shoving and grunting to air his authority. I caught his eye. “Yesterday, I saw you blowing bubbles in the stream, and the day before the spotted sow sent you off with a bitten ear and nothing more. So you may behave.”
He huffed at the dirt, then flopped on his belly and subsided.
“Do you always talk to pigs when I am gone?”
Hermes stood in his traveling cloak, his broad-brimmed hat tilted over his eyes.
“I like to think of it the other way around,” I said. “What brings you out in the honest daylight?”
“A ship is coming,” he said. “I thought you might want to know.”
I stood. “Here? What ship?”
He smiled. He always liked seeing me at a loss. “What will you give me if I tell you?”
“Begone,” I said. “I prefer you in the dark.”
He laughed and vanished.
I made myself go about the morning as I usually would, in case Hermes watched, but I felt the tension in myself, the taut anticipation. I could not keep my eyes from flicking to the horizon. A ship. A ship with visitors that amused Hermes. Who?
They came at mid-afternoon, resolving out of the bright mirror of the waves. The vessel was ten times the size of Glaucos’, and even at a distance I could see how fine it was: sleek and brightly painted, with a huge rearing prow-piece. It cut through the sluggish air straight towards me, its oarsmen rowing steadily. As they approached, I felt that old eager jump in my throat. They were mortals.
The sailors dropped the anchor, and a single man leapt over the low side and splashed to shore. He followed the seam of beach and woods until he found a path, a small pig trail that wound upwards through the acanthus spears and laurel groves, past the thorn-bush thicket. I lost sight of him then, but I knew where the trail led. I waited.
He checked when he saw my lion, but only for a moment. With his shoulders straight and unbowed, he knelt to me in the clearing’s grass. I realized I knew him. He was older, the skin of his face more lined, but it was the same man, his head still shaved, his eyes clear. Of all the mortals on the earth, there are only a few the gods will ever hear of. Consider the practicalities. By the time we learn their names, they are dead. They must be meteors indeed to catch our attention. The merely good: you are dust to us.
“Lady,” he said, “I am sorry to trouble you.”
“You have not been trouble yet,” I said. “Please stand if you like.”
If he noticed my mortal voice, he gave no sign. He stood up—I will not say gracefully, for he was too solidly built for that—but easily, like a door swinging on a well-fitted hinge. His eyes met mine without flinching. He was used to gods, I thought. And witches too.
“What brings the famous Daedalus to my shores?”
“I am honored you would know me.” His voice was steady as a west wind, warm and constant. “I come as a messenger from your sister. She is with child, and her time approaches. She asks that you attend her delivery.”
I eyed him. “Are you certain you have come to the right place, messenger? There has never been love between my sister and me.”
“She does not send to you for love,” he said.
The breeze blew, carrying the scent of linden flowers. At its back, the muddy stink of the pigs.
“I’m told my sister has bred half a dozen children each more easily than the last. She cannot die in childbirth and her infants thrive with the strength of her blood. So why does she need me?”
He spread his hands, deft-looking and thickened with muscle. “Pardon, lady, I can say no more, but she bids me tell you that if you do not help her there is no one else who can. It is your art she wants, lady. Yours alone.”
So Pasiphaë had heard of my powers and decided they could be of use to her. It was the first compliment I had had from her in my life.
“Your sister instructed me to say besides that she has permission from your father for you to go. Your exile is lifted for this.”
I frowned. This was all strange, very strange. What was important enough to make her go to my father? And if she needed more magic, why not summon Perses? It seemed like some sort of trick, but I could