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Authors: Ann Halam

BOOK: Snakehead
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“Hey. Are you going to get out of the way, or what?” I demanded.

My vision cleared. I saw that the taller of the two was dressed as a warrior, in polished black: a tunic as if carved from obsidian; leg and arm guards strapped around white sculpted muscle; a black breastplate. She had a shield on her back and a sword at her hip, and her face was so icily beautiful I couldn’t look at it. The young man with her wore a traveler’s cloak and hat and carried a herald’s staff. His sandals had wings at the heels. He looked more human than the woman, but it was hard to keep his smooth, bright face in focus; it seemed to be in constant motion.

I knew who they were. I refused to fall on my knees. I wanted to run, but no one can run from fate. The other world had reached out to claim me, and there was nothing I could do. I hated to be in their power, but I
needed
them.

“I never get out of anyone’s way,” said my half sister Athini, in a dangerously gentle tone. “What are you going to do about it, Perseus?”

“Oh well.” I made as if to turn around and head back into the woods. (I was showing off; there was no risk that they’d let me go.) “There are other paths.”

“Stay where you are, brat!” snapped the Goddess of Wisdom with her hand on her sword hilt. I remembered I was supposed to look out for her temper.

“We need to talk to you,” explained the young man,
whose staff and winged heels told me he was Hermes, the Divine Messenger, God of Thought. “Or rather, you need to talk to us. We’re here to equip you for your quest. Didn’t Father Zeus tell you?”

“He didn’t tell me anything beyond Polydectes’ feast.”

“But you know you have to slay the Medusa?”

I could not let go of my anger. “For the sake of argument,” I said, “let’s say I know that. Let’s say I have to chop this woman’s head off, because you Supernaturals say so, and I don’t have a choice. But it sounds like murder to me. You can’t just tell me
she’s a monster
, as if that explains everything. Why does Medusa deserve to die? Hasn’t she suffered enough?
Why
do I have to do this? I don’t understand.”

Athini came up close, in one stride. Her blinding face looked into mine. I felt her touch on my brow, same as when my father had pushed me off his yacht, into the whirling snake pit. “You have to do it because
you don’t know,”
she said.

I backed off, stumbling and shaking my head.

“Thanks. That’s very helpful.”

“Don’t bother with the sarcasm, Perseus. These are mysteries. Just pay attention.”

“The Medusa is innocent,” said Hermes. “She was once the most beautiful creature in the world, but she offended one of the Supernaturals. She was transformed, as you have heard, into a hideous monster whose glance turns anyone looking on her to stone. She banished herself to
the Garden of the Hesperides, at the far end of the world, where she lives with the two Gorgon sisters, Sthenno and Euryale. They have boar tusks, snakes for hair, and they are winged…. Medusa has never willingly harmed anyone, but what you do will not be murder, far from it. For the Medusa it will be a joyful release.”

“Which doesn’t mean the monster won’t put up a fight.” Athini unslung the shield from her back, and drew her sword. “And you are not immune to the petrifying glance, Perseus. You have to do it like this.” She demonstrated. “Look into the shield.
Do not
look at the Medusa. Look at the Snakehead directly and—divine or mortal—you are dead stone. Look into the shield. In reflection she is not a monster, I assure you. One sweep, and leap back. Her blood is poisonous, by the way.
Don’t
get the blood on your skin.”

I thought I knew how to handle a sword and shield. I thought I was pretty good, tell you the truth, although I’d never drawn a weapon in anger. But when my half sister went into action, that was utterly different. I was awed.

She held out the sword and shield. “Now you try.”

God help me, I thought. But there was no escape.

She schooled me till I was dripping, and let me stand for a breather. My poor-box tunic was drenched; my legs were trembling. Athini was cool and dry as marble.

“Not bad. You can borrow the shield. I’ll have my sword back, thank you.”

“Apart from the blood,” said Hermes, who’d been
watching the training bout carefully, and making helpful comments (I mean, really helpful). “There are the Gorgon sisters. Sthenno and Euryale are not mortal or human, and never were. You can’t kill them, don’t try. The only thing you can do is get away from there, very, very fast. You’ll need to borrow these.” He stooped, swift as thought, and unfastened his sandals.

I slung the shield of Athini on my back, and took the sandals. The wings on the heels were fixed with little golden studs; they were folded like a sleeping bird’s. I’d seen Yacht Club kids wearing winged sandals with the feathers done in cut leather, dyed white or gilded…. This was where the idea came from; this was the real thing.

“Don’t put them on,” Hermes advised. “Put them in, er”—he took a dubious look at the sweat-sodden, poor-box tunic—“in the breast of your, er, training kit. Practice where you have plenty of space. No buildings or tall trees around, and no steep hillsides you might smash yourself into. But don’t worry, it’s intuitive, you’ll soon pick it up.”

I held the sandals, not sure if I should really stuff them away.

“And there’s this.” Hermes produced a slim bundle from under his cloak, unwrapped it and drew a weapon from a plain leather sheath. It was a strange thing, between a sickle and a hooked dagger and the length of a foot soldier’s short sword. “This is the
harpe,”
he said.
“It’s Chaldean. It wants to help you.
Please
treat it with respect.” The blade was well-forged bronze, without any inscription; the edge had a silvery, wavering gleam. “The metal’s specially treated. It’ll sever Medusa’s head at one blow, which is vital. You won’t get a second swing at her.”

“All right,” I said. “I’ll remember that.” I tucked the sandals under my arm. He slid the
harpe
into its sheath, wrapped it up again and put it into my hands.

“Keep these things hidden until you’re off the island. Your enemy, Polydectes, doesn’t know that he is in our hands. He believes you were fathered either by a cunning mortal who sneaked into the tower, or else by some minor deity with no great power whom the king of Argos had offended. He thinks he’s sending you on a hopeless venture.
Don’t
let him know you’ve had our help.”

“I won’t.”

Athini stood with her arms folded. “How about ‘thank you,’ Perseus?”

I did not feel grateful. Stunned, yes. Dazzled, definitely. Winged sandals, Athini’s own shield! Great Mother. But I didn’t feel like
thanking
them for the loan of these staggering treasures. They were supplying the gear they needed me to have, so that I could do their bidding. Why should I thank them for that? I used my common sense. I bowed very low and made the right noises. Athini looked slightly mollified. Now’s my chance to find out something I personally need to know, I thought.

“You’ve been very kind and generous and thoughtful. I’m
overwhelmed, Great Athini, Divine Hermes. But, er, there’s one thing. Excuse my ignorance, but which Divine Person did she offend? Which of the Supernaturals did something so terrible to the most beautiful creature in the world?”

Until my father had told me I had to kill her, the Medusa had just been a name to me, just one of those hair-raising monsters that litter the Middle Sea: some of them real, some of them as fake as a stuffed mermaid. But I knew how the Supernaturals ganged up on each other. If it was true that the Medusa would be released by my blow, the Person who had turned her into a monster was not going to be pleased. I had to know whose divine toes I would be stepping on. I knew
I’d
be the one in trouble with whoever it was. Not Zeus, Hermes and Athini, oh no. That’s not the way it works.

Hermes grinned, which worried me. “Ah, hmm …We’re glad you asked that.” He glanced at Great Athini. “That’s a very good question, isn’t it, sister?”

Athini was not amused. She came up too close again, gripped me by my upper arms and fixed me with that terrifying, glorious gaze.
“I
did it. Something most improper happened to her, in one of my temples. I detest that kind of thing and
I lost my temper
.”

“All right,” I said hurriedly. “That’s fine. Thanks. Just wanted to know.”

She stepped back, and resumed her businesslike tone. “We come to the journey. The Gorgons live in the Garden of the Hesperides. Do you know where that is?”

I told her what the Yacht Club kids had told me when I asked. “The Gorgons’ lair is in North Africa. Almost as far as the Pillars of the West, and back from the coast a bit, somewhere. There’s a huge mountain range. It’s in the foothills, I think.”

She sighed. “You
think
. And how are you going to get there?”

I’d been working it out. “I’ll take a boat over to Paros. I’d get a berth from there to Libya, and then coast-hop westward, asking the way as I go. I’d get better directions when I’m in the area, since I’ll be following the trail of the other champions.”

No points. Athini and Hermes were shaking their heads.

“No, no, no,” said Hermes.
“Do not
head south. That’s the way to join the statuary. You’re forgetting that Polydectes is your enemy, and you’re forgetting this is not a mortal quest. You must go down to the River, to find your way back to the Garden.”

There was no river in the Medusa lore I’d picked up. “Er, which river?”

Hermes looked amazed at my slow thinking. “The dark one, of course.”

“Ask the nymphs,” Athini advised. “They’ll help you.”

“Nymphs?”
I felt a shift in the air, in the light, and panicked, because I knew Athini and Hermes were about to vanish, leaving me bewildered. “There’s a nymph for every tree and stone on Serifos, and what do those
fragile creatures know?
Which
of them do you suggest I should ask?”

Athini looked at Hermes. “He really is one of us,” said the Goddess.

She smiled on me, for the first time: a smile so fierce and glorious it nearly knocked me off my feet. “My father’s half-mortal children are frequently supercharged dolts, Perseus. They see what mortals can’t see, they feel what immortals can’t feel, and they go crazy, torn between the worlds, and have to be put out of their misery. You will not share that fate; you are too wise. We salute you…. The Stygian nymphs are different from the simple spirits you know. The Graeae, the Elder Goddesses, will show you how to reach them. But they won’t do it willingly. You’ll have to trick them.”

A bright cloud, like a sun-filled mist, fell between me and the Supernaturals.

“The Graeae have one tooth and one eye between them. If one of them wants to eat, she says pass the tooth; if one of them wants to see what she’s eating, she says pass the eye. Your best plan is to steal the eye and the tooth, trade them for a passage….”

The Divine Messenger’s voice came from far away. It was fading … it was gone.
Trade the eye and the tooth for a passage
.

I was alone on the stony height.

“I don’t understand!” I yelled. “Why
me?
You know
everything, you have all the power. If you want the Medusa’s head,
Why don’t you just take it?”

“That’s what we’re doing, Perseus,” said Athini’s voice. “You are our action.”

The confusion I’d felt before Athini and Hermes appeared had vanished. I knew where I was. It was hot noon. I had a pair of winged sandals in the front of my tunic, Athini’s shield on my back and a wicked-looking curved dagger, wrapped up in a bundle of cloth, that the God Hermes had treated with great respect. I decided the
harpe
was safely disguised by its sheath, which was attached to a plain leather belt. I strapped it around my waist (the poor-box tunic’s belt was a piece of cord). I used the cloth to wrap Athini’s shield. I couldn’t do anything about the sandals’ shining white feathers, which poked out of the neck of my skimpy tunic. I plodded home, looking as if I’d stolen somebody’s prize fancy chicken.

There was no one in the yard when I let myself in. Kefi was singing in the stable, accompanied by some mighty honks from the mules. I could hear voices from the kitchen and the dining room: our staff, my family, Andromeda, getting ready for the evening. I had a strange feeling that if I went into the restaurant, they wouldn’t recognize me. They’d say,
You can’t be Perseus. He vanished, long ago…
. I sneaked through the house like a
ghost, and reached my own room without being spotted. Our ferret, Brébré, was asleep on my bed. I laid out my treasures, and sat there cuddling his warm, supple, furry body. He licked my chin. A ferret can be a surprisingly comforting pet.

“I’m going away, Brébré. I’m going hunting. You won’t see me for a while.”

Athini’s shield.

Winged sandals.

The
harpe
.

And a bucketful of instructions that were fast escaping from my brain. Find the Stygian nymphs, steal the eye and the tooth. Practice where there are no trees. Could we go over that again, Hermes? I can’t memorize things I can’t understand.

The feathers felt like feathers; the wings were no bigger than a pigeon’s wings. Hermes was limber and tall, but very slim. Do Gods weigh anything? Would his sandals carry me? Perhaps they’d only have to carry half my weight, as I was only half mortal. Someone coughed. The boss was at my door, his cooking apron around his waist.

He looked older, worn and bowed by trouble. Maybe it was because I’d just seen his brother. I stood up, holding Brébré, and felt that I towered over him. I’d been taller than the boss since I was ten, but I’d never felt bigger than him before.

“Anthe and Andromeda told you?”

“That everything happened as Great Zeus foretold? The
king challenged you, and you accepted? Yes, they did.” He saw the loot on my bed, and looked at me quizzically.

“Equipment,” I croaked. “I had another encounter with the Supernaturals.”

“I see.” He moved the shield aside, and sat on my bed.
“Can
you do this, Perseus? Can you kill the monster?”

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