Percy Jackson The Complete Collection (97 page)

BOOK: Percy Jackson The Complete Collection
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‘I see,’ Clarisse said. ‘And the senior counsellors? Are
any
of you going to side with me?’

Nobody was smiling now. None of them met Clarisse’s eyes.

‘Fine.’ Clarisse turned to Silena. ‘I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to get into this when you’ve just lost … anyway, I apologize. To
you.
Nobody else.’

Silena didn’t seem to register her words.

Clarisse threw her knife on the ping-pong table. ‘All of you can fight this war without Ares. Until I get satisfaction, no one in my cabin is lifting a finger to help. Have fun dying.’

The counsellors were all too stunned to say anything as Clarisse stormed out of the room.

Finally Michael Yew said, ‘Good riddance.’

‘Are you kidding?’ Katie Gardner protested. ‘This is a disaster!’

‘She can’t be serious,’ Travis said. ‘Can she?’

Chiron sighed. ‘Her pride has been wounded. She’ll calm down eventually.’ But he didn’t sound convinced.

I wanted to ask what the heck Clarisse was so mad about, but I looked at Annabeth and she mouthed the words,
I’ll tell you later.

‘Now,’ Chiron continued, ‘if you please, counsellors. Percy has brought something I think you should hear. Percy – the Great Prophecy.’

Annabeth handed me the parchment. It felt dry and old, and my fingers fumbled with the string. I uncurled the paper, trying not to rip it, and began to read:

 


A half-blood of the eldest dogs …

 

‘Er, Percy?’ Annabeth interrupted. ‘That’s gods. Not dogs.’

‘Oh, right,’ I said. Being dyslexic is one mark of a demigod, but sometimes I really hate it. The more nervous I am, the worse my reading gets.

 


A half-blood of the eldest gods
Shall reach sixteen against all odds …

 

I hesitated, staring at the next lines. A cold feeling started in my fingers as if the paper were freezing.

 


And see the world in endless sleep,
The hero’s soul, cursed blade shall reap.

 

Suddenly Riptide seemed heavier in my pocket. A cursed blade? Chiron once told me Riptide had brought many people sorrow. Was it possible my own sword could get me killed? And how could the world fall into endless sleep, unless that meant death?

‘Percy,’ Chiron urged. ‘Read the rest.’

My mouth felt like it was full of sand, but I spoke the last two lines.

 


A single choice shall … shall end his days.
Olympus to per – pursue –

 

‘Preserve,’ Annabeth said gently. ‘It means “to save”.’

‘I know what it means,’ I grumbled.

 


Olympus to preserve or raze.

 

The room was silent. Finally Connor Stoll said, ‘Raise is good, isn’t it?’

‘Not raise,’ Silena said. Her voice was hollow, but I was startled to hear her speak at all. ‘R-a-z-e means “destroy”.’

‘Obliterate,’ Annabeth said. ‘Annihilate. Turn to rubble.’

‘Got it.’ My heart felt like lead. ‘Thanks.’

Everybody was looking at me – with concern, or pity, or maybe a little fear.

Chiron closed his eyes as if he were saying a prayer. In horse form, his head almost brushed the lights in the rec room. ‘You see now, Percy, why we thought it best not to tell you the whole prophecy. You’ve had enough on your shoulders –’

‘Without realizing I was going to die in the end anyway?’ I said. ‘Yeah, I get it.’

Chiron gazed at me sadly. The guy was three thousand years old. He’d seen hundreds of heroes die. He might not like it, but he was used to it. He probably knew better than to try reassuring me.

‘Percy,’ Annabeth said. ‘You know prophecies always have double meanings. It might not literally mean you die.’

‘Sure,’ I said. ‘
A single choice shall end his days.
That has tons of meanings, right?’

‘Maybe we can stop it,’ Jake Mason offered. ‘
The hero’s soul, cursed blade shall reap.
Maybe we could find this cursed blade and destroy it. Sounds like Kronos’s scythe, right?’

I hadn’t thought about that, but it didn’t matter if the cursed blade was Riptide or Kronos’s scythe. Either way, I doubted we could stop the prophecy. A blade was supposed to reap my soul. As a general rule, I preferred not to have my soul reaped.

‘Perhaps we should let Percy think about these lines,’ Chiron said. ‘He needs time –’

‘No.’ I folded up the prophecy and shoved it in my pocket. I felt defiant and angry, though I wasn’t sure who I was angry with. ‘I don’t need time. If I die, I die. I can’t worry about that, right?’

Annabeth’s hands were shaking a little. She wouldn’t meet my eyes.

‘Let’s move on,’ I said. ‘We’ve got other problems. We’ve got a spy.’

Michael Yew scowled. ‘A spy?’

I told them what had happened on the
Princess Andromeda
– how Kronos had known we were coming, how he’d shown me the silver scythe pendant he’d used to communicate with someone at camp.

Silena started to cry again and Annabeth put her arm around her shoulders.

‘Well,’ Connor Stoll said uncomfortably, ‘we’ve suspected
there might be a spy for years, right? Somebody kept passing information to Luke – like the location of the Golden Fleece a couple of years ago. It must be somebody who knew him well.’

He glanced at Annabeth. She’d known Luke better than anyone, of course, but Connor looked away quickly. ‘Um, I mean, it could be anybody.’

‘Yes.’ Katie Gardner frowned at the Stoll brothers. She’d disliked them ever since they’d decorated the grass roof of the Demeter cabin with chocolate Easter bunnies. ‘Like one of Luke’s siblings.’

Travis and Connor both started arguing with her.

‘Stop!’ Silena banged the table so hard her hot chocolate spilled. ‘Charlie’s dead and … and you’re all arguing like little kids!’ She put her head down and began to sob.

Hot chocolate trickled off the ping-pong table. Everybody looked ashamed.

‘She’s right,’ Pollux said at last. ‘Accusing each other doesn’t help. We need to keep our eyes open for a silver necklace with a scythe charm. If Kronos had one, the spy probably does too.’

Michael Yew grunted. ‘We need to find this spy before we plan our next operation. Blowing up the
Princess Andromeda
won’t stop Kronos forever.’

‘No, indeed,’ Chiron said. ‘In fact his next assault is already on the way.’

I scowled. ‘You mean the “bigger threat” Poseidon mentioned?’

He and Annabeth looked at each other like:
It’s time
. Did I mention I hate it when they do that?

‘Percy,’ Chiron said, ‘we didn’t want to tell you until
you returned to camp. You needed a break with your … mortal friends.’

Annabeth blushed. It dawned on me that she knew I’d been hanging out with Rachel, and I felt guilty. Then I felt angry that I felt guilty. I was allowed to have friends outside camp, right? It wasn’t like …

‘Tell me what’s happened,’ I said.

Chiron picked up a bronze goblet from the snack table. He tossed water onto the hot plate where we usually melted nacho cheese. Steam billowed up, making a rainbow in the fluorescent lights. Chiron fished a golden drachma out of his pouch, tossed it through the mist and muttered, ‘O Iris, Goddess of the Rainbow, show us the threat.’

The mist shimmered. I saw the familiar image of a smouldering volcano – Mount St Helens. As I watched, the side of the mountain exploded. Fire, ash and lava rolled out. A newscaster’s voice was saying: – e
ven larger than last year’s eruption, and geologists warn that the mountain may not be done.

I knew all about last year’s eruption. I’d caused it. But this explosion was much worse. The mountain tore itself apart, collapsing inward, and an enormous form rose out of the smoke and lava like it was emerging from a manhole cover. I hoped the Mist would keep the humans from seeing it clearly, because what I saw would’ve caused panic and riots across the entire United States.

The giant was bigger than anything I’d ever encountered. Even my demigod eyes couldn’t make out its exact form through the ash and fire, but it was vaguely humanoid and so huge it could’ve used the Chrysler Building as a baseball bat. The mountain shook with a horrible rumbling, as if the monster were laughing.

‘It’s him,’ I said. ‘Typhon.’

I was seriously hoping Chiron would say something good, like
No, that’s our huge friend Leroy! He’s going to help us!
But no such luck. He simply nodded. ‘The most horrible monster of all, the biggest single threat the gods ever faced. He has been freed from under the mountain at last. But this scene is from two days ago.
Here
is what is happening today.’

Chiron waved his hand and the image changed. I saw a bank of storm clouds rolling across the Midwest plains. Lightning flickered. Lines of tornadoes destroyed everything in their path – ripping up houses and trailers, tossing cars around like Matchbox toys.

Monumental floods
, an announcer was saying.
Five states declared disaster areas as the freak storm system sweeps east, continuing its path of destruction.
The cameras zoomed in on a column of storm bearing down on some Midwest city. I couldn’t tell which one. Inside the storm I could see the giant – just small glimpses of his true form: a smoky arm, a dark clawed hand the size of a city block. His angry roar rolled across the plains like a nuclear blast. Other smaller forms darted through the clouds, circling the monster. I saw flashes of light, and I realized the giant was trying to swat them. I squinted and thought I saw a golden chariot flying into the blackness. Then some kind of huge bird – a monstrous owl – dived in to attack the giant.

‘Are those … the gods?’ I said.

‘Yes, Percy,’ Chiron said. ‘They have been fighting him for days now, trying to slow him down. But Typhon is marching forward – towards New York. Towards Olympus.’

I let that sink in. ‘How long until he gets here?’

‘Unless the gods can stop him? Perhaps five days. Most of the Olympians are there … except your father, who has a war of his own to fight.’

‘But then who’s guarding Olympus?’

Connor Stoll shook his head. ‘If Typhon gets to New York, it won’t matter who’s guarding Olympus.’

I thought about Kronos’s words on the ship:
I would love to see the terror in your eyes when you realize how I will destroy Olympus.

Was this what he was talking about: an attack by Typhon? It sure was terrifying enough. But Kronos was always fooling us, misdirecting our attention. This seemed too obvious for him. And in my dream the golden Titan had talked about several more challenges to come, like Typhon was only the first.

‘It’s a trick,’ I said. ‘We have to warn the gods. Something else is going to happen.’

Chiron looked at me gravely. ‘Something worse than Typhon? I hope not.’

‘We have to defend Olympus,’ I insisted. ‘Kronos has another attack planned.’

‘He did,’ Travis Stoll reminded me. ‘But you sank his ship.’

Everyone was looking at me. They wanted some good news. They wanted to believe that at least I’d given them a little bit of hope.

I glanced at Annabeth. I could tell we were thinking the same thing: what if the
Princess Andromeda
was a ploy? What if Kronos
let
us blow up that ship so we’d lower our guard?

But I wasn’t going to say that in front of Silena. Her boyfriend had sacrificed himself for that mission.

‘Maybe you’re right,’ I said, though I didn’t believe a word of it.

I tried to imagine how things could get much worse. The gods were in the Midwest fighting a huge monster that had almost defeated them once before. Poseidon was under siege and losing a war against the sea Titan Oceanus. Kronos was still out there somewhere. Olympus was virtually undefended. The demigods of Camp Half-Blood were on our own with a spy in our midst.

Oh, and according to the ancient prophecy, I was going to die when I turned sixteen – which happened to be in five days, the exact same time Typhon was supposed to hit New York. Almost forgot that.

‘Well,’ Chiron said, ‘I think that’s enough for one night.’

He waved his hand and the steam dissipated. The stormy battle of Typhon and the gods disappeared.

‘That’s an understatement,’ I muttered.

And the war council adjourned.

4    We Burn a Metal Shroud
 

I dreamed Rachel Elizabeth Dare was throwing darts at my picture.

She was standing in her room … Okay, back up. I have to explain that Rachel doesn’t have a room. She has the top floor of her family’s mansion, which is a renovated brownstone in Brooklyn. Her ‘room’ is a huge loft with industrial lighting and floor-to-ceiling windows. It’s about twice as big as my mom’s apartment.

Some alt rock was blaring from her paint-covered Bose docking system. As far as I could tell, Rachel’s only rule about music was that no two songs on her iPod could sound the same, and they all had to be strange.

She wore a kimono and her hair was frizzy like she’d been sleeping. Her bed was messed up. Sheets hung over a bunch of artist’s easels. Dirty clothes and old energy-bar wrappers were strewn around the floor, but when you’ve got a room that big, the mess doesn’t look so bad. Out of the windows you could see the entire night-time skyline of Manhattan.

The picture she was attacking was a painting of me standing over the giant Antaeus. Rachel had painted it a couple of months ago. My expression in the picture was fierce – disturbing, even – so it was hard to tell if I was the good guy or the bad guy, but Rachel said I’d looked just like that after the battle.


Demigods
,’ Rachel muttered as she threw another dart at the canvas. ‘And their
stupid
quests.’

Most of the darts bounced off, but a few stuck. One hung off my chin like a goatee.

Someone pounded on her bedroom door.

‘Rachel!’ a man shouted. ‘What in the world are you doing? Turn off that –’

Rachel scooped up her remote control and shut off the music. ‘Come in!’

Her dad walked in, scowling and blinking from the light. He had rust-coloured hair a little darker than Rachel’s. It was smushed on one side like he’d lost a fight with his pillow. His blue silk pyjamas had ‘WD’ monogrammed on the pocket. Seriously, who has monogrammed pyjamas?

‘What is going on?’ he demanded. ‘It’s three in the morning.’

‘Couldn’t sleep,’ Rachel said.

On the painting, a dart fell off my face. Rachel hid the rest of the darts behind her back, but Mr Dare noticed.

‘So … I take it your friend isn’t coming to St Thomas?’ That’s what Mr Dare called me. Never Percy. Just
your friend.
Or
young man
if he was talking to me, which he rarely did.

Rachel knitted her eyebrows. ‘I don’t know.’

‘We leave in the morning,’ her dad said. ‘If he hasn’t made up his mind yet –’

‘He’s probably not coming,’ Rachel said miserably. ‘Happy?’

Mr Dare put his hands behind his back. He paced the room with a stern expression. I imagined he did that in
the boardroom of his land-development company and made his employees nervous.

‘Are you still having bad dreams?’ he asked. ‘Headaches?’

Rachel threw her darts on the floor. ‘I should never have told you about that.’

‘I’m your father,’ he said. ‘I’m worried about you.’

‘Worried about the family’s reputation,’ Rachel muttered.

Her father didn’t react – maybe because he’d heard that comment before, or maybe because it was true.

‘We could call Dr Arkwright,’ he suggested. ‘He helped you get through the death of your hamster.’

‘I was six then,’ she said. ‘And no, Dad, I don’t need a therapist. I just …’

She shook her head helplessly.

Her father stopped in front of the windows. He gazed at the New York skyline as if he owned it – which wasn’t true. He only owned part of it.

‘It will be good for you to get away,’ he decided. ‘You’ve had some unhealthy influences.’

‘I’m not going to Clarion Ladies’ Academy,’ Rachel said. ‘And my friends are none of your business.’

Mr Dare smiled, but it wasn’t a warm smile. It was more like,
Some day you’ll realize how silly you sound.

‘Try to get some sleep,’ he urged. ‘We’ll be at the beach by tomorrow night. It will be fun.’

‘Fun,’ Rachel repeated. ‘Lots of fun.’

Her father exited the room. He left the door open behind him.

Rachel stared at the portrait of me. Then she walked to the easel next to it, which was covered in a sheet.

‘I hope they’re dreams,’ she said.

She uncovered the easel. On it was a hasty charcoal sketch, but Rachel was a good artist. The picture was definitely Luke as a young boy. He was about nine years old, with a wide grin and no scar on his face. I had no idea how Rachel could’ve known what he looked like back then, but the portrait was so good I had a feeling she wasn’t guessing. From what I knew about Luke’s life (which wasn’t much) the picture showed him just before he’d found out he was a half-blood and had run away from home.

Rachel stared at the portrait. Then she uncovered the next easel. This picture was even more disturbing. It showed the Empire State Building with lightning all around it. In the distance a dark storm was brewing, with a huge hand coming out of the clouds. At the base of the building a crowd had gathered … but it wasn’t a normal crowd of tourists and pedestrians. I saw spears, javelins and banners – the trappings of an army.

‘Percy,’ Rachel muttered as if she knew I was listening. ‘What is going on?’

The dream faded, and the last thing I remember was wishing I could answer Rachel’s question.

The next morning, I wanted to call her, but there were no phones at camp. Dionysus and Chiron didn’t need a landline. They just called Olympus with an Iris-message whenever they needed something. And when demigods use cell phones, the signals agitate every monster within a hundred miles. It’s like sending up a flare:
Here I am! Please rearrange my face!
Even within the safe borders of camp, that’s not the kind of advertising we wanted to do.

Most demigods (except for Annabeth and a few others) don’t even own cell phones. And I definitely couldn’t tell Annabeth, ‘Hey, let me borrow your phone so I can call Rachel!’ To make the call, I would’ve had to leave camp and walk several miles to the nearest convenience store. Even if Chiron let me go, by the time I got there, Rachel would’ve been on the plane to St Thomas.

I ate a depressing breakfast by myself at the Poseidon table. I kept staring at the fissure in the marble floor, where two years ago Nico had banished a bunch of bloodthirsty skeletons to the Underworld. The memory didn’t exactly improve my appetite.

After breakfast, Annabeth and I walked down to inspect the cabins. Actually, it was Annabeth’s turn for inspection. My morning chore was to sort through reports for Chiron. But since we both hated our jobs, we decided to do them together so it wouldn’t be so heinous.

We started at the Poseidon cabin, which was basically just me. I’d made my bunk bed that morning (well, sort of) and straightened the Minotaur horn on the wall, so I gave myself a four out of five.

Annabeth made a face. ‘You’re being generous.’ She used the end of her pencil to pick up an old pair of running shorts.

I snatched them away. ‘Hey, give me a break. I don’t have Tyson cleaning up after me this summer.’

‘Three out of five,’ Annabeth said. I knew better than to argue, so we moved along.

I tried to skim through Chiron’s stack of reports as we walked. There were messages from demigods, nature spirits and satyrs all around the country, writing about the latest monster activity. They were pretty depressing,
and my ADHD brain did
not
like concentrating on depressing stuff.

Little battles were raging everywhere. Camp recruitment was down to zero. Satyrs were having trouble finding new demigods and bringing them to Half-Blood Hill because so many monsters were roaming the country. Our friend Thalia, who led the Hunters of Artemis, hadn’t been heard from in months, and if Artemis knew what had happened to them, she wasn’t sharing information.

We visited the Aphrodite cabin, which of course got a five out of five. The beds were perfectly made. The clothes in everyone’s footlocker were colour coordinated. Fresh flowers bloomed on the windowsills. I wanted to dock a point because the whole place reeked of designer perfume, but Annabeth ignored me.

‘Great job as usual, Silena,’ Annabeth said.

Silena nodded listlessly. The wall behind her bed was decorated with pictures of Beckendorf. She sat on her bunk with a box of chocolates on her lap, and I remembered that her dad owned a chocolate store in the Village, which was how he’d caught the attention of Aphrodite.

‘You want a bonbon?’ Silena asked. ‘My dad sent them. He thought – he thought they might cheer me up.’

‘Are they any good?’ I asked.

She shook her head. ‘They taste like cardboard.’

I didn’t have anything against cardboard, so I tried one. Annabeth passed. We promised to see Silena later and kept going.

As we crossed the commons area, a fight broke out between the Ares and Apollo cabins. Some Apollo campers
armed with fire bombs flew over the Ares cabin in a chariot pulled by two pegasi. I’d never seen the chariot before, but it looked like a pretty sweet ride. Soon, the roof of the Ares cabin was burning, and naiads from the canoe lake rushed over to blow water on it.

Then the Ares campers called down a curse and all the Apollo kids’ arrows turned to rubber. The Apollo kids kept shooting at the Ares kids but the arrows bounced off.

Two archers ran by, chased by an angry Ares kid who was yelling in poetry: ‘Curse me, eh? I’ll make you pay!/I don’t want to rhyme all day!’

Annabeth sighed. ‘Not that again. Last time Apollo cursed a cabin, it took a week for the rhyming couplets to wear off.’

I shuddered. Apollo was god of poetry as well as archery, and I’d heard him recite in person. I’d almost rather get shot by an arrow.

‘What are they fighting about anyway?’ I asked.

Annabeth ignored me while she scribbled on her inspection scroll, giving both cabins a one out of five.

I found myself staring at her, which was stupid since I’d seen her a billion times. She was about the same height as me this summer, which was a relief. Still, she seemed so much more mature. It was kind of intimidating. I mean sure, she’d always been cute, but she was starting to be seriously beautiful.

Finally she said, ‘That flying chariot.’

‘What?’

‘You asked what they were fighting about.’

‘Oh. Oh, right.’

‘They captured it in a raid in Philadelphia last week.
Some of Luke’s demigods were there with that flying chariot. The Apollo cabin seized it during the battle, but Ares cabin led the raid. So they’ve been fighting about who gets it ever since.’

We ducked as Michael Yew’s chariot dive-bombed an Ares camper. The Ares camper tried to stab him and cuss him out in rhyming couplets. He was pretty creative about rhyming those cuss words.

‘We’re fighting for our lives,’ I said, ‘and they’re bickering about some stupid chariot.’

‘They’ll get over it,’ Annabeth said. ‘Clarisse will come to her senses.’

I wasn’t so sure. That didn’t sound like the Clarisse I knew.

I scanned more reports and we inspected a few more cabins. Demeter got a four. Hephaestus got a three and probably should’ve gotten lower, but with Beckendorf being gone and all, we cut them some slack. Hermes got a two, which was no surprise. All campers who didn’t know their godly parentage were shoved into the Hermes cabin, and since the gods were kind of forgetful, that cabin was always overcrowded.

Finally we got to Athena’s cabin, which was orderly and clean as usual. Books were straightened on the shelves. The armour was polished. Battle maps and blueprints decorated the walls. Only Annabeth’s bunk was messy. It was covered in papers and her silver laptop was still running.


Vlacas
,’ Annabeth muttered, which was basically calling herself an idiot in Greek.

Her second-in-command Malcolm suppressed a smile. ‘Yeah, um … we cleaned everything else. Didn’t know if it was safe to move your notes.’

That was probably smart. Annabeth had a bronze knife that she reserved just for monsters and people who messed with her stuff.

Malcolm grinned at me. ‘We’ll wait outside while you finish inspection.’ The Athena campers filed out the door while Annabeth cleaned up her bunk.

I shuffled uneasily and pretended to go through some more reports. Technically, even on inspection, it was against camp rules for two campers of the opposite sex to be … like,
alone
in a cabin.

That rule had come up a lot when Silena and Beckendorf started dating. And I know some of you might be thinking: aren’t all demigods related on the godly side, and doesn’t that make dating gross? But the thing is, the godly side of your family doesn’t count genetically speaking, since gods don’t have DNA. A demigod would never think about dating someone who had the same godly parent. Like two kids from Athena cabin? No way. But a daughter of Aphrodite and a son of Hephaestus? They’re not related. So it’s no problem.

Anyway, for some strange reason I was thinking about this as I watched Annabeth straighten up. She closed her laptop, which she’d been given as a gift from the inventor Daedalus last summer.

I cleared my throat. ‘So … get any good info from that thing?’

‘Too much,’ she said. ‘Daedalus had so many ideas I could spend fifty years just trying to figure them all out.’

‘Yeah,’ I muttered. ‘That would be fun.’

She shuffled her papers – mostly drawings of buildings and a bunch of handwritten notes. I knew she wanted to
be an architect some day, but I’d learned the hard way not to ask what she was working on. She’d start talking about angles and load-bearing joints until my eyes glazed over.

‘You know …’ She brushed her hair behind her ear, like she does when she’s nervous. ‘This whole thing with Beckendorf and Silena. It kind of makes you think. About … what’s important. About losing people who are important.’

I nodded. My brain started seizing on little random details, like the fact that she was still wearing those silver owl earrings from her dad, who was this brainiac military history professor in San Francisco.

‘Um, yeah,’ I stammered. ‘Like … is everything cool with your family?’

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