Read Death Ex Machina Online

Authors: Gary Corby

Death Ex Machina

A
LSO BY
G
ARY
C
ORBY

The Pericles Commission

The Ionia Sanction

Sacred Games

The Marathon Conspiracy

Copyright © 2015 Gary Corby

All rights reserved.

First published in the United States by

Soho Press, Inc.

853 Broadway

New York, NY 10003

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Corby, Gary.

Death ex machina / Gary Corby.

1. Nicolaos (Fictitious character : Corby)—Fiction. 2. Diotima (Legendary character)—Fiction. 3. Private investigators—Fiction. 4. Murder—Investigation—Fiction. 5. Athens (Greece)—Fiction. 6. Greece—History—Athenian supremacy, 479-431 B.C.—Fiction. I. Title. PR9619.4.C665D43  2015   823’.92—dc23   2014042465

HC ISBN 978-1-61695-519-9

PB ISBN 978-1-61695-676-9

eISBN 978-1-61695-520-5

Interior design by Janine Agro, Soho Press, Inc.

v3.1

For Gweneth Mary Corby
because every writer has a Mum

Contents

Cover

Other Books by This Author

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Map

Theatrical Terms

The Actors

Scene 1: Rehearsal for Death

Scene 2: The Psyche of the Great Dionysia

Scene 3: The Ghost of Thespis

Scene 4: The Mask

Scene 5: Drama Therapy

Scene 6: Fall from Favor

Scene 7: Break a Leg

Scene 8: The Healing Machine

Scene 9: The Tritagonist

Scene 10: This is becoming a Habit

Scene 11: Crowded House

Scene 12: Time Passes

Scene 13: Just Hanging Around

Scene 14: Descent into Melite

Scene 15: Whoops

Scene 16: The Academy

Scene 17: The Polemarch

Scene 18: Conference of War

Scene 19: The Speech

Scene 20: Writers’ Conference

Scene 21: The Previous Day Dawns Again

Scene 22: The Funeral

Scene 23: The Protagonist

Scene 24: Friends make the Worst Enemies

Scene 25: A Sudden Revelation

Scene 26: The Vegetable Woman

Scene 27:
Salaminia

Scene 28: The Skeleton in the Family Closet

Scene 29: All is not as it Seems

Scene 30: The Lakon Identity

Scene 31: The Hand of Sabazios

Scene 32: The High Priest

Scene 33: The Strange Tenant

Scene 34: The Rites of Sabazios

Scene 35: Professional Indiscretions

Scene 36: The Feast

Scene 37: The False Trial

Scene 38: Deus Ex Machina

Scene 39: A Happy Ending!

Scene 40: Denouement

Author Note

Glossary

Acknowledgments

THEATRICAL TERMS

M
ODERN THEATER COMES from the plays of classical Athens, including most of our theatrical terms. Many of the words haven’t changed their meaning in 2,500 years. A chorus is still a chorus. An amphitheater is still an amphitheater. There’s a certain magic in the idea that actors on stage today use the same words that you would have heard on stage in 458
BC
.

A few words have changed their meaning slightly. The wall at the back of the stage was called a
skene.
The latest innovation in Nico’s time was to paint the skene to match the subject of the play. That’s the origin of our words scene and scenery. In this book, Nico says skene to mean the wall, and scene to mean the action on stage.

In ancient Greek, the word orchestra means the place where the chorus stands. The classical Greek orchestra is the stage! To avoid confusion, Nico always uses the modern word stage where in his own tongue he would have said orchestra.

Greek plays were arranged in scenes, but they didn’t have acts. Scenes were interspersed with songs sung by the chorus, who commented on the plot, rather like a narrator.

There is one technical term in this book written in Latin, which is an odd thing in a mystery of classical Athens, but that’s how we know the term in modern English. I refer of course to the infamous plot technique, created by those dastardly Greeks, of
deus ex machina.

THE ACTORS

Every name in this book is a genuine one from the classical world. Some are still in use. To this day there are people named Nicolaos. It’s also the origin of our Nicholas.

Other names you might already know because they belong to famous people, such as Socrates and Pericles.

But some names from thousands of years ago are unusual to our modern eyes. I hope you’ll say each name however sounds happiest to you, and have fun reading the story.

For those who’d like a little more guidance, I’ve suggested a way to say each name in the character list. My suggestions do not match ancient pronunciation. They’re how I think the names will sound best in an English sentence.

That’s all you need to read the book!

Characters with an asterisk by their name were real historical people.

 

Nicolaos
NEE-CO-LAY-OS
 (Nicholas)

Our protagonist

“How do you get a ghost out of a theater?”

Pericles
*
PERRY-CLEEZ

A politician

“How in Hades should I know? That’s your job.”

Diotima
*
DIO-TEEMA

A Priestess of Artemis
Wife of Nico

“There’s no such thing as ghosts. Of course, there might be a
psyche
haunting the theater.”

Socrates
*
SOCK-RA-TEEZ

An irritant Brother of Nico

“Have you ever wondered why dead bodies mummify?”

Sophocles
*
SOFF-O-CLEEZ

A playwright Author of
Sisyphus

“That’s the machine. We use it to lift actors into the air when they’re playing gods.”

Aeschylus
*
AY-SHILL-US

A playwright

“Every writer in Athens is desperate to see his work at the Great Dionysia. It’s a wonder there isn’t a bloodbath every time the authors apply.”

Chorilos
*
KORR-E-LOS

A playwright

“If only it were that simple.”

Euripides
*
YOU-RIP-ID-EEZ

A wannabe
Creepy and intense tragic fan

“My mother didn’t send you, did she?”

Cleito
*
CLY-TOE

Euripides’s Mother

“You want to buy my onions?”

Lakon
LAY-KON

Lead actor (protagonist) of
Sisyphus

“I’m not the monster you think I am.”

Phellis
FELL-ISS

Second actor in
Sisyphus

“It’s not my fault. There’s a slippery patch.”

Romanos
ROM-AN-OS

Third actor in
Sisyphus

“The fact is, if I’m to get ahead in my profession, then I must become a citizen.”

Kebris
KEB-RIS

An old actor

“Death happens.”

Kiron
KEE-RON

Stage manager

“You probably think I’m a tough boss.”

Akamas
AK-AM-AS

Member of the stage crew

“If Thespis can be a ghost, and I saw a ghost, then it must be Thespis, right? That’s logic.”

Stephanos of Vitale
STEFF-AN-OS

Scene painter

“It’s the clients in this town that drive me crazy. You wouldn’t believe how many of them demand changes to perfectly good pictures.”

Theokritos
THEO-KRIT-OS

High Priest of Dionysos

“Real men drink wine.”

Euboulides and Pheidestratos
YOU-BOL-EED-EEZ
FIE-DE-STRAT-OS

Two slaves of the Scythian Guard

“It don’t normally take only a cup of wine to knock me down, master. Normally it’s more like … uh … ten.”

Melpon
MEL-PON

A doctor with a machine

“If you must throw up, do it outside.”

Kordax
CORD-AX

Captain of
Salaminia

“I’ve become addicted to speed. Do you know I’ve traveled faster than any man who’s ever lived?”

Lysanias
*
LIE-SAN-E-US

An elder statesman

“Is Athens in dire peril? Is our city on the verge of destruction?”

Pythax
PIE-THAX

Chief of the city guard of Athens
Father-in-law of Nicolaos

“Sisyphus had it coming to him.”

Sophroniscus
*
SOFF-RON-ISK-US

Father of Nicolaos

“Sometimes the best thing to do is accept a defeat and move on.”

Phaenarete
*
FAIN-A-RET-EE

Mother of Nicolaos
A midwife

“Your father is right, Nico.”

Euterpe
YOU-TERP-E

Mother of Diotima

“I think you should thank me for choosing you such an interesting husband.”

Habron
*
HAB-RON

The Eponymous Archon
Also, he’s the man in charge of the calendar

“What’s the date today?”

The Basileus
BASS-IL-E-US
(origin of our word Basilica)

The city official in charge of religious affairs

“Gentlemen, this is a murder committed in the presence of the God.”

The Polemarch
POL-E-MARK

Official in charge of resident aliens in Athens

“That’s it, then. We’re doomed.”

Andros
AND-ROSS

Assistant to the Polemarch

“Nobody ever reads government records. We just keep them.”

Thodis
THOAD-ISS

Choregos (producer) of the play
Sisyphus

“They tell me that protagonists are important people.”

Maia
MAY-AH

A professional mourner

“Euoi saboi! Euoi saboi!”

Petros
PET-ROS

Husband of Maia

“Did you enjoy it?”

Sisyphus
SISSY-FUSS

King of Corinth
Also, he pushes boulders uphill

A character in the play
Sisyphus
by Sophocles.

Thanatos
THAN-A-TOS

God of death

A character in the play
Sisyphus
by Sophocles.

Thespis
*
THESP-ISS
As in, thespian

A ghost

The world’s first actor. He’s been dead for fifty years, but not even dead actors can resist an encore.

The Chorus
Assorted guardsmen, sailors, drunken revelers, actors, stage crew, and believe it or not, a Greek chorus!

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