usually into theater, but for some reason I wanted to go. Sit next to me?â
âI shouldnât.â
âOh, is Charlotte here?â
âNo, I just have to get in position. To shoot the stage. My cousin is in the play. She wants photos.â
âShame.â
The conversation floundered for a second. He strained for something to say. âDo you know what this play is about? I have no idea,â
âI cheated and looked it up before. Letâs seeâŠâ
Mia thumbed through the program and, in spite of his objection a second ago, he sat next to her, leaning over her shoulder to follow along.
âThe Bacchae. Itâs about 2,400 years old, so thereâs that. Itâs about Dionysusâheâs the god of wine. Also the god of the theater.â
âWhy both?â
âNo idea. But the playâs about him. He comes back to Greece after being gone a while, and drives all the women insane.â
âWhy?â
âSo theyâll worship him. Itâs what he does. Mostly itâs just a big party. All the women go out into the forests to dance and sing and run around half-naked. Nice work if you can get it. But the king gets angry, because the women in the royal family are out there too, plus he doesnât believe Dionysus is a real god.”
âThen what happens?â
âLet me think: Dionysus disguises himself as human and meets the king, and gets the king riled up, and then he gets him killed. All the women tear him apart. Messy.
âDionysus sounds like an asshole.â
âPretty much. But thatâs the way things were: Gods got angry. If people got in their way, so much for them.â
âWhy would people worship gods who were pricks?â
âThe world was a hard place. Maybe gods who were pricks made sense.â
Eros floated over the amphitheater. So far, so good: It was a beautiful night in the park, both his turtledoves were here, and no competing divinities had come to spoil the fun. Now to check on the Wine God. He found his cousin behind the stage, surrounded by a dozen young women in costumes that made them look very much like the women in his vineyard. None of them could see him. âHello, Eros,â he said. âEverything is ready.â
âGood. Glad to hear it. Super. âŠyouâre not planning anything crazy, are you?â
Dionysus looked at him.
âIâm just curious. I appreciate you getting my back on all this. Iâm justââ
âEverything will be satisfactory. Enjoy the show and let me take care of it.â
âGotcha. Do your thing, man. Donât mind me.â He fluttered away.
Opening night jitters were pandemic. Five minutes until curtain and everything was in place, but the stage manager was waiting to see what would go wrong. There was always something to go wrong on an opening night. When an antsy looking stagehand approached him, he felt a sense of relief. No problem was ever worse than the wait leading up to it.
âBeau canât go on,â said the stagehand.
Almost no problem.
âCan we do it without him?â the stagehand continued.
âHeâs the lead. The first 70 lines are his. This is opening night. No, I donât think we can do it without him. Whatâs the problem, exactly?â
âItâs better if I show you.â
Beau was in the equipment van, seemingly inert. At first the stage manager was worried he might be dead, but then he belched in his sleep and rolled over. The smell coming off him was like a winoâs gym bag. âJesus, heâs drunk.â
âYou donât know the half of it.â
âI never really understood the phrase âstinking drunkâ until now,â said the stage manager. He was too amazed to even really be mad. âWhat the hell were you guys drinking?â
âJust wine. Half a glass, I swear. Itâs the same stuff weâre serving to everyone. Everyone drank it, and weâre all fine, but BeauâŠwell, just look at him.â
Beau was chewing one of his sandals in his sleep, like a dog gnawing a bone. The stage manager took it away.
âAll right, alert the understudy.â
âUnderstudy?â
âSurely we have one?” He flipped through his notes. They must have assigned it? They couldnât possibly notâ
âExcuse me,â said a voice from behind them. âIâm the one youâre looking for.â
The stage manager didnât recognize the man: He was a babyish, fair-haired kid, almost too young looking to be working here at all. But there was something about his eyes, or maybe his voice. He was already wearing the costume, though, and he looked good in it. âYou know the part?â said the stage manager.
âBetter than anyone.â
âOkay, youâre Dionysus. Weâve got donors in the crowd, so break a leg.â
âWhat a charming suggestion.â
The orchestra finished tuning. The audience hushed. Andrew took his position, camera ready. Mia sat in one of the rear rows, splitting her attention between the stage and him. Eros hovered nearby, unseen. He was nervous. He wasnât used to being nervous, and that made him even more nervous. He plucked his bowstring. Whatever was about to happen, it had better work.
The play began. The women of the chorus came on, dressed as Maenads, all fawn skin dresses and crowns of ivy. Their hair and makeup were supposed to make them look half-mad and dangerous, but tonight they seemed a little too well suited for the role, and those in the front rows leaned a bit away from the stage, alarmed.
The women all danced, and the gyrating of their hips, the sway of their breasts, and the way their hair whipped from side to side made the men in the audience sit up straighter. The actor who came on with them was a beautiful, golden-haired boy, with a crown of real ivy and a lion skin tied around his nubile body. Some people in the audience (mostly women) gasped when they saw him. Andrew tried to take a picture but froze; Mia stopped halfway through taking a sip of wine. Stepping downstage, the boy actor said:
âI am Dionysus.â
Eros spat out his wine.
âBut Iâve disguised myself as a mortal man and come here, with all my women who dance my rites, to teach the people of this land how to honor me,â he continued, his voice carrying all the way back to the back row and then up and out into the night, like birds escaping a cage.
The audience stirred. There was something strange about him. He was round-faced and childlike, but his voice was strong and deep, and the redness of his lips looked beautiful and obscene under the stage lights. The chorus seemed agitated being so close to him, twitching and lolling.
Eros put a hand over his face. Oh shit. What had he done?
âIâve traveled to all lands in the east, bringing grape-bearing vines with me to the sun-drenched plains and the bleak mountains and the richest, most exotic lands of Asia and Arabia,â said Dionysus, looking every single person in the front row in the eyes. âNow, here, Iâll drive the women from their homes and make them run in the forest, dress in the skins of deer, carry staffs of ivy, and dance under the pines, to prove that I am a god, powerful and terrible.â
More murmuring. Some people shifted in their seats, while others (women) stood up. The actorâs voice intensified the potency of the wine in everyoneâs blood. The stage lights became brighterâor was the light coming from the actor himself? The women in the chorus stepped off their marks, crawling and writhing at his feet. Their eyes rolled as they twitched and clawed their bodies.
âThatâs why Iâve transformed myself to a mortal shape. You, my women who worship me, my beautiful barbarian priestesses, go and beat the drums and raise your voices high, so that everyone knows weâve come.â
âYes: Iâve come to dance,â said one of the chorus actors, scraping her body over the stage. âIâve come to cry out in glorious celebration of the great god.â
A woman in the audience whispered, âIs thisâŠis this how itâs supposed to go?â
âI have no idea,â said Andrew. He wanted to take a picture of the actor playing Dionysus but he simply couldnât. The camera might as well have weighed a thousand pounds.
âIâve come to sing,â said another woman in the chorus. âEveryone, hear the hymn of the great god and know that I celebrate his holy power.â
âBlessed are those who know our ways and join our Bacchic revels,â said a third. She peeled her costume down, exposing her naked breasts. Several others did the same.
âPut on your ivy crown and flaunt your green yew.â
âTaste the sweet fruits.â
âTo the mountains and the streams: Everyone dance!â
Offstage, the stage manager frowned. Those were the right lines, but why were women in the audience saying them? He felt a headache coming on. He also felt like he should stop the scene, but also that trying would be dangerous. Possibly even fatal.
Twilight came into the sky. One by one, all the women in the audience stood up, reaching out to touch the feet and robes of the boy onstage. Other actors came on to say their lines when they were meant to, but they all looked stunned and afraid, and none of them could finish. The women of the chorus became louder.
âThe land flows with milk. The land flows with wine. The land flows with honey from the bees.â
Every woman in the theater chanted along now.
âHe holds the blazing pine torch high, sweet smoke burning like Syrian incense. He dances and runs, stirring the straggler and leading them out. Join us! Celebrate the god of joy!â
The dam burst: Women pushed and kicked to get to the front seats, and those already there crawled onto the stage. Most clawed their dresses off, tearing fabric and spilling buttons and pearls. They poured wine onto their naked breasts and let it run in glorious streams, their hair flying free.
One woman peeled herself out of a cream-colored gown and threw away jewelry as she pulled herself up onto the stage and crept to the feet of the Wine God, kissing his ankles and calves. Eros flew to the stage and grabbed his cousin by the arm.
âDude! What the hell are you doing?â
âWhat we planned. The Frenzy is on these women: Now my power here is absolute, and no god can interfere. Do whatever you want without fear of interruption.â
âBut this is way too much heat. I wanted to get this done quietly. Do you have any idea whatâs going to happen to me when word gets around?â
âIâm the god of revels. I do what I want. Are you going to stop me?â
The Maenads forgot the actor king and turned on Eros. The night air grew thick with murderous intent. He threw up his hands.
âWhoa! You know what, never mind. Itâs cool. Do your thing, bro. Iâll show myself out.â
âDo,â said Dionysus.
Eros flitted off the stage. By now the whole grove was in chaos. The men were all catatonic. And the womenâŠwell, none of them were having a dull evening, that was for sure. Eros looked at his bow and his arrows, helpless.
âMom is going to kill me when she finds out about this,â he said.
Suddenly he remembered his job. He zipped into the crowd and found Mia. Sheâd had lousy seats, and was just now approaching the melee, dazed and stumbling. Eros put his hands out to stop her.
âTake it easy, girl. Why donât we just have a seat and wait forâŠwait forâŠoh, where the hell is he?â
Andrew couldnât take his eyes off the scene in front of him: writhing, crawling women, nude and half-nude, baptizing each other with bowls of beautiful, crystalline wine, whites that gleamed and reds so deep they were almost black. They fell over each other to lick the precious droplets up. Lips and tongues and fingers and breasts became stained. The grove was a writhing carpet of bodies. He felt desire stir but also heard a shrill, panicky voice of alarm in his head warning him to stay away.
In the reflected glare of the stage lights, the womenâs nails and teeth gleamed, and their loose manes made them look like wild animals. Andrew was sure that theyâd tear him apart if he got too close. Still, it was tempting. His feet wavered, taking a curious half-step forwardâŠ
Someone grabbed his shoulder and turned him around. Through the dreamy, unreal miasma of the wine and madness, the stranger looked likeâŠa man with wings?
âAndrew, buddy, can you hear me?â
âYes?â
âI think we should go check on Mia. That sound like a good idea? Check on Mia?â
âUmâŠif you think so.â
âI do. I really, really do.â
The two were easy to lead, though they tripped over their own feet, like zombies. Eros found a tree far away from the Bacchanal and sat them down. They started to come back to their senses, though they still looked a bit tipsy and uncertain. He snapped his fingers in front of their glazed eyes a few times. Finally, he made them both join hands, and gradually they focused on each other.
âMia, can you hear me? WellâŠlook, youâre not going to remember any of this except for one thing: From now on, youâre going to be completely honest with Andrew, always. Andrew, that goes for you too. Do both of you understand?â
They nodded, but neither of them were looking at him. They only had eyes for each other. It was like watching little light bulbs go on over each of their heads. Andrew felt like he couldnât breathe. When he finally could talk, all that came at first was mumbling.
âHey. Hi. I donât know how to say this, butâŠâ
âI know,â she said. âI mean, I know exactly what youâre going to say, andâŠâ
âYou too?â
âMe too.â
They kissed. The little hollow of the tree cradled them. Miaâs hands traced the line of Andrewâs back, all the way down to his rear, which she gave a squeeze just for the hell of it. He jumped. It was cute. She slipped her other hand down to get another feel. He certainly was enthusiastic tonight.
Andrew glanced over his shoulder. âShould we? Weâre right out in the openâŠâ
âEveryone else is.â
âI donât understand whatâs going on at all.â
âNeither do I. Letâs not worry about it. Kiss me.â
Meanwhile, Dionysus left the stage and went down into the people, bringing his Maenads with him. Every woman he touched with his ivy staff became an animal in heat. The younger and the older alike stripped, and found their bodies more beautiful than theyâd ever remembered. The touched themselves, exploring the softness of their naked skin, cupping each breast in the palm as if weighing it, fondling the outline of their legs and thighs and calves and then flinging themselves back into the grass and shouting out to trees, feeling free and mad and alive.
Then theyâd fall on each other, eager to feel more, long and untamed hair spreading underneath those who laid back and hanging over the shoulders of those who got on top. Soft breasts pressed together as open mouths met. Hands and fingers found each other, wrapping in knots. Nearby, they were dimly aware of what the others were doing, and the wet ache coming on urged them on to the same thing. But not yet. It could wait until the time came. What a wonderful thing, to be free and not to have to think about anything except this moment and the feel of warm flesh, the taste of good wine, and the music of moans and cries.
How good the grass felt against a bare back, and how much better still it felt to touch the pale white or dark brown limbs of a sister nearby and feel her body with yours and then taste her lips. How good to always find another and another, for the circle grew wider and wider. Some danced alone or in groups while standing, and others danced with one another in twos or threes while lying on the ground. How comforting to know that a great god watched over all of it and was pleased, and that no one would defy him by breaking up the revel.
There were men nearby, but they did nothing. That was how they showed their respect to the god: By fearing him enough not to interfere. If anyone dared, his blood would fill the mouth of every sister here.
But they turned to more pleasant thoughts, like the touch of a sister as she put her hand on a knee, sculpting the length of the leg with massaging fingers until the heat and want spiked. Would she go higher? Would her fingers dare go where they were wanted most? Another kiss, harder than the others, and then the agonizing relief of a touch just where it was truly needed.
Oh yesâŠ
Eros toasted his cousin. âIâve got to hand it to you. You always do throw one hell of a party.â
âItâs a lot of responsibility,â said Dionysus. âBut someone has to do it.â
***
Sunday morning. Miaâs bedroom. She and Andrew lay together.
âSoâŠyouâll do it?â she said.
âTonight.â
âIâm sorry. I know itâs going to be hard.â
âDonât be sorry. Besides, you have to talk to him.â
âYeah, but that will be a phone call. Not as bad. Heâll be relieved anyway. I mean, heâll still get mad, but just for show.â
âItâs not too late to change your mind, you know,â said Andrew.
âYes it is,â Mia said.
Eros watched from the fire escape, reclining on the railing. He didnât have his bow or golden arrows. Instead, Hathor had them, and a long silver chain with a lock wrapped around the entire bundle. She watched through the window too.
âWhat do they remember?â
âNot much,â said Eros. âThey think they got very drunk and blacked out, which is basically true. Most everyone else in the audience thinks the same thing. There were a few drunk and disorderly arrests, and a big scandal for the theater company, but no real harm done. âŠwell, all right, a couple of the actresses from the chorus have come up missing, but that will get sorted out. The Wine God does whatever he wants. All I did was point the damage in a direction that worked for me.â
âThatâs not all you did,â Hathor said, inclining her head toward the two inside.
âWhatâs the word on them?â
âYou win. I mean, youâre still busted, and you donât get these back.â She hefted the bow and arrows. âBut weâre not splitting them up.â
âI thought Nu Wa would scream and cry to get things put back the way she wanted them.â
âOh, she did, believe me. But the rest of us figured this pair had enough of gods meddling with their destiny. Better to leave them be.
She peered through the window at the man and woman who had been the cause of so much furor: So young and so naĂŻve, both of them.
âWhy these two?â said Hathor. âWhy did it matter so much?â
âI just like them, thatâs all. And I like getting my way.â
âBut there have been plenty of times you didnât get your way before. What was special now?â
Eros shrugged, shedding a few feathers. He didnât like the way she was looking at him.
âI have a theory,â Hathor continued. âWhat you said that night, about how theyâd both regret it if they forgot each other? I think youâve got regrets of your own, and you donât like seeing them happen to other people. Thatâs what touched a nerve about this couple. Am I right?â
Eros sat up. Beneath them, on the city street, a long snake of traffic honked its way along. He looked Hathor in the eyes for a long time, looked down at his feet as if groping for the right thing to say, and thenâŠ
He grinned.
âNah. What kind of regrets would a guy like me have? Iâm the god of love.â
âWeâre all the god of love.â
âI guess thatâs true.â
He winked at the couple through the window. Then he flapped his wings and floated up until the entire city was a great, sun-kissed panorama of glass and steel and people below him. Hathor followed.
âHow long am I suspended for?â he said.
âIâm not sure there are any numbers large enough to express the duration.â
âDoesnât matter. Iâll be back before you know it. A little vacation in the meantime sounds nice. What about you, my dear?â
He slipped an arm around her waist.
âFeel like going somewhere pleasant? A few weeks in the tropics? where we can get to know each other on a strictly non-professional basis? What do you say?â
Hathor looked shocked. Then she grinned. She took an arrow out of the quiver, considering its golden tip, turning it between her supple fingers and peering at Eros around the dove feathers in the fletching. And thenâŠ
She threw it away.
âKeep dreaming,â she said.