Mamas, donโt let your larvae Grow up to be ants
MEG THRASHED IN HER GOO CASE.ย โGet me out of here!โ
โI donโt have a blade!โ My fingers crept to the ukulele string around my neck. โActually I haveย yourย blades, I mean your ringsโโ
โYou donโt need to cut me out. When the ant dumped me here, I dropped the packet of seeds. It should be close.โ
She was right. I spotted the crumpled pouch near her feet.
I inched toward it, keeping one eye on the ants. They stood together at the entrance as if hesitant to come closer. Perhaps the trail of dead ants leading to this room had given them pause.
โNice ants,โ I said. โExcellent calm ants.โ
I crouched and scooped up the packet. A quick glance inside told me half a dozen seeds remained. โNow what, Meg?โ
โThrow them on the goo,โ Meg said.
I gestured to the geraniums bursting from her neck and armpit. โHow many seeds did that?โ
โOne.โ
โThen this many will choke you to death. Iโve turned too many people I cared about into flowers, Meg. I wonโtโโ
โJUST DO IT!โ
The ants did not like her tone. They advanced, snapping their mandibles.
I shook the geranium seeds over Megโs cocoon, then nocked my arrow. Killing one ant would do no good if the other three tore us apart, so I chose a different target. I shot the roof of the cavern, just above the antsโ heads.
It was a desperate idea, but Iโd had success bringing down buildings with arrows before. In 464ย BCE, I caused an earthquake that wiped out most of
Sparta by hitting a fault line at the right angle. (I never liked the Spartans much.)
This time, I had less luck. The arrow embedded itself in the packed earth with a dullย thunk.ย The ants took another step forward, acid dripping from their mouths. Behind me, Meg struggled to free herself from her cocoon, which was now covered in a shag carpet of purple flowers.
She needed more time.
Out of ideas, I tugged my Brazilian-flag handkerchief from my neck and waved it like a maniac, trying to channel my inner Paolo.
โBACK, FOUL ANTS!โ I yelled.ย โBRASIL!โ
The ants waveredโperhaps because of the bright colors, or my voice, or my sudden insane confidence. While they hesitated, cracks spread across the roof from my arrowโs impact site, and then thousands of tons of earth collapsed on top of the myrmekes.
When the dust cleared, half the room was gone, along with the ants.
I looked at my handkerchief. โIโll be Styxed. Itย doesย have magic power. I can never tell Paolo about this or heโll be insufferable.โ
โOver here!โ Meg yelled.
I turned. Another myrmeke was crawling over a pile of carcassesโ apparently from a second exit I had failed to notice behind the disgusting food stores.
Before I could think what to do, Meg roared and burst from her cage, spraying geraniums in every direction. She shouted, โMy rings!โ
I yanked them from my neck and tossed them through the air. As soon as Meg caught them, two golden scimitars flashed into her hands.
The myrmeke barely had time to thinkย Uh-ohย before Meg charged. She sliced off his armored head. His body collapsed in a steaming heap.
Meg turned to me. Her face was a tempest of guilt, misery, and bitterness. I was afraid she might use her swords on me.
โApollo, Iโฆโ Her voice broke.
I supposed she was still suffering from the effects of my song. She was shaken to her core. I made a mental note never again to sing so honestly when a mortal might be listening.
โItโs all right, Meg,โ I said. โI should be apologizing to you. I got you into this mess.โ
Meg shook her head. โYou donโt understand. Iโโ
An enraged shriek echoed through the chamber, shaking the compromised ceiling and raining clods of dirt on our heads. The tone of the scream reminded me of Hera whenever she stormed through the hallways of Olympus, yelling at me for leaving the godly toilet seat up.
โThatโs the queen ant,โ I guessed. โWe need to leave.โ
Meg pointed her sword toward the roomโs only remaining exit. โBut the sound came from there. Weโll be walking in her direction.โ
โExactly. So perhaps we should hold off on making amends with each other, eh? We might still get each other killed.โ
We found the queen ant.
Hooray.
All corridors must have led to the queen. They radiated from her chamber like spikes on a morning star. Her Majesty was three times the size of her largest soldiersโa towering mass of black chitin and barbed appendages, with diaphanous oval wings folded against her back. Her eyes were glassy swimming pools of onyx. Her abdomen was a pulsing translucent sac filled with glowing eggs. The sight of it made me regret ever inventing gel capsule medications.
Her swollen abdomen might slow her down in a fight, but she was so large, she could intercept us before we reached the nearest exit. Those
mandibles would snap us in half like dried twigs.
โMeg,โ I said, โhow do you feel about dual-wielding scimitars against this lady?โ
Meg looked appalled. โSheโs a mother giving birth.โ
โYesโฆand sheโs an insect, which you hate. And her children were ripening you up for dinner.โ
Meg frowned. โStillโฆI donโt feel right about it.โ
The queen hissedโa dry spraying noise. I imagined she would have already hosed us down with acid if she werenโt worried about the long-term effects of corrosives on her larvae. Queen ants canโt be too careful these days.
โYou have another idea?โ I asked Meg. โPreferably one that does not involve dying?โ
She pointed to a tunnel directly behind the queenโs clutch of eggs. โWe need to go that way. It leads to the grove.โ
โHow can you be sure?โ
Meg tilted her head. โTrees. Itโs likeโฆI can hear them growing.โ
That reminded me of something the Muses once told meโhow they could actually hear the ink drying on new pages of poetry. I suppose it made sense that a daughter of Demeter could hear the growth of plants. Also, it didnโt surprise me that the tunnel we needed was the most dangerous one to reach.
โSing,โ Meg told me. โSing like you did before.โ โIโI canโt. My voice is almost gone.โ
Besides, I thought, I donโt want to risk losing you again.
I had freed Meg, so perhaps Iโd fulfilled my oath to Pete the geyser god. Still, by singing and practicing archery, I had broken my oath upon the River Styx not once but twice. More singing would only make meย moreย of a
scofflaw. Whatever cosmic punishments awaited me, I did not want them to fall on Meg.
Her Majesty snapped at usโa warning shot, telling us to back off. A few feet closer and my head would have rolled in the dirt.
I burst into songโor rather, I did the best I could with the raspy voice that remained. I began to rap. I started with the rhythmย boom chicka chicka. I busted out some footwork the Nine Muses and I had been working on just before the war with Gaea.
The queen arched her back. I donโt think she had expected to be rapped to today.
I gave Meg a look that clearly meantย Help me out!
She shook her head. Give the girl two swords and she was a maniac. Ask her to lay down a simple beat and she suddenly got stage fright.
Fine, I thought. Iโll do it by myself.
I launched into โDanceโ by Nas, which I have to say was one of the most moving odes to mothers that I ever inspired an artist to write. (Youโre welcome, Nas.) I took some liberties with the lyrics. I may have changedย angelย toย brood motherย andย womanย toย insect. But the sentiment remained. I serenaded the pregnant queen, channeling my love for my own dear mother,
Leto. When I sang that I could only wish to marry a woman (or insect) so
fine someday, my heartbreak was real. I would never have such a partner. It was not in my destiny.
The queenโs antennae quivered. Her head seesawed back and forth. Eggs kept extruding from her abdomen, which made it difficult for me to
concentrate, but I persevered.
When I was done, I dropped to one knee and held up my arms in tribute, waiting for the queenโs verdict. Either she would kill me or she would not. I was spent. I had poured everything into that song and could not rap another line.
Next to me, Meg stood very still, gripping her swords.
Her Majesty shuddered. She threw back her head and wailedโa sound more brokenhearted than angry.
She leaned down and gently nudged my chest, pushing me in the direction of the tunnel we needed.
โThank you,โ I croaked. โIโIโm sorry about the ants I killed.โ
The queen purred and clicked, extruding a few more eggs as if to say,
Donโt worry; I can always make more.
I stroked the queen antโs forehead. โMay I call you Mama?โ Her mouth frothed in a pleased sort of way.
โApollo,โ Meg urged, โletโs go before she changes her mind.โ
I was not sure Mamaย wouldย change her mind. I got the feeling she had accepted my fealty and adopted us into her brood. But Meg was right; we needed to hurry. Mama watched as we edged around her clutch of eggs.
We plunged into the tunnel and saw the glow of daylight above us.