โThe Hercules Guide to the Mare Nostrumย didnโt help much with snakes and mosquitoes.โ
โIf this is a magic island,โ Piper grumbled, โwhy couldnโt it be aย nice
magic island?โ
They tromped up a hill and down into a heavily wooded valley, careful to avoid the black-and-red-striped snakes sunning themselves on the rocks. Mosquitoes swarmed over stagnant ponds in the lowest areas. The trees were mostly stunted olives, cypress, and pines. The chirring of the cicadas and the oppressive heat reminded Piper of the rez in Oklahoma during the summer.
So far they hadnโt found any river. โWe could fly,โ Jason suggested again.
โWe might miss something,โ Piper said. โBesides, Iโm not sure I want to drop in on an unfriendly god. What was his name? Etch-a-Sketch?โ
โAchelous.โ Jason was trying to read the guidebook while they walked, so he kept running into trees and stumbling over rocks. โSays here heโs aย potamus.โ
โHeโs a hippopotamus?โ
โNo.ย Potamus.ย A river god. According to this, heโs the spirit of some river in Greece.โ
โSince weโre not in Greece, letโs assume heโs moved,โ Piper said. โDoesnโt
bode well for how useful that book is going to be. Anything else?โ โSays Hercules fought him one time,โ Jason offered.
โHercules fought ninety-nine percent of everything in Ancient Greece.โ โYeah. Letโs see. Pillars of Herculesโฆโ Jason flipped a page. โSays here
this island has no hotels, no restaurants, no transportation. Attractions: Hercules and two pillars. Huh, this is interesting. Supposedly the dollar sign
โyou know, the S with the two lines through it?โthat came from the Spanish coat of arms, which showed the Pillars of Hercules with a banner curling between them.โ
Great, Piper thought. Jason finally gets along with Annabeth, and her brainiac tendencies start rubbing off on him.
โAnything helpful?โ she asked.
โWait. Hereโs a tiny reference to Achelous:ย This river god fought Hercules for the hand of the beautiful Deianira. During the struggle, Hercules broke off one of the river godโs horns, which became the first cornucopia.โ
โCorn of what?โ
โItโs that Thanksgiving decoration,โ Jason said. โThe horn with all the goodies spilling out? We have some in the mess hall at Camp Jupiter. I didnโt know the original one was actually some guyโs horn.โ
โAnd weโre supposed to take his other one,โ Piper said. โIโm guessing that wonโt be so easy. Who was Deianira?โ
โHercules married her,โ Jason said. โI thinkโฆdoesnโt say here. But I think something bad happened to her.โ
Piper remembered what Hercules had told them: his first family dead, his second wife dead after being tricked into poisoning him. She was liking this challenge less and less.
They trudged across a ridge between two hills, trying to stay in the shade; but Piper was already soaked with perspiration. The mosquitoes left welts on her ankles, arms, and neck, so she probably looked like a smallpox victim.
Sheโd finally gotten some alone time with Jason, andย thisย was how they spent it.
She was irritated with Jason for having mentioned Hera, but she knew she shouldnโt blame him. Maybe she was just irritated with him in general. Ever since Camp Jupiter, sheโd been carrying around a lot of worry and resentment.
She wondered what Hercules had wanted to tell her about the sons of Zeus. They couldnโt be trusted? They were under too much pressure? Piper tried to imagine Jason becoming a god when he died, standing on some beach guarding the gates to an ocean long after Piper and everyone else he knew in his mortal life were dead.
She wondered if Hercules had ever been as positive as Jasonโmore upbeat, confident, quick to comfort. It was hard to picture.
As they hiked down into the next valley, Piper wondered what was happening back on theย Argo II. She was tempted to send an Iris-message, but Hercules had warned them not to contact their friends. She hoped Annabeth could guess what was going on and didnโt try to send another party ashore. Piper wasnโt sure what Hercules would do if he were bothered further. She imagined Coach Hedge getting impatient and aiming a ballista at the man in purple, or eidolons possessing the crew and forcing them to commit suicide- by-Hercules.
Piper shuddered. She didnโt know what time it was, but the sun was already starting to sink. How had the day passed so quickly? She would have welcomed sundown for the cooler temperatures, except it was also their deadline. A cool night breeze wouldnโt mean much if they were dead. Besides, tomorrow was July 1, the Kalends of July. If their information was correct, it would be Nico di Angeloโs last day of life, and the day Rome was destroyed.
โStop,โ Jason said.
Piper wasnโt sure what was wrong. Then she realized she could hear running water up ahead. They crept through the trees and found themselves on the bank of a river. It was maybe forty feet wide but only a few inches deep, a silver sheet of water racing over a smooth bed of stones. A few yards downstream, the rapids plunged into a dark blue swimming hole.
Something about the river bothered her. The cicadas in the trees had gone quiet. No birds were chirping. It was as if the water was giving a lecture and would only allow its own voice.
But the more Piper listened, the more inviting the river seemed. She wanted to take a drink. Maybe she should take off her shoes. Her feet could really use a soak. And that swimming holeโฆit would be so nice to jump in
with Jason and relax in the shade of the trees, floating in the nice cool water. So romantic.
Piper shook herself. These thoughts werenโt hers. Something was wrong. It almost felt like the river was charmspeaking.
Jason sat on a rock and started taking off his shoes. He grinned at the swimming hole like he couldnโt wait to get in.
โCut it out!โ Piper yelled at the river. Jason looked startled. โCut what out?โ โNot you,โ Piper said. โHim.โ
She felt silly pointing at the water, but she was certain it was working some sort of magic, swaying their feelings.
Just when she thought she had lost it and Jason would tell her so, the river spoke:ย Forgive me. Singing is one of the few pleasures I have left.
A figure emerged from the swimming hole as if rising on an elevator. Piperโs shoulders tensed. It was the creature sheโd seen in her knife blade,
the bull with the human face. His skin was as blue as the water. His hooves levitated on the riverโs surface. At the top of his bovine neck was the head of a man with short curly black hair, a beard done in ringlets Ancient Greek style, deep, mournful eyes behind bifocal glasses, and a mouth that seemed set in a permanent pout. Sprouting from the left side of his head was a single bullโs hornโa curved black-and-white one like warriors might turn into drinking cups. The imbalance made his head tilt to the left, so that he looked like he was trying to get water out of his ear.
โHello,โ he said sadly. โCome to kill me, I suppose.โ
Jason put his shoes back on and stood slowly. โUm, wellโโ
โNo!โ Piper intervened. โIโm sorry. This is embarrassing. We didnโt want to bother you, but Hercules sent us.โ
โHercules!โ The bull-man sighed. His hooves pawed the water as if ready to charge. โTo me, heโll always be Heracles. Thatโs his Greek name, you know:ย the glory of Hera.โ
โFunny name,โ Jason said. โSince he hates her.โ
โIndeed,โ the bull-man said. โPerhaps thatโs why he didnโt protest when the Romans renamed him Hercules. Of course, thatโs the name most people know him byโฆhisย brand, if you will. Hercules is nothing if not image-
conscious.โ
The bull-man spoke with bitterness but familiarity, as if Hercules was an old friend who had lost his way.
โYouโre Achelous?โ Piper asked.
The bull-man bent his front legs and lowered his head in a bow, which Piper found both sweet and a little sad. โAt your service. River god extraordinaire. Once the spirit of the mightiest river in Greece. Now sentenced to dwell here, on the opposite side of the island from my old enemy. Oh, the gods are cruel! But whether they put us so close together to punish me or Hercules, I have never been sure.โ
Piper wasnโt sure what he meant, but the background noise of the river was invading her mind againโreminding her how hot and thirsty she felt, how pleasant a nice swim would be. She tried to focus.
โIโm Piper,โ she said. โThis is Jason. We donโt want to fight. Itโs just that HeraclesโHerculesโwhoever he is, got mad at us and sent us here.โ
She explained about their quest to the ancient lands to stop the giants from waking Gaea. She described how their team of Greeks and Romans had come together, and how Hercules had thrown a temper tantrum when he found out Hera was behind it.
Achelous kept tipping his head to the left, so Piper wasnโt sure if he was dozing off or dealing with one-horn fatigue.
When she was done, Achelous regarded her as if she were developing a regrettable skin rash. โAh, my dearโฆthe legends are true, you know. The spirits, the water cannibals.โ
Piper had to fight back a whimper. She hadnโt told Achelousย anything
about that. โH-howโ?โ
โRiver gods know many things,โ he said. โAlas, you are focusing on the wrong story. If you had made it to Rome, the story of the flood would have served you better.โ
โPiper?โ Jason asked. โWhatโs he talking about?โ
Her thoughts were suddenly as jumbled as kaleidoscope glass.ย The story of the floodโฆIfย you had made it to Rome.
โIโIโm not sure,โ she said, though the mention of a flood story rang a distant bell. โAchelous, I donโt understandโโ
โNo, you donโt,โ the river god sympathized. โPoor thing. Another girl stuck with a son of Zeus.โ
โWait a minute,โ Jason said. โItโs Jupiter, actually. And how does that make her aย poor thing?โ
Achelous ignored him. โMy girl, do you know the cause of my fight with Hercules?โ
โIt was over a woman,โ Piper recalled. โDeianira?โ
โYes.โ Achelous heaved a sigh. โAnd do you know what happened to her?โ
โUhโฆโ Piper glanced at Jason.
He took out his guidebook and began flipping through pages. โIt doesnโt reallyโโ
Achelous snorted indignantly. โWhat isย that?โ
Jason blinked. โJustโฆThe Hercules Guide to Mare Nostrum.ย He gave us the guidebook soโโ
โThat isย notย a book,โ Achelous insisted. โHe gave you that just to get under my skin, didnโt he? He knows I hate those things.โ
โYou hateโฆbooks?โ Piper asked.
โBah!โ Achelousโs face flushed, turning his blue skin eggplant purple. โThatโsย notย a book.โ
He pawed the water. A scroll shot from the river like a miniature rocket and landed in front of him. He nudged it open with his hooves. The weathered yellow parchment unfurled, covered with faded Latin script and elaborate hand-drawn pictures.
โThisย is a book!โ Achelous said. โOh, the smell of sheepskin! The elegant feel of the scroll unrolling beneath my hooves. You simply canโt duplicate it in something likeย that.โ
He nodded indignantly at the guidebook in Jasonโs hand. โYou young folks today and your newfangled gadgets. Bound pages. Little compact squares of text that are not hoof-friendly. Thatโs aย boundย book, a b-book, if you must. But itโs not a traditional book. Itโll never replace the good old-fashioned scroll!โ
โUm, Iโll just put this away now.โ Jason slipped the guidebook in his back pocket the way he might holster a dangerous weapon.
Achelous seemed to calm down a little, which was a relief to Piper. She didnโt need to get run over by a one-horned bull with a scroll obsession.
โNow,โ Achelous said, tapping a picture on his scroll. โThis is Deianira.โ
Piper knelt down to look. The hand-painted portrait was small, but she could tell the woman had been very beautiful, with long dark hair, dark eyes, and a playful smile that probably drove guys crazy.
โPrincess of Calydon,โ the river god said mournfully. โShe was promised to me, until Hercules butted in. He insisted on combat.โ
โAnd he broke off your horn?โ Jason guessed.
โYes,โ Achelous said. โI could never forgive him for that. Horribly uncomfortable, having only one horn. But the situation was worse for poor Deianira. She could have had a long, happy life married to me.โ
โA man-headed bull,โ Piper said, โwho lives in a river.โ
โExactly,โ Achelous agreed. โIt seems impossible she would refuse, eh? Instead, she went off with Hercules. She picked the handsome, flashy hero over the good, faithful husband who would have treated her well. What happened next? Well, she should have known. Hercules was much too wrapped up in his own problems to be a good husband. He had already murdered one wife, you know. Hera cursed him, so he flew into a rage and killed his entire family. Horrible business. Thatโs why he had to do those twelve labors as penance.โ
Piper felt appalled. โWaitโฆHeraย madeย him crazy, andย Herculesย had to do the penance?โ
Achelous shrugged. โThe Olympians never seem to pay for their crimes. And Hera has always hated the sons of Zeusโฆor Jupiter.โ He glanced distrustfully at Jason. โAt any rate, my poor Deianira had a tragic end. She became jealous of Herculesโs many affairs. He gallivanted all over the world, you see, just like his father Zeus, flirting with every woman he met. Finally Deianira got so desperate she listened to bad advice. A crafty centaur named Nessus told her that if she wanted Hercules to be faithful forever, she should spread some centaur blood on the inside of Herculesโs favorite shirt. Unfortunately Nessus was lying because he wanted revenge on Hercules. Deianira followed his instructions, but instead of making Hercules a faithful husbandโโ
โCentaur blood is like acid,โ Jason said.
โYes,โ Achelous said. โHercules died a painful death. When Deianira realized what sheโd done, sheโฆโ The river god drew a line across his neck.
โThatโs awful,โ Piper said.
โAnd the moral, my dear?โ Achelous said. โBeware the sons of Zeus.โ
Piper couldnโt look at her boyfriend. She wasnโt sure she could mask the uneasiness in her eyes. Jason would never be like Hercules. But the story played into all her fears. Hera had manipulated their relationship, just as she had manipulated Hercules. Piper wanted to believe that Jason could never go into a murderous frenzy like Hercules had. Then again, only four days ago he had been controlled by an eidolon and almost killed Percy Jackson.
โHercules is a god now,โ Achelous said. โHe married Hebe, the youth goddess, but still he is rarely at home. He dwells here on this island, guarding those silly pillars. He says Zeusย makesย him do this, but I think he prefers being here to Mount Olympus, nursing his bitterness and mourning his mortal life. My presence reminds him of his failuresโespecially the woman who finally killed him. Andย hisย presence reminds me of poor Deianira, who could have been my wife.โ
The bull-man tapped the scroll, which rolled itself up and sank into the water.
โHercules wants my other horn in order to humiliate me,โ Achelous said. โPerhaps it would make him feel better about himself, knowing that Iโm miserable too. Besides, the horn would become a cornucopia. Good food and drink would flow from it, just as my power causes the river to flow. No doubt Hercules would keep the cornucopia for himself. It would be a tragedy and a waste.โ
Piper suspected the noise of the river and the drowsy sound of Achelousโs voice were still affecting her thoughts, but she couldnโt help agreeing with the river god. She was starting to hate Hercules. This poor bull-man seemed so sad and lonely.
Jason stirred. โIโm sorry, Achelous. Honestly, youโve gotten a bum deal. But maybeโฆwell, without the other horn, you might not be so lopsided. It might feel better.โ
โJason!โ Piper protested.
Jason held up his hands. โJust a thought. Besides, I donโt see that we have many choices. If Hercules doesnโt get that horn, heโll kill us and our friends.โ
โHeโs right,โ Achelous said. โYou have no choice. Which is why I hope youโll forgive me.โ
Piper frowned. The river god sounded so heartbroken, she wanted to pat his head. โForgive you for what?โ
โI have no choice either,โ Achelous said. โI have to stop you.โ The river exploded, and a wall of water crashed over Piper.