Below us, the dark and sleeping earth. Above us, the wide and starry sky.

And still no moon.

“I wonder,” said Ruth, “if Crow has figured out how widespread the moon anomaly is.”

Hello,” said a head of glossy black feathers that appeared in the ruff of Rook’s neck.

Talk of the devil and she shall appear,” said Ruth. 

Never met that fellow myself,” said Crow. “Anyway, this moon thing seems to end about a hundred miles from your location. I’ve been getting reports from birds farther afield, saying it’s not happening where they are.”

Great,” said Ruth. “So to anyone watching from above, there’s a big shadow moving slowly towards Lake Superior. He knows where we’re going, he knows we’re in the shadow, he knows we don’t want to be seen. It’s like trying to hide by sitting behind the single bush in a field.”

Or trying to hide in a moving cloud,” I said. “Maybe we ought to be turning north after all. That might throw him off a bit. Well, Crow, do you think you can help us out here? Maybe try one of your famous tricks?”

“Better to try a new one,” said the voice of an unfamiliar woman.

I whipped my head around. There was an owl sitting on Rook’s back, behind Ruth. “I’m going to take a wild guess and say you’re –”

Athena,” said Crow. “You finally showed up.”

I arrive precisely when I mean to, my frisky feathered friend.”

“Hang on a second,” said Ruth, “I thought you didn’t like having the Olympians in your territory?”

“It’s a temporary alliance!” said Crow. “I needed to consult with someone who understood these people better than I did.”

And you,” I said to Athena. “You would conspire against your own father?”

“Yes?” said Athena. “This is not the first time I have done so. Surely you have read stories about my family? We are not one big happy. And here you are, two heroes on an odyssey –”

Three,” said Ruth, switching back to Crow Speak. “Rook is the one doing all the work right now anyway.”

And we’re not going on an odyssey,” I said. “We’re going away from home, not towards it.”

The owl winked.

“What the hell is that supposed to mean?” said Ruth.

And how the hell did you do that?” I said.

“You think you’re going to get an easy answer out of Athena,” said Crow, in the human tongue. “Look, you wanted a trick, I’ve got a trick. Fly up to the moon and tell her that our three heroes here are going to be making a dash straight across the plains towards Lake Superior.”

“You want me to fly up to a moon that isn’t there,” said Athena.

“No, silly, I want you to fly to the moon that is there. Get a few hundred miles from us and then make for the moon.”

“Ah ha,” said Athena. “And then these three will wait a bit before heading north along the mountains, while the artificial moon shadow makes it look like they’re over the plains.”

You’re almost as clever as me, madam.”

The owl glared at Crow. “More importantly, I should hope I am far more wise.”

“You’re sure this will work?” said Ruth. “I get the feeling that our little Denali ploy didn’t fool Zeus for long. We spotted a storm on the horizon a day ago –”

“Then he’s caught on to your general location,” said Athena. “Your foolish behavior with those hikers has reached my ears, which means it has reached his. You two definitely need to go to ground for a few days, and not make the slightest mistake. Crow, if your plan is going to work I need you to do something special.”

“Like what?” said Crow.

“Get too big for your britches,” said Athena. Her owl eyes shone bright, and then Crow was rising into the air, cawing madly. Suddenly, where a little crow had been was a huge black bird, nearly as big as Rook. The bird veered away from us northward, and was soon gone.

“Please tell me you’re going to turn them back,” said Ruth.

“They shouldn’t be too hard to find,” said Athena. “All I have to do is follow the news. Alright, young ones, good luck. You’ll need it.” She spread her owl wings and lifted off and away.

Glad to have her on our side,” said Ruth.

No,” said Rook. “She is a suspicious lady. She is sneaky. Be careful.”

We don’t have a good track record with that,” I said.

Please?”

As you wish, my formidable feathered friend.”



Above us, the densely-woven boughs of fir. Around us, the deep shadows of the forest floor. Beside us, the still water of a beaver pond. Around me, Ruth’s wings, as she and I rested beneath Rook’s wing. 

We had taken no time to enjoy ourselves, when we touched down before dawn, not like normal. We had gone straight to sleep. No sense risking being seen by the sun. But that meant I had woken up well before noon, this time. Had I not been in Ruth’s arms I would have worried about becoming bored and stifled.

Then again, even with her embrace it would happen eventually. Eventually I would find it impossible to rest anymore. Perhaps I could do the noon prayer before noon – except that, if I did so, if I made a proper prayer with the rug and everything, Zeus might pick up on our location. Damn that  – that Olympian, keeping me from my duties! I ought to just march right out and – 

 – and consider that Ruth was correct, and my religion certainly did not demand any expressions of faith that would put me and my companions in peril.

Hmph. So I couldn’t even spice things up with a little martyrdom.

I gently brushed the feathers of Ruth’s cheek.

She stirred. “Hm? Oh, Rani. Good morning.” She yawned. “Do I look any different today?”

Um –”

What am I saying, it’s too dark to know. Wait a second. I sound different. Why am I talking in Crow first thing in the morning? Oh, no.”

Rook stirred a bit, and said, “You chose to talk to me. You chose to speak in Crow so that I could be a part of the conversation. You sacrificed your human form for me. Seems like Rani isn’t the only one you sacrifice for.”

Oh dear,” said Ruth. “Rani, it seems we have both adopted this bird.”

If I can still hold a pen I’ll sign the papers. Ah, but that reminds me, I should be taking scientific notes now that we have the opportunity. Ah, but I will have to step out from under Rook’s wing, and leave you, my dear.”

And get spotted by an Olympian? No way.”

We did pick the deep shadows for a reason.” I lifted Rook’s wing a little and peeked out. Right in front of me was a patch of sunlight. Dammit. I peeked out the other side. Another patch of sunlight. Nuts. Alright. I crawled under the long part of Rook’s wing and peeked out. Ah, there was shadow. I scurried forward.

Ruth was close behind. “Rani, this is –”  she gasped. “Oh, goodness. Fresh air. It tastes so sweet.”

Only the best for you, my dear.”

Oh!” said Ruth. “You are so romantic! I wish I could kiss you right now. Stupid beak.”

Perhaps this is the purpose of our journey,” I said. “For the sake of a kiss.”

How much we spend for its sake! Yet I would say a kiss is worth it all.”

About that,” I said, stepping into the darkness beneath a spruce tree. “We may jest, but I would like to discuss the matter more seriously.” I sat against the trunk. “Sit by me.”

Ruth sat in front of me and fixed me with her gaze.

I said sit BY me. I want to put my arm around you.”

Ruth sat next to me. I draped an arm over her shoulder, my long flight feathers covering half of her body. Ruth glanced at me, and said, “What’s got you in a serious mood?”

Athena,” I said. “And Apollo. If Athena hadn’t repeated Apollo’s remark about an odyssey, I would have thought the word was inconsequential. But Athena thinks it’s important enough to repeat. An Apollo does prophecies, so – ”

So we’re going on a grand and noble quest,” chirped Ruth. “That sounds like fun.”

A grand and noble quest would be Arthurian, and we’re nowhere near Wales.”

Ruth scoffed. “The Argonauts had a grand and noble quest!”

Grand yes, noble I don’t know. It’s not like they were trying to save anyone’s life, they were just trying to grab something that would let Jason claim to be the head honcho. And that whole thing ended with Medea chopping up her brother to distract her dad’s pursuit, and then Jason cheated on Medea and lost her and then he got hit by a falling timber from his decaying ship. Nah. I don’t call Jason a role model. I don’t call any Greek hero a role model. Their stories almost never end happy.”

The Odyssey did, right?”

Sure, after Odysseus slaughtered a bunch of guests and caused a civil war on Ithaca. Athena had to step into that one.”

Alright,” said Ruth, “What about –”

Herakles died when he got poisoned by the hydra venom he’d collected long ago.”

How ironic!” said Ruth. “How tragic! Brought low by his own greatest triumph! A true Greek tragedy!”

Yeah,” I said, “they’re all tragedies besides Perseus. Maybe the writers of all those stories only how to write tragedies.”

Or maybe they weren’t allowed to write happy endings,” said Ruth. “Tragedy was the name of the game for Greek theater, right?”

It’s the name of the game for most of the stories that have survived. But what if that’s not the issue? What if having an Olympian in your life means you’re bound to be a tragic hero? What if we’re set on a course for tragedy?”  

It’s possible,” said Ruth. “But bear in mind, neither of us have yet done any heroic deeds that could plausibly bite us in the tail. Except your commitment to absolute monotheism, right in the face of the Olympians. And my commitment to you, which led to me getting myself and two other people stuck with your condition. Okay, so maybe we’re sunk.”

Rook lifted their head from under their wing. “You talk loud. I can’t sleep. You know there are other Great Spirits, right? Other stories that live. Crow lives.”

So what,” said Ruth, “we change the narrative?”

I certainly hope we can,” I said. “Because here’s the thing, Ruth – An odyssey isn’t about going off to fetch something. It’s about the struggle to get back home. And you – you are my home.”

Rani –”

You will never meet my parents. God willing, I will never meet them again either. That is why I stick to the Morrow Lab. The lab lets me live. Therein lies my tragedy – I am in this situation because I was headstrong and my parents could not bend me, and then as soon as Professor Windsor and the university were halfway nice to me I was putty in their hands. I will not say I wish to be putty in your hands – I care about you too much to lead you into that manner of emotional and moral risk. But I will say that home is wherever you are.”

Goodness, my dear! We have only known each other for a few years!”

And yet roommates all that time,” I said. “By our choice. And you have demonstrated your infatuation with me, rather thoroughly.”

So glad you noticed,” said Ruth. “It’s not like I did anything drastic and incredibly consequential to prove it after being quite reasonably denied by you for years. No, I was too subtle. I should have been even more obvious.”

That would probably have involved explosions,” I said.

Hey, I almost ordered a big fireworks display for your gender-reveal party before I realized the campus is in the middle of a habitually-dry mountain forest ecosystem.”

So that’s why you went with the party where you invited everyone in the dorm? You needed the equivalent of fireworks? And that was…in freshman year. Dammit. How long have you been crushing on me?”

Since October of that year? You got really passionate about democracy in Professor Solinskyy’s class and I thought, damn, this is the one for me.”

Well then,” I said, “were we not under the doom of Apollo’s prophecy, I would be very happy to make a nest with you.”

Wait,” said Rook. “Doom?”

Think about it,” I said. “If Ruth is my home and I’m hers, and you’re our adopted child, and odysseys are about reaching home…”

Uh oh,” said Rook.

We’re going to get separated,” said Ruth.

Highly probable,” I said. “And even if we glue each other together, well, right now we’re in a Greek story. In those ones, your fate will happen to you, no matter how you try to avoid it.”

So let’s not be in a Greek story,” said Rook.

I’d rather be in an American story,” said Ruth. “I want to be a tall-tale hero. Riding the whirlwind and lassoing the sun and all.”

Well if we want to do that,” I said, “We have to start bragging to someone. Can’t be a tall tale if you don’t tell the tale, right? And right now we’re trying to avoid running into anyone, so we can only tell tales to each other –”

What about to the birds?” said Rook.

I opened my beak to object, but then I paused. Rook was right. The birds could listen. The birds could tell our stories to other people. The birds could believe our stories because they were bird-brains. I got up and went over to Rook and patted them on the beak. “Rook, you’re a genius. I’m so glad we adopted you.”

Shucks,” said Rook. They put their head under their wing and pretended to sleep. 

I went back to Ruth and sat beside her, trying to think of what sort of wild nonsense I could come up with. Nothing came to mind quickly. 

We leant against each other, and dozed a good long while.





That nightfall, Ruth and I were hunting for beetles when I heard a curious twittering from the birds. “Here comes the traveler! How swiftly he walks! Always in a hurry!”

I raised my head from digging through leaf litter when I saw a fellow in the distance, strolling along merrily through the mess of fallen branches and piles of stones like he was moseying down a country lane. And then, faster than I had expected, he was only in the middle distance. And then he was moseying right up to us.

He had on hiking gear, complete with a hiking stick, wide-brim hat and one of those backpack water bottles with the sipping tube that goes over the shoulder. But the wings on his hat and on his boots would have given him away even if I hadn’t been involved with the Olympians. I crossed my arms and waited for him to speak.

“Rani,” said Ruth, “you are being rude to our guest.”

The fellow laughed. “Understandable, my family doesn’t exactly have a good reputation even among the polytheists. And I hear my half-sister hasn’t exactly been nice to you. Nor you to her, it seems! Ah, but sometimes she deserves it.”

What exactly do you want, Hermes.”

“I just want to keep an eye on you!” said Hermes. “Keep you safe, I mean. If you’ll accept my guidance. Maybe I could help you get messages back to your fellows –”

I will not accept the guidance of one who calls themself a god. If I were to do so, I would be allowing you greater scrutiny over our journey, and possibly even breaking faith with Heaven. No thank you.”

Hermes looked annoyed. “I’m just trying to help. Roads are dangerous these days, you know? If you wanted, I could give you all disguises, let you get across the plains faster. Easy-peasy lemon squeezy.”

I turned to Ruth. “Love, what is your opinion?”

Ruth shook her head. “We can’t guarantee who you’re working for, trickster. Could be you’re not working for us. Could be you’re working for Zeus. Or yourself. Rook, what about you?”

Rook looked up from their meal of mule deer. “The birds seem to like him. I’m in favor.”

Two of them do not,” I said. “So the nays have it. We do not need your guidance, Olympian.”

Hermes looked disappointed. “Can’t I even deliver your messages?”

You would be no more swift, and much less secure, than the Postal Service.”

Hermes crossed his arms. “Those guys! I’m always competing with them. And their Postal Inspectors don’t miss a trick, either. I can’t count the number of times I’ve tried and failed to get one by them – Ah. Perhaps I have made it sound as though I have given the game away.”

You’re Hermes. You always have a game.”

“Not always!” said Hermes. “Like right now.” He brought a palm-sized drawstring bag out of his pocket and tossed it at me. I did not even flinch, but continued to keep my arms crossed as it landed atop my beak and sat there. 

“What was that for?” said Ruth, as she lifted the bag off my face. “Wait, coins? What for?”

“Paying for an envelope and stamps,” said Hermes. “Don’t open that until you get to the post office. I really want to help you guys. I…don’t like what Doctor Morrow is doing either. Can’t I just –”

Rook was standing over Hermes in a second, with their face right close. “Mamas decided. They need no help from you. Go.”

Hermes was out of our sight faster than he had come in. 

Rook,” I said, “That was really rude. Don’t escalate a situation that quickly, alright? Not unless someone is making threats.”

You seemed scared of him, mama.”

And another thing, I’m not your mother. I mean – we adopted you and stuff but I’m not a mother. Or father. Um. Not sure what the right word is for me. Just call me Rani.”

Yes, elder.”

I sighed. Well, that would have to do.

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