Tithonus rushed toward her, and she waved him off, angrily.
Meanwhile the old man turned his back on her and walked over to the river. He knelt and splashed water on his face, then stood up again.
“Frankly,” he said turning around, “I’m disappointed. I thought you’d have more spirit.”
Getting up, Hippolyta said, “I’ve plenty of spirit.” She no longer addressed him as old man. He hadn’t seemed very old when he was attacking.
“Oh, you’ve got anger enough,” the warrior conceded. “But you don’t know what to do with it. Fire is your friend when it lights your way. It is your friend when it keeps you warm. But if it burns your house down, what use is it to you?”
“Riddles!” Hippolyta said. She spat to one side, to show her disdain, though her mouth was dry as dust.
“I know what he means—” Tithonus began, stopping when Hippolyta glared at him.
“Your riddles won’t protect you,” Hippolyta snapped. She understood without Tithonus’ help what the old man meant. She’d been reckless in her attacks, letting her anger drive her. She’d been too eager to strike him down without sizing him up first, without remembering all her fighting techniques.
She rehearsed them in her head: Don’t let your guard down. Probe your opponent for weaknesses. Watch how he moves. How could she have forgotten?
When she closed with the old warrior this time, she watched with care, calculating the way he used his staff. She checked his feet out of the corner of her eyes.
There! He took a step forward, signaling an attack.
Now she could sidestep his thrust.
Whack! She struck him a glancing blow across his bony shoulder.
He hopped away, grimacing.
“That must have hurt,” she said. “Old bones have little padding.”
He flashed her a fierce grin. “That’s better, girl. Now we’ll really test your mettle.”
He came at her faster than she expected. She blocked high, but he swept his staff low and scooped her feet out from under her. She landed hard on her bottom but leaped up again before the pain could keep her down, aiming a blow at his head, then his knee, then his belly. Not one of the blows connected, but the attack was furious enough to get him to retreat, huffing and puffing, like an old boar in a fight for its life.
“There!” he cried out. “Now your blood is flowing, like a river in spate. And you’re finally using your speed and your strength, instead of simply squandering them.”
Their staffs cracked together, again and again.
Hippolyta had risen above her anger. She was high on battle fever, using it to fuel her ferocity and drive herself on. She repeated the moves she’d practiced since she was a little girl. But now she was putting a passion into each strike that she’d never had before.
An Amazon battle cry burst from her lips. “Aeeeeeeiiiiiii!”
And then she was whipping the staff around the old man like lightning in a summer storm. At last she cracked him across the bald skull, and he toppled like a felled tree.
At once the battle fury left her, and she stood, panting, waiting for him to rise.
Tithonus knelt over the old man.
“Is he—” Hippolyta whispered, “is he alive?”
“I don’t know,” Tithonus said, looking up at her. “But I can’t see a mark on him.”
Just then the ancient sat up and rubbed his head. “That was good,” he said, oblivious of the boy’s astonished face. “Very good.” He found his staff and used it to stand.
Tithonus stepped away, but Hippolyta held her staff ready. She had no energy left, though. She wondered if she could fight any longer.
The old man looked at her. “Took you awhile, girl.” His head nodded up and down, like some sort of addled stork. “But in the end you fought like a warrior. Take your reward, but don’t forget the lesson that comes with it.” He started off into the woodland.
“Sir,” Hippolyta called after him, “you haven’t told me your name.”
The old man turned back slowly. For a long moment he seemed to be studying Hippolyta’s face, as if memorizing it. “I’ll tell you that next time we meet,” he called. “But I will tell you this, turn east and north that way”—he pointed—“and you will get home a lot more quickly than you came to Troy.” Then he grinned broadly, walked into the trees, and disappeared.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
THEMISCYRA
HIPPOLYTA DISMISSED THE OLD man from her mind and started ripping open the pack. Inside were loaves of bread, cheeses, strips of dried meat, fruits and berries, and a skinful of wine.
“He must have quite an appetite for someone so skinny,” she mused, biting into a handful of figs.
“I don’t like it,” said Tithonus. “He gave all this up too easily.”
“Easy for you,” said Hippolyta, rubbing her bruises. “I paid quite a price.”
She tossed Tithonus a loaf of bread, and his hunger immediately overcame his curiosity. Having silenced him as she intended, Hippolyta examined the horse and discovered something tucked under the pack, a double-headed ax. She pulled it out and saw that it was identical in every way to the kind used by the Amazons.
“That’ll come in handy,” said Tithonus. “We can chop wood for a campfire tonight.”
“It’s handy for a lot more than that,” Hippolyta said.
She turned the ax over in her hand, examining it from every angle. If not for the fact that it was impossible, she could have sworn this was the very same ax she had taken with her from Themiscyra.
Once they had eaten their fill, Hippolyta vaulted onto the horse’s back and took hold of the reins. Tithonus gaped at her as if she had just turned a somersault and landed feetfirst on top of a tree.
“Come on,” she said, waving him forward. “You’re not planning to walk all the way, are you?”
“You mean, we’re going to sit up there? But we’ll just fall off.”
“Don’t be silly. I’ve been riding on horseback since I was younger than you.”
“Well, that’s all very well for a barbarian, but civilized people ride in chariots.”
“I know one civilized person who’s going to be trampled under these hooves if he doesn’t get over here,” Hippolyta said.
Tithonus came forward reluctantly and took Hippolyta’s hand. She pulled him up with a grunt. It was like dragging up a sackful of vegetables.
“And this is safe?” he asked, his voice trembling slightly. She wasn’t certain if he was shaking from fear, cold, or the fact that the horse had started to prance about with an uncertain rider on its back.
“Yes, it’s safe. Just put your arms around my waist.”
Tithonus threw both arms around her and held on so tightly, she could hardly breathe.
“Try to relax a bit,” Hippolyta said. “We aren’t exactly galloping. Yet.”
Tithonus slowly loosened his hold, but every time the horse made an unexpected movement, he squeezed Hippolyta so hard she gasped out loud.
“This is going to be an awfully long trip,” Hippolyta muttered.
Behind her, his head resting on her back, Tithonus nodded.
Remembering what the old man said about going home, she turned the horse’s nose east and north. If it got her home sooner, she’d say a prayer for the old man’s safety.
It turned out that Tithonus was more trouble than baby Podarces had been.
Yes, he could feed himself.
And wash himself.
And he didn’t need to be changed.
But he wouldn’t shut up.
All day long he asked endless questions. Hippolyta gave him as many answers as she could stand, all the while avoiding the full story of why she had come to Troy.