‘You mean . . . I can’t even look at her?’
‘Not directly. No.’ Athene laughed briefly and without much humour. ‘Polydectes didn’t tell you that, did he! But it doesn’t matter. I can show you what to do.’
‘It’s very kind of you, mighty Athene,’ Perseus said.
‘Don’t mention it. As a matter of fact, I’ve never cared much for Medusa and it’s about time someone did away with her. Now listen to what I have to tell you, Perseus. Your life will depend on it . . .’
The Grey Ones
A short while later, Perseus crept up on the Grey Ones, who were sitting beside a bog arguing. They were always arguing. The Grey Ones weren’t exactly monsters but they were certainly very strange. They had been born with grey hair (which is how they got their name) and they had only one eye and one tooth between the three of them. They were called Enyo, Pemphredo and Deino.
As Perseus approached, this is what he heard.
‘Can I have the tooth, please, Enyo?’ Pemphredo was saying.
‘Why?’ Enyo asked.
‘Because I want to eat an apple.’
‘But I’m eating a toffee.’
‘You can suck the toffee. I want the tooth!’
‘All right. All right. Here it is, then.’
‘I can’t see it.’
‘Haven’t you got the eye?’
‘I’ve got the eye,’ Deino said.
‘Let me have it,’ Pemphredo demanded.
‘No. I’m looking at something.’
The argument continued endlessly and Perseus guessed that the three old hags must have had the same conversation every day of their lives. Making no sound, he tiptoed up behind them and snatched away both the eye and the tooth.
‘Who is it?’ Enyo demanded.
‘Bite him!’ Pemphredo exclaimed.
‘I can’t!’ Deino cried. ‘He’s got the tooth!’
‘All right,’ Perseus said. ‘I’ve got your eye and your tooth and I won’t let you have them back until you tell me where I can find your sister, the Gorgon Medusa.’
The three Grey Ones got up and tried to grab him, but being unable to see they only grabbed each other. Eventually they sat down again, banging their fists in the mud and wailing with frustration.
‘If you don’t tell me what I want to know,’ Perseus continued, ‘I’ll throw your eye and your tooth away and you’ll never see or bite anyone again.’
‘All right!’
‘All right!’
‘All right!’
The Grey Ones tried to grind their teeth. But since that was impossible, they ground their gums instead.
‘Go to the Land of the Hyperboreans,’ Enyo said. Her voice was shrill and bitter. ‘There’s a big cave in a valley there. You can’t miss it.’
‘That’s where you’ll find her,’ Pemphredo added. ‘Just make sure you get a good look at her.’
‘Look her straight in the eyes!’ Deino giggled. ‘You’ll never forget your first sight of Medusa.’
Perseus gave them back their eye and their tooth and left them, their laughter echoing in his ears. The Grey Ones were still cackling to themselves, thinking how clever they had been, when he arrived in the Land of the Hyperboreans.
Medusa
Athene had not only told Perseus how to destroy the Gorgon, she had given him the means. As he approached Medusa’s cave, trying not to make any sound, he was carrying the goddess’s brightly polished shield in one hand and his own army sword in the other.
He knew that this must be where Medusa lived. He was in a gulley, a narrow cleft in the rocky landscape that was filled with stone people, some trapped as they turned to run, others frozen in horror, their mouths open, the screams still on their lips. It was as if they had been photographed in the last second of their life. Their reaction in that second had been caught for eternity. One young soldier had covered his face, but then he had tried to peep through his fingers. His stone hand still shuttered his stone eyes. A farmer with a scythe stood rigid with a puzzled smile, his stone fingers curled around the weapon, still trying to swing it through the air. There were stone women and stone children. It was like a crazy open-air museum.
Perseus saw the mouth of a large cave yawning darkly at him. Holding the shield more tightly than ever, he climbed up the gentle slope and, taking a deep breath, entered the gloom.
‘Medusa!’ he called out. His voice sounded lost in the shadows.
Something moved at the back of the cave.
‘Medusa!’ he repeated.
Now he could hear breathing and the sound of hissing.
‘I am Perseus!’ he announced.
‘Perseus!’ came a deep, throaty voice from the back of the cave. It was followed by a soft giggling. ‘Have you come to see me?’
The Gorgon stepped forward into the light. For a dreadful moment, Perseus was tempted to look up at her, to meet her eyes. But with all his strength he kept his head turned away as Athene had instructed him and instead concentrated on the reflection in the shield. He could see her green skin, her poisonous red eyes and her yellow teeth, all reflected in the polished bronze. He lifted the sword.
‘Look at me! Look at me!’ the Gorgon cried.
Still he kept his eyes on the shield. He took another step into the cave. The reflection was huge, the teeth snarling at him out of the shield. The snakes writhed furiously, hissing with the sound of red-hot needles being plunged into water.
‘Look at me! Look at me!’
How could he find her when all he could see was the reflection? Surely it would be easier to kill her if he took one quick look at her, just to make sure that he didn’t miss . . .
‘Yes. That’s right. I’m here!’
‘No!’
With a despairing cry, Perseus swung wildly with his sword. He felt the sharp steel bite into flesh and bone. The Gorgon screamed. The snakes exploded around her head as the whole thing flew from her shoulders, bounced against the cave wall and rolled to the ground. A fountain of blood spouted out of her neck as her body crumpled. Then at last it was over. With his eyes still fixed on the shield, Perseus picked up the grim trophy of his victory and dropped it into a heavy sack.
The Gorgon’s Head
Perseus had spent months looking for the Gorgon and he had many other adventures on his way back to Seriphos. And so a whole year had passed by the time he returned.
The first person he saw on the island was an old fisherman who was just bringing in the morning catch. His name was Dictys and by coincidence it had been he who had first discovered Perseus and his mother when they were washed ashore. The two greeted each other like old friends.
‘My dear Dictys,’ Perseus said. ‘Here I am, back at last. Now tell me, has the king married?’
‘No,’ the fisherman said. ‘King Polydectes lives alone.’
‘And how is my mother?’ Perseus asked.
At this, the old man burst into tears. ‘Oh Master Perseus!’ he cried. ‘It was your mother that the wicked king wished to marry. Once you were gone, he tried to force her into his bed, and when she refused he turned her into a slave. For a whole year now she’s been worked to the bone in the palace kitchens, carrying and cleaning. It’s a terrible thing, Master Perseus. The king just laughs at her . . .’
‘He does, does he?’ Perseus said through gritted teeth. ‘We’ll soon see about that!’
Throwing the bundle that he carried over his shoulder, Perseus strode into the palace and straight into the great hall where King Polydectes was sitting on his throne.
‘Greetings, Your Majesty!’ he called out to the astonished monarch. ‘It is I, Perseus, returned after twelve long months. I bring with me the present that you asked for.’
‘The Gorgon’s head?’ Polydectes muttered. ‘A likely story!’
‘Don’t you believe me, sire?’ Perseus asked.
‘Certainly not,’ the king said.
‘Would you believe your own eyes?’
‘Have you got it
there?’ The king pointed at the sack.
‘See for yourself.’
And with that, Perseus lifted the Gorgon’s head out of the sack and held it up for the king to see.
‘It’s . . .’ King Polydectes got no further than that. What was he about to say? It’s hideous? It’s not possible? Nobody would ever know. The next moment there was a stone statue leaning out of the throne, a stone sneer on its stone face and one stone eyebrow raised in disbelief.
Perseus wondered what would happen next. He had, after all, just assassinated the king. He was completely surrounded by the courtiers and the royal guard and he was prepared to turn the Gorgon’s head on anyone who tried to arrest him. But no sooner had Polydectes been frozen than there was a great cheering that began around the throne and spread throughout the palace. For it turned out that everyone on the island was tired of their cruel and scheming monarch. Perseus had finally got rid of him and, by popular acclaim, he was invited to become the new king.
But Perseus had had enough of Seriphos. Instead he chose Dictys to inherit the throne on the grounds that an honest fisherman would be just the man to rule over a kingdom – and certainly one that was entirely surrounded by water. He was reunited with his mother and, laden with gifts and various pieces of royal treasure, the two of them set off for new adventures. Eventually, he became the King of Mycenae, for Athene had been right. He had a good heart and had been born to be a hero.
He gave the Gorgon’s head to the goddess and she magically turned it into part of her armour and wore it to terrify her enemies in battle. Dictys ruled Seriphos long and well.
As for Polydectes, he was put in the palace garden as a pleasing ornament, and he is probably still there to this day.
. . . but I’m afraid I’ve made one of them up. Can you spot the intruder?
A mythical beast found in Islamic poetry, the Al-mi’raj is a large yellow rabbit with a single horn, like that of a unicorn. It may look harmless, but the Al-mi’raj is extremely aggressive and can kill and eat animals far larger than itself.
This mythical animal from Asia is similar in appearance to a bison, but with long, curly horns. Its most unusual feature is its dung, which is constantly on fire.
A variety of gnome found in Swiss folklore. They have extremely large feet, which are useful for skiing through the mountains, or surfing down avalanches.
A sea monster from Greek mythology, which is basically a giant mouth that swallows large amounts of water (and any unsuspecting ships that might be floating in it) and then spits it out as whirlpools.
An interesting creature from Mapuche Indian mythology, the Chonchon is a disembodied human head. It uses its extremely large ears as wings.
A small troll-like demon of Native American origin, the Puckwudgie has smooth, grey skin that has been known to glow in the dark. It can create fire and change its shape and is known for causing trouble!
In some African and Indian folklore Rompo has human ears, the head of a rabbit, a skeletal body, the arms of a badger and the legs of a bear. It is said to feed on human flesh and sing as it eats.
A High Priestess in Nubian mythology, this old hag had three eyes. One could see the past, one could see the future and one was blind. She lived in a cave with a talking snake.
Meaning ‘devourer’ or ‘bone eater’, Ammit is an Egyptian demon who is part lion, part hippo and part crocodile. In Egyptian mythology, when a person died their heart was weighed by Anubis on a pair of scales. If the heart was lighter than a feather, the person could continue to the afterlife – if not, they were eaten by Ammit.
The most deadly monster of Greek mythology, Typhon is as tall as the stars, with the heads of one hundred dragons extending from each hand. His lower half is made of enormous vipers and his whole body covered with wings.
ENDNOTES
1 The most accurate picture of the dragon was painted in the fifteenth century by an Italian named Uccello. If you have any doubts about the accuracy of my description, you can see it for yourself at the National Gallery in London.
2 Pronounced Finn McCool
Also by Anthony Horowitz from
Macmillan Children’s Books
LEGENDS: BATTLES AND QUESTS
First published 2010 by Macmillan Children’s Books
This electronic edition published 2010 by Macmillan Children’s Books
a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited
Pan Macmillan, 20 New Wharf Road, London N1 9RR
Basingstoke and Oxford
Associated companies throughout the world
www.panmacmillan.com
ISBN 978-0-330-52553-4 PDF
ISBN 978-0-330-52551-0 EPUB
Text copyright © Anthony Horowitz 1985, 2010
Illustration copyright © Thomas Yeates 2010
The right of Anthony Horowitz and Thomas Yeates to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Visit www.panmacmillan.com to read more about all our books and to buy them. You will also find features, author interviews and news of any author events, and you can sign up for e-newsletters so that you’re always first to hear about our new releases.
Beasts and Monsters Page 4