THE SEA OF MONSTERS
Percy Jackson and the Olympians – Book 2
Rick Riordan
Scanned by Cluttered Mind
ONE
MY BEST FRIEND SHOPS
FOR A WEDDING DRESS
My nightmare started like this.
I was standing on a deserted street in some little beach town. It was the middle of the night. A
storm was blowing. Wind and rain ripped at the palm trees along the sidewalk. Pink and
yellow stucco buildings lined the street, their win-dows boarded up. A block away, past a line
of hibiscus bushes, the ocean churned.
Florida, I thought. Though I wasn't sure how I knew that. I'd never been to Florida.
Then I heard hooves clattering against the pavement. I turned and saw my friend Grover
running for his life.
Yeah, I said hooves.
Grover is a satyr. From the waist up, he looks like a typical gangly teenager with a peach-fuzz
goatee and a bad case of acne. He walks with a strange limp, but unless you happen to catch
him without his pants on (which I don't recommend), you'd never know there was anything
un-human about him. Baggy jeans and fake feet hide the fact that he's got furry hindquarters
and hooves.
Grover had been my best friend in sixth grade. He'd gone on this adventure with me and a girl
named Annabeth to save the world, but I hadn't seen him since last July, when he set off alone
on a dangerous quest—a quest no satyr had ever returned from.
Anyway, in my dream, Grover was hauling goat tail, holding his human shoes in his hands the
way he does when he needs to move fast. He clopped past the little tourist shops and
surfboard rental places. The wind bent the palm trees almost to the ground.
Grover was terrified of something behind him. He must've just come from the beach. Wet
sand was caked in his fur. He'd escaped from somewhere. He was trying to get away from ...
something.
A bone-rattling growl cut through the storm. Behind Grover, at the far end of the block, a
shadowy figure loomed. It swatted aside a street lamp, which burst in a shower of sparks.
Grover stumbled, whimpering in fear. He muttered to himself, Have to get away. Have to
warn them!
I couldn't see what was chasing him, but I could hear it muttering and cursing. The ground
shook as it got closer. Grover dashed around a street corner and faltered. He'd run into a deadend
courtyard full of shops. No time to back up. The nearest door had been blown open by the
storm. The sign above the darkened display window read: ST. AUGUSTINE BRIDAL
BOUTIQUE.
Grover dashed inside. He dove behind a rack of wed-ding dresses.
The monster's shadow passed in front of the shop. I could smell the thing—a sickening
combination of wet sheep wool and rotten meat and that weird sour body odor only monsters
have, like a skunk that's been living off Mexican food.
Grover trembled behind the wedding dresses. The monster's shadow passed on.
Silence except for the rain. Grover took a deep breath. Maybe the thing was gone.
Then lightning flashed. The entire front of the store exploded, and a monstrous voice
bellowed: "MIIIIINE!"
I sat bolt upright, shivering in my bed.
There was no storm. No monster.
Morning sunlight filtered through my bedroom win-dow.
I thought I saw a shadow flicker across the glass—a humanlike shape. But then there was a
knock on my bed-room door—my mom called: "Percy, you're going to be late"—and the
shadow at the window disappeared.
It must've been my imagination. A fifth-story window with a rickety old fire escape ... there
couldn't have been anyone out there.
"Come on, dear," my mother called again. "Last day of school. You should be excited! You've
almost made it.'"
"Coming," I managed.
I felt under my pillow. My fingers closed reassuringly around the ballpoint pen I always slept
with. I brought it out, studied the Ancient Greek writing engraved on the side: Anaklusmos.
Riptide.
I thought about uncapping it, but something held me back. I hadn't used Riptide for so long….
Besides, my mom had made me promise not to use deadly weapons in the apartment after I'd
swung a javelin the wrong way and taken out her china cabinet. I put Anaklusmos on my
nightstand and dragged myself out of bed.
I got dressed as quickly as I could. I tried not to think about my nightmare or monsters or the
shadow at my window.
Have to get away. Have to warn them!
What had Grover meant?
I made a three-fingered claw over my heart and pushed outward—an ancient gesture Grover
had once taught me for warding off evil.
The dream couldn't have been real.
Last day of school. My mom was right, I should have been excited. For the first time in my
life, I'd almost made it an entire year without getting expelled. No weird accidents. No fights
in the classroom. No teachers turn-ing into monsters and trying to kill me with poisoned
cafeteria food or exploding homework. Tomorrow, I'd be on my way to my favorite place in
the world—Camp Half-Blood.
Only one more day to go. Surely even I couldn't mess that up.
As usual, I didn't have a clue how wrong I was.
My mom made blue waffles and blue eggs for breakfast. She's funny that way, celebrating
special occasions with blue food. I think it's her way of saying anything is possible. Percy can
pass seventh grade. Waffles can be blue. Little miracles like that.
I ate at the kitchen table while my mom washed dishes. She was dressed in her work
uniform—a starry blue skirt and a red-and-white striped blouse she wore to sell candy at
Sweet on America. Her long brown hair was pulled back in a ponytail.
The waffles tasted great, but I guess I wasn't digging in like I usually did. My mom looked
over and frowned. "Percy, are you all right?"
"Yeah ... fine."
But she could always tell when something was bothering me. She dried her hands and sat
down across from me. "School, or ..."
She didn't need to finish. I knew what she was asking.
"I think Grover's in trouble," I said, and I told her about my dream.
She pursed her lips. We didn't talk much about the other part of my life. We tried to live as
normally as possible, but my mom knew all about Grover.
"I wouldn't be too worried, dear," she said. "Grover is a big satyr now. If there were a
problem, I'm sure we would've heard from ... from camp... ." Her shoulders tensed as she said
the word camp.
"What is it?" I asked.
"Nothing," she said. "I'll tell you what. This afternoon we'll celebrate the end of school. I'll
take you and Tyson to Rockefeller Center—to that skateboard shop you like."
Oh, man, that was tempting. We were always struggling with money. Between my mom's
night classes and my private school tuition, we could never afford to do special stuff like shop
for a skateboard. But something in her voice bothered me.
"Wait a minute," I said. "I thought we were packing me up for camp tonight."
She twisted her dishrag. "Ah, dear, about that ... I got a message from Chiron last night."
My heart sank. Chiron was the activities director at Camp Half-Blood. He wouldn't contact us
unless some-thing serious was going on. "What did he say?"
"He thinks ... it might not be safe for you to come to camp just yet. We might have to
postpone."
"Postpone? Mom, how could it not be safe? I'm a half-blood! It's like the only safe place on
earth for me!"
"Usually, dear. But with the problems they're having—"
"What problems?"
"Percy ... I'm very, very sorry. I was hoping to talk to you about it this afternoon. I can't
explain it all now. I'm not even sure Chiron can. Everything happened so suddenly."
My mind was reeling. How could I not go to camp? I wanted to ask a million questions, but
just then the kitchen clock chimed the half-hour.
My mom looked almost relieved. "Seven-thirty, dear. You should go. Tyson will be waiting."
"But—"
"Percy, we'll talk this afternoon. Go on to school."
That was the last thing I wanted to do, but my mom had this fragile look in her eyes—a kind
of warning, like if I pushed her too hard she'd start to cry. Besides, she was right about my
friend Tyson. I had to meet him at the subway station on time or he'd get upset. He was scared
of traveling underground alone.
I gathered up my stuff, but I stopped in the doorway. "Mom, this problem at camp. Does it...
could it have anything to do with my dream about Grover?"
She wouldn't meet my eyes. "We'll talk this afternoon, dear. I'll explain ... as much as I can."
Reluctantly, I told her good-bye. I jogged downstairs to catch the Number Two train.
I didn't know it at the time, but my mom and I would never get to have our afternoon talk.
In fact, I wouldn't be seeing home for a long, long time.
As I stepped outside, I glanced at the brownstone building across the street. Just for a second I
saw a dark shape in the morning sunlight—a human silhouette against the brick wall, a
shadow that belonged to no one.
Then it rippled and vanished.
TWO
I PLAY DODGEBALL
WITH CANNIBALS
My day started normal. Or as normal as it ever gets at Meriwether College Prep.
See, it's this "progressive" school in downtown Man-hattan, which means we sit on beanbag
chairs instead of at desks, and we don't get grades, and the teachers wear jeans and rock
concert T-shirts to work.
That's all cool with me. I mean, I'm ADHD and dys-lexic, like most half-bloods, so I'd never
done that great in regular schools even before they kicked me out. The only bad thing about
Meriwether was that the teachers always looked on the bright side of things, and the kids
weren't always ... well, bright.
Take my first class today: English. The whole middle school had read this book called Lord
of the Flies, where all these kids get marooned on an island and go psycho. So for our final
exam, our teachers sent us into the break yard to spend an hour with no adult supervision to
see what would happen. What happened was a massive wedgie contest between the seventh
and eighth graders, two pebble fights, and a full-tackle basketball game. The school bully,
Matt Sloan, led most of those activities.
Sloan wasn't big or strong, but he acted like he was. He had eyes like a pit bull, and shaggy
black hair, and he always dressed in expensive but sloppy clothes, like he wanted everybody
to see how little he cared about his family's money. One of his front teeth was chipped from
the time he'd taken his daddy's Porsche for a joyride and run into a PLEASE SLOW DOWN
FOR CHILDREN sign.
Anyway, Sloan was giving everybody wedgies until he made the mistake of trying it on my
friend Tyson.
Tyson was the only homeless kid at Meriwether College Prep. As near as my mom and I
could figure, he'd been aban-doned by his parents when he was very young, probably because
he was so ... different. He was six-foot-three and built like the Abominable Snowman, but he
cried a lot and was scared of just about everything, including his own reflection. His face was
kind of misshapen and brutal-looking. I couldn't tell you what color his eyes were, because I
could never make myself look higher than his crooked teeth. His voice was deep, but he
talked funny, like a much younger kid—I guess because he'd never gone to school before
coming to Meriwether. He wore tattered jeans, grimy size-twenty sneakers, and a plaid flannel
shirt with holes in it. He smelled like a New York City alleyway, because that's where he
lived, in a cardboard refrigerator box off 72nd Street.
Meriwether Prep had adopted him as a community service project so all the students could
feel good about themselves. Unfortunately, most of them couldn't stand Tyson. Once they
discovered he was a big softie, despite his massive strength and his scary looks, they made
themselves feel good by picking on him. I was pretty much his only friend, which meant he
was my only friend.
My mom had complained to the school a million times that they weren't doing enough to help
him. She'd called social services, but nothing ever seemed to happen. The social workers
claimed Tyson didn't exist. They swore up and down that they'd visited the alley we described
and couldn't find him, though how you miss a giant kid living in a refrigerator box, I don't
know.
Anyway, Matt Sloan snuck up behind him and tried to give him a wedgie, and Tyson
panicked. He swatted Sloan away a little too hard. Sloan flew fifteen feet and got tangled in
the little kids' tire swing.
"You freak!" Sloan yelled. "Why don't you go back to your cardboard box!"
Tyson started sobbing. He sat down on the jungle gym so hard he bent the bar, and buried his
head in his hands.
"Take it back, Sloan!" I shouted.
Sloan just sneered at me. "Why do you even bother, Jackson? You might have friends if you
weren't always stick-ing up for that freak."
I balled my fists. I hoped my face wasn't as red as it felt. "He's not a freak. He's just..."
I tried to think of the right thing to say, but Sloan wasn't listening. He and his big ugly friends
were too busy laughing. I wondered if it were my imagination, or if Sloan had more goons
hanging around him than usual. I was used to seeing him with two or three, but today he had
like, half a dozen more, and I was pretty sure I'd never seen them before.
"Just wait till PE, Jackson," Sloan called. "You are so dead."
When first period ended, our English teacher, Mr. de Milo, came outside to inspect the
carnage. He pronounced that we'd understood Lord of the Flies perfectly. We all passed his
course, and we should never, never grow up to be violent people. Matt Sloan nodded
earnestly, then gave me a chip-toothed grin.
I had to promise to buy Tyson an extra peanut butter sandwich at lunch to get him to stop
sobbing.
"I ... I am a freak?" he asked me.
"No," I promised, gritting my teeth. "Matt Sloan is the freak."
Tyson sniffled. "You are a good friend. Miss you next year if ... if I can't ..."
His voice trembled. I realized he didn't know if he'd be invited back next year for the
community service project. I wondered if the headmaster had even bothered talking to him
about it.
"Don't worry, big guy," I managed. "Everything's going to be fine."
Tyson gave me such a grateful look I felt like a big liar. How could I promise a kid like him
that anything would be fine?
Our next exam was science. Mrs. Tesla told us that we had to mix chemicals until we
succeeded in making something explode, Tyson was my lab partner. His hands were way too
big for the tiny vials we were supposed to use. He accidentally knocked a tray of chemicals
off the counter and made an orange mushroom cloud in the trash can.
After Mrs. Tesla evacuated the lab and called the haz-ardous waste removal squad, she
praised Tyson and me for being natural chemists. We were the first ones who'd ever aced her
exam in under thirty seconds.
I was glad the morning went fast, because it kept me from thinking too much about my
problems. I couldn't stand the idea that something might be wrong at camp. Even worse, I
couldn't shake the memory of my bad dream. I had a terrible feeling that Grover was in
danger.
In social studies, while we were drawing latitude/longi-tude maps, I opened my notebook and
stared at the photo inside—my friend Annabeth on vacation in Washington, D.C. She was
wearing jeans and a denim jacket over her orange Camp Half-Blood T-shirt. Her blond hair
was pulled back in a bandanna. She was standing in front of the Lincoln Memorial with her
arms crossed, looking extremely pleased with herself, like she'd personally designed the
place. See, Annabeth wants to be an architect when she grows up, so she's always visiting
famous monuments and stuff. She's weird that way. She'd e-mailed me the picture after spring
break, and every once in a while I'd look at it just to remind myself she was real and Camp
Half-Blood hadn't just been my imagination.
I wished Annabeth were here. She'd know what to make of my dream. I'd never admit it to
her, but she was smarter than me, even if she was annoying sometimes.
I was about to close my notebook when Matt Sloan reached over and ripped the photo out of
the rings.
"Hey!" I protested.
Sloan checked out the picture and his eyes got wide. "No way, Jackson. Who is that? She is
not your—"
"Give it back!" My ears felt hot.
Sloan handed the photo to his ugly buddies, who snick-ered and started ripping it up to make
spit wads. They were new kids who must've been visiting, because they were all wearing
those stupid HI! MY NAME IS: tags from the admis-sions office. They must've had a weird
sense of humor, too, because they'd all filled in strange names like: MARROW SUCKER,
SKULL EATER, and JOE BOB. No human beings had names like that.
"These guys are moving here next year," Sloan bragged, like that was supposed to scare me.
"I bet they can pay the tuition, too, unlike your retard friend."
"He's not retarded." I had to try really, really hard not to punch Sloan in the face.
"You're such a loser, Jackson. Good thing I'm gonna put you out of your misery next period."
His huge buddies chewed up my photo. I wanted to pulverize them, but I was under strict
orders from Chiron never to take my anger out on regular mortals, no matter how obnoxious
they were. I had to save my fighting for monsters.
Still, part of me thought, if Sloan only knew who I really was ...
The bell rang.
As Tyson and I were leaving class, a girl's voice whispered, "Percy!"
I looked around the locker area, but nobody was paying me any attention. Like any girl at
Meriwether would ever be caught dead calling my name.
Before I had time to consider whether or not I'd been imagining things, a crowd of kids
rushed for the gym, carrying Tyson and me along with them. It was time for PE. Our coach
had promised us a free-for-all dodgeball game, and Matt Sloan had promised to kill me.
The gym uniform at Meriwether is sky blue shorts and tie-dyed T-shirts. Fortunately, we did
most of our athletic stuff inside, so we didn't have to jog through Tribeca looking like a bunch
of boot-camp hippie children.
I changed as quickly as I could in the locker room because I didn't want to deal with Sloan. I
was about to leave when Tyson called, "Percy?"
He hadn't changed yet. He was standing by the weight room door, clutching his gym clothes.
"Will you ... uh ..."
"Oh. Yeah." I tried not to sound aggravated about it. "Yeah, sure, man."
Tyson ducked inside the weight room. I stood guard outside the door while he changed. I felt
kind of awkward doing this, but he asked me to most days. I think it's because he's completely
hairy and he's got weird scars on his back that I've never had the courage to ask him about.
Anyway, I'd learned the hard way that if people teased Tyson while he was dressing out, he'd
get upset and start ripping the doors off lockers.
When we got into the gym, Coach Nunley was sitting at his little desk reading Sports
Illustrated. Nunley was about a million years old, with bifocals and no teeth and a greasy
wave of gray hair. He reminded me of the Oracle at Camp Half-Blood—which was a
shriveled-up mummy—except Coach Nunley moved a lot less and he never billowed green
smoke. Well, at least not that I'd observed.
Matt Sloan said, "Coach, can I be captain?"
"Eh?" Coach Nunley looked up from his magazine. "Yeah," he mumbled. "Mm-hmm."
Sloan grinned and took charge of the picking. He made me the other team's captain, but it
didn't matter who I picked, because all the jocks and the popular kids moved over to Sloan's
side. So did the big group of visitors.
On my side I had Tyson, Corey Bailer the computer geek, Raj Mandali the calculus whiz, and
a half dozen other kids who always got harassed by Sloan and his gang. Normally I would've
been okay with just Tyson—he was worth half a team all by himself—but the visitors on
Sloan's team were almost as tall and strong-looking as Tyson, and there were six of them.
Matt Sloan spilled a cage full of balls in the middle of the gym.
"Scared," Tyson mumbled. "Smell funny."
I looked at him. "What smells funny?" Because I didn't figure he was talking about himself.
"Them." Tyson pointed at Sloan's new friends. "Smell funny."
The visitors were cracking their knuckles, eyeing us like it was slaughter time. I couldn't help
wondering where they were from. Someplace where they fed kids raw meat and beat them
with sticks.
Sloan blew the coach's whistle and the game began. Sloan's team ran for the center line. On
my side, Raj Mandali yelled something in Urdu, probably "I have to go potty!" and ran for the
exit. Corey Bailer tried to crawl behind the wall mat and hide. The rest of my team did their
best to cower in fear and not look like targets.
"Tyson," I said. "Let's g—"
A ball slammed into my gut. I sat down hard in the mid-dle of the gym floor. The other team
exploded in laughter.
My eyesight was fuzzy. I felt like I'd just gotten the Heimlich maneuver from a gorilla. I
couldn't believe any-body could throw that hard.
Tyson yelled, "Percy, duck!"
I rolled as another dodgeball whistled past my ear at the speed of sound.
Whooom!
It hit the wall mat, and Corey Bailer yelped.
"Hey!" I yelled at Sloan's team. "You could kill some-body!"
The visitor named Joe Bob grinned at me evilly. Somehow, he looked a lot bigger now ...
even taller than Tyson. His biceps bulged beneath his T-shirt. "I hope so, Perseus Jackson! I
hope so!"
The way he said my name sent a chill down my back. Nobody called me Perseus except those
who knew my true identity. Friends ... and enemies.
What had Tyson said? They smell funny.
Monsters.
All around Matt Sloan, the visitors were growing in size. They were no longer kids. They
were eight-foot-tall giants with wild eyes, pointy teeth, and hairy arms tattooed with snakes
and hula women and Valentine hearts.
Matt Sloan dropped his ball. "Whoa! You're not from Detroit! Who ..."
The other kids on his team started screaming and back-ing toward the exit, but the giant
named Marrow Sucker threw a ball with deadly accuracy. It streaked past Raj Mandali just as
he was about to leave and hit the door, slamming it shut like magic. Raj and some of the other
kids banged on it desperately but it wouldn't budge.
"Let them go!" I yelled at the giants.
The one called Joe Bob growled at me. He had a tattoo on his biceps that said: JB luvs
Babycakes. "And lose our tasty morsels? No, Son of the Sea God. We Laistrygonians aren't
just playing for your death. We want lunch!"
He waved his hand and a new batch of dodgeballs appeared on the center line—but these balls
weren't made of red rubber. They were bronze, the size of cannon balls, perforated like wiffle
balls with fire bubbling out the holes. They must've been searing hot, but the giants picked
them up with their bare hands.
"Coach!" I yelled.
Nunley looked up sleepily, but if he saw anything abnormal about the dodgeball game, he
didn't let on. That's the problem with mortals. A magical force called the Mist obscures the
true appearance of monsters and gods from their vision, so mortals tend to see only what they
can understand. Maybe the coach saw a few eighth graders pounding the younger kids like
usual. Maybe the other kids saw Matt Sloan's thugs getting ready to toss Molotov cock-tails
around. (It wouldn't have been the first time.) At any rate, I was pretty sure nobody else
realized we were dealing with genuine man-eating bloodthirsty monsters.
"Yeah. Mm-hmm," Coach muttered. "Play nice."
And he went back to his magazine.
The giant named Skull Eater threw his ball. I dove aside as the fiery bronze comet sailed past
my shoulder.
"Corey!" I screamed.
Tyson pulled him out from behind the exercise mat just as the ball exploded against it,
blasting the mat to smoking shreds.
"Run!" I told my teammates. "The other exit!"
They ran for the locker room, but with another wave of Joe Bob's hand, that door also
slammed shut.
"No one leaves unless you're out!" Joe Bob roared. "And you're not out until we eat you!"
He launched his own fireball. My teammates scattered as it blasted a crater in the gym floor.
I reached for Riptide, which I always kept in my pocket, but then I realized I was wearing
gym shorts. I had no pockets. Riptide was tucked in my jeans inside my gym locker. And the
locker room door was sealed. I was com-pletely defenseless.
Another fireball came streaking toward me. Tyson pushed me out of the way, but the
explosion still blew me head over heels. I found myself sprawled on the gym floor, dazed
from smoke, my tie-dyed T-shirt peppered with sizzling holes. Just across the center line, two
hungry giants were glaring down at me.
"Flesh!" they bellowed. "Hero flesh for lunch!" They both took aim.
"Percy needs help!" Tyson yelled, and he jumped in front of me just as they threw their balls.
"Tyson!" I screamed, but it was too late.
Both balls slammed into him ... but no ... he'd caught them. Somehow Tyson, who was so
clumsy he knocked over lab equipment and broke playground structures on a regu-lar basis,
had caught two fiery metal balls speeding toward him at a zillion miles an hour. He sent them
hurtling back toward their surprised owners, who screamed, "BAAAAAD!" as the bronze
spheres exploded against their chests.
The giants disintegrated in twin columns of flame—a sure sign they were monsters, all right.
Monsters don't die. They just dissipate into smoke and dust, which saves heroes a lot of
trouble cleaning up after a fight.
"My brothers!" Joe Bob the Cannibal wailed. He flexed his muscles and his Babycakes tattoo
rippled. "You will pay for their destruction!"
"Tyson!" I said. "Look out!"
Another comet hurtled toward us. Tyson just had time to swat it aside. It flew straight over
Coach Nunley's head and landed in the bleachers with a huge KA-BOOM!
Kids were running around screaming, trying to avoid the sizzling craters in the floor. Others
were banging on the door, calling for help. Sloan himself stood petrified in the middle of the
court, watching in disbelief as balls of death flew around him.
Coach Nunley still wasn't seeing anything. He tapped his hearing aid like the explosions were
giving him interfer-ence, but he kept his eyes on his magazine.
Surely the whole school could hear the noise. The head-master, the police, somebody would
come help us.
"Victory will be ours!" roared Joe Bob the Cannibal. "We will feast on your bones!"
I wanted to tell him he was taking the dodgeball game way too seriously, but before I could,
he hefted another ball. The other three giants followed his lead.
I knew we were dead. Tyson couldn't deflect all those balls at once. His hands had to be
seriously burned from blocking the first volley. Without my sword ...
I had a crazy idea.
I ran toward the locker room.
"Move!" I told my teammates. "Away from the door."
Explosions behind me. Tyson had batted two of the balls back toward their owners and
blasted them to ashes.
That left two giants still standing.
A third ball hurtled straight at me. I forced myself to wait—one Mississippi, two
Mississippi—then dove aside as the fiery sphere demolished the locker room door.
Now, I figured that the built-up gas in most boys' locker rooms was enough to cause an
explosion, so I wasn't surprised when the flaming dodgeball ignited a huge
WHOOOOOOOM!
The wall blew apart. Locker doors, socks, athletic sup-porters, and other various nasty
personal belongings rained all over the gym.
I turned just in time to see Tyson punch Skull Eater in the face. The giant crumpled. But the
last giant, Joe Bob, had wisely held on to his own ball, waiting for an opportunity. He threw
just as Tyson was turning to face him.
"No!" I yelled.
The ball caught Tyson square in the chest. He slid the length of the court and slammed into
the back wall, which cracked and partially crumbled on top of him, making a hole right onto
Church Street. I didn't see how Tyson could still be alive, but he only looked dazed. The
bronze ball was smoking at his feet. Tyson tried to pick it up, but he fell back, stunned, into a
pile of cinder blocks.
"Well!" Joe Bob gloated. "I'm the last one standing! I'll have enough meat to bring Babycakes
a doggie bag!"
He picked up another ball and aimed it at Tyson.
"Stop!" I yelled. "It's me you want!"
The giant grinned. "You wish to die first, young hero?"
I had to do something. Riptide had to be around here somewhere.
Then I spotted my jeans in a smoking heap of clothes right by the giant's feet. If I could only
get there.... I knew it was hopeless, but I charged.
The giant laughed. "My lunch approaches." He raised his arm to throw. I braced myself to die.
Suddenly the giant's body went rigid. His expression changed from gloating to surprise. Right
where his belly button should've been, his T-shirt ripped open and he grew something like a
horn—no, not a horn—the glowing tip of a blade.
The ball dropped out of his hand. The monster stared down at the knife that had just run him
through from behind.
He muttered, "Ow," and burst into a cloud of green flame, which I figured was going to make
Babycakes pretty upset.
Standing in the smoke was my friend Annabeth. Her face was grimy and scratched. She had a
ragged backpack slung over her shoulder, her baseball cap tucked in her pocket, a bronze
knife in her hand, and a wild look in her storm-gray eyes, like she'd just been chased a
thousand miles by ghosts.
Matt Sloan, who'd been standing there dumbfounded the whole time, finally came to his
senses. He blinked at Annabeth, as if he dimly recognized her from my notebook picture.
"That's the girl ... That's the girl—"
Annabeth punched him in the nose and knocked him flat. "And you," she told him, "lay off
my friend."
The gym was in flames. Kids were still running around screaming. I heard sirens wailing and
a garbled voice over the intercom. Through the glass windows of the exit doors, I could see
the headmaster, Mr. Bonsai, wres-tling with the lock, a crowd of teachers piling up behind
him.
"Annabeth ..." I stammered. "How did you ... how long have you ..."
"Pretty much all morning." She sheathed her bronze knife. "I've been trying to find a good
time to talk to you, but you were never alone."
"The shadow I saw this morning—that was—" My face felt hot. "Oh my gods, you were
looking in my bed-room window?"
"There's no time to explain!" she snapped, though she looked a little red-faced herself. "I just
didn't want to—"
"There!" a woman screamed. The doors burst open and the adults came pouring in.
"Meet me outside," Annabeth told me. "And him." She pointed to Tyson, who was still sitting
dazed against the wall. Annabeth gave him a look of distaste that I didn't quite understand.
"You'd better bring him."
"What?"
"No time!" she said. "Hurry!"
She put on her Yankees baseball cap, which was a magic gift from her mom, and instantly
vanished.
That left me standing alone in the middle of the burn-ing gymnasium when the headmaster
came charging in with half the faculty and a couple of police officers.
"Percy Jackson?" Mr. Bonsai said. "What ... how ..."
Over by the broken wall, Tyson groaned and stood up from the pile of cinder blocks. "Head
hurts."
Matt Sloan was coming around, too. He focused on me with a look of terror. "Percy did it,
Mr. Bonsai! He set the whole building on fire. Coach Nunley will tell you! He saw it all!"
Coach Nunley had been dutifully reading his magazine, but just my luck—he chose that
moment to look up when Sloan said his name. "Eh? Yeah. Mm-hmm."
The other adults turned toward me. I knew they would never believe me, even if I could tell
them the truth.
I grabbed Riptide out of my ruined jeans, told Tyson, "Come on!" and jumped through the
gaping hole in the side of the building.
THREE
WE HAIL THE TAXI
OF ETERNAL TORMENT
Annabeth was waiting for us in an alley down Church Street. She pulled Tyson and me off the
sidewalk just as a fire truck screamed past, heading for Meriwether Prep.
"Where'd you find him?" she demanded, pointing at Tyson.
Now, under different circumstances, I would've been really happy to see her. We'd made our
peace last summer, despite the fact that her mom was Athena and didn't get along with my
dad. I'd missed Annabeth probably more than I wanted to admit.
But I'd just been attacked by cannibal giants, Tyson had saved my life three or four times, and
all Annabeth could do was glare at him like he was the problem.
"He's my friend," I told her.
"Is he homeless?"
"What does that have to do with anything? He can hear you, you know. Why don't you ask
him?"
She looked surprised. "He can talk?"
"I talk," Tyson admitted. "You are pretty."
"Ah! Gross!" Annabeth stepped away from him.
I couldn't believe she was being so rude. I examined Tyson's hands, which I was sure must've
been badly scorched by the flaming dodge balls, but they looked fine—grimy and scarred,
with dirty fingernails the size of potato chips—but they always looked like that. "Tyson," I
said in disbelief. "Your hands aren't even burned."
"Of course not," Annabeth muttered. "I'm surprised the Laistrygonians had the guts to attack
you with him around."
Tyson seemed fascinated by Annabeth's blond hair. He tried to touch it, but she smacked his
hand away.
"Annabeth," I said, "what are you talking about? Laistry-what?"
"Laistrygonians. The monsters in the gym. They're a race of giant cannibals who live in the
far north. Odysseus ran into them once, but I've never seen them as far south as New York
before."
"Laistry—I can't even say that. What would you call them in English?"
She thought about it for a moment. "Canadians," she decided. "Now come on, we have to get
out of here."
"The police'll be after me."
"That's the least of our problems," she said. "Have you been having the dreams?"
"The dreams ... about Grover?"
Her face turned pale. "Grover? No, what about Grover?"
I told her my dream. "Why? What were you dreaming about?"
Her eyes looked stormy, like her mind was racing a mil-lion miles an hour.
"Camp," she said at last. "Big trouble at camp."
"My mom was saying the same thing! But what kind of trouble?"
"I don't know exactly. Something's wrong. We have to get there right away. Monsters have
been chasing me all the way from Virginia, trying to stop me. Have you had a lot of attacks?"
I shook my head. "None all year ... until today."
"None? But how ..." Her eyes drifted to Tyson. "Oh."
"What do you mean, 'oh'?"
Tyson raised his hand like he was still in class. "Canadians in the gym called Percy something
... Son of the Sea God?"
Annabeth and I exchanged looks.
I didn't know how I could explain, but I figured Tyson deserved the truth after almost getting
killed.
"Big guy," I said, "you ever hear those old stories about the Greek gods? Like Zeus, Poseidon,
Athena—"
"Yes," Tyson said.
"Well ... those gods are still alive. They kind of follow Western Civilization around, living in
the strongest countries, so like now they're in the U.S. And sometimes they have kids with
mortals. Kids called half-bloods."
"Yes," Tyson said, like he was still waiting for me to get to the point.
"Uh, well, Annabeth and I are half-bloods," I said. "We're like ... heroes-in-training. And
whenever monsters pick up our scent, they attack us. That's what those giants were in the
gym. Monsters."
"Yes."
I stared at him. He didn't seem surprised or confused by what I was telling him, which
surprised and confused me. "So ... you believe me?"
Tyson nodded. "But you are ... Son of the Sea God?"
"Yeah," I admitted. "My dad is Poseidon."
Tyson frowned. Now he looked confused. "But then ..."
A siren wailed. A police car raced past our alley.
"We don't have time for this," Annabeth said. "We'll talk in the taxi."
"A taxi all the way to camp?" I said. "You know how much money—"
"Trust me."
I hesitated. "What about Tyson?"
I imagined escorting my giant friend into Camp Half-Blood. If he freaked out on a regular
playground with reg-ular bullies, how would he act at a training camp for demigods? On the
other hand, the cops would be looking for us.
"We can't just leave him," I decided. "He'll be in trou-ble, too." *
"Yeah." Annabeth looked grim. "We definitely need to take him. Now come on."
I didn't like the way she said that, as if Tyson were a big disease we needed to get to the
hospital, but I followed her down the alley. Together the three of us sneaked through the side
streets of downtown while a huge column of smoke billowed up behind us from my school
gymnasium.
* * *
"Here." Annabeth stopped us on the corner of Thomas and Trimble. She fished around in her
backpack. "I hope I have one left."
She looked even worse than I'd realized at first. Her chin was cut. Twigs and grass were
tangled in her ponytail, as if she'd slept several nights in the open. The slashes on the hems of
her jeans looked suspiciously like claw marks.
"What are you looking for?" I asked.
All around us, sirens wailed. I figured it wouldn't be long before more cops cruised by,
looking for juvenile delinquent gym-bombers. No doubt Matt Sloan had given them a
statement by now. He'd probably twisted the story around so that Tyson and I were the
bloodthirsty cannibals.
"Found one. Thank the gods." Annabeth pulled out a gold coin that I recognized as a
drachma, the currency of Mount Olympus. It had Zeus's likeness stamped on one side and the
Empire State Building on the other.
"Annabeth," I said, "New York taxi drivers won't take that."
"Stêthi," she shouted in Ancient Greek. "Ô hárma diabolês!"
As usual, the moment she spoke in the language of Olympus, I somehow understood it. She'd
said: Stop, Chariot of Damnation!
That didn't exactly make me feel real excited about whatever her plan was.
She threw her coin into the street, but instead of clattering on the asphalt, the drachma sank
right through and disappeared.
For a moment, nothing happened.
Then, just where the coin had fallen, the asphalt dark-ened. It melted into a rectangular pool
about the size of a parking space—bubbling red liquid like blood. Then a car erupted from the
ooze.
It was a taxi, all right, but unlike every other taxi in New York, it wasn't yellow. It was smoky
gray. I mean it looked like it was woven out of smoke, like you could walk right through it.
There were words printed on the door—some-thing like GYAR SSIRES—but my dyslexia
made it hard for me to decipher what it said.
The passenger window rolled down, and an old woman stuck her head out. She had a mop of
grizzled hair cover-ing her eyes, and she spoke in a weird mumbling way, like she'd just had a
shot of Novocain. "Passage? Passage?"
"Three to Camp Half-Blood," Annabeth said. She opened the cab's back door and waved at
me to get in, like this was all completely normal.
"Ach!" the old woman screeched. "We don't take his kind!"
She pointed a bony finger at Tyson.
What was it? Pick-on-Big-and-Ugly-Kids Day?
"Extra pay," Annabeth promised. "Three more drachma on arrival."
"Done!" the woman screamed.
Reluctantly I got in the cab. Tyson squeezed in the middle. Annabeth crawled in last.
The interior was also smoky gray, but it felt solid enough. The seat was cracked and lumpy—
no different than most taxis. There was no Plexiglas screen separating us from the old lady
driving ... Wait a minute. There wasn't just one old lady. There were three, all crammed in the
front seat, each with stringy hair covering her eyes, bony hands, and a charcoal-colored
sackcloth dress.
The one driving said, "Long Island! Out-of-metro fare bonus! Ha!"
She floored the accelerator, and my head slammed against the backrest. A prerecorded voice
came on over the speaker: Hi, this is Ganymede, cup-bearer to Zeus, and when I'm out buying
wine for the Lord of the Skies, I always buckle up!
I looked down and found a large black chain instead of a seat belt. I decided I wasn't that
desperate ... yet.
The cab sped around the corner of West Broadway, and the gray lady sitting in the middle
screeched, "Look out! Go left!"
"Well, if you'd give me the eye, Tempest, I could see that!" the driver complained.
Wait a minute. Give her the eye?
I didn't have time to ask questions because the driver swerved to avoid an oncoming delivery
truck, ran over the curb with a jaw-rattling thump, and flew into the next block.
"Wasp!" the third lady said to the driver. "Give me the girl's coin! I want to bite it."
"You bit it last time, Anger!" said the driver, whose name must've been Wasp. "It's my turn!"
"Is not!" yelled the one called Anger.
The middle one, Tempest, screamed, "Red light!"
"Brake!" yelled Anger.
Instead, Wasp floored the accelerator and rode up on the curb, screeching around another
corner, and knocking over a newspaper box. She left my stomach somewhere back on
Broome Street.
"Excuse me," I said. "But ... can you see?"
"No!" screamed Wasp from behind the wheel.
"No!" screamed Tempest from the middle.
"Of course!" screamed Anger by the shotgun window.
I looked at Annabeth. "They're blind?"
"Not completely," Annabeth said. "They have an eye."
"One eye?"
"Yeah."
"Each?"
"No. One eye total."
Next to me, Tyson groaned and grabbed the seat. "Not feeling so good."
"Oh, man," I said, because I'd seen Tyson get carsick on school field trips and it was not
something you wanted to be within fifty feet of. "Hang in there, big guy. Anybody got a
garbage bag or something?"
The three gray ladies were too busy squabbling to pay me any attention. I looked over at
Annabeth, who was hang-ing on for dear life, and I gave her a why-did-you-do-this-to-me
look.
"Hey," she said, "Gray Sisters Taxi is the fastest way to camp."
"Then why didn't you take it from Virginia?"
"That's outside their service area," she said, like that should be obvious. "They only serve
Greater New York and surrounding communities."
"We've had famous people in this cab!" Anger exclaimed. "Jason! You remember him?"
"Don't remind me!" Wasp wailed. "And we didn't have a cab back then, you old bat. That was
three thousand years ago!"
"Give me the tooth!" Anger tried to grab at Wasp's mouth, but Wasp swatted her hand away.
"Only if Tempest gives me the eye!"
"No!" Tempest screeched. "You had it yesterday!"
"But I'm driving, you old hag!"
"Excuses! Turn! That was your turn!"
Wasp swerved hard onto Delancey Street, squishing me between Tyson and the door. She
punched the gas and we shot up the Williamsburg Bridge at seventy miles an hour.
The three sisters were fighting for real now, slapping each other as Anger tried to grab at
Wasp's face and Wasp tried to grab at Tempest's. With their hair flying and their mouths
open, screaming at each other, I realized that none of the sisters had any teeth except for
Wasp, who had one mossy yellow incisor. Instead of eyes, they just had closed, sunken
eyelids, except for Anger, who had one bloodshot green eye that stared at everything
hungrily, as if it couldn't get enough of anything it saw.
Finally Anger, who had the advantage of sight, managed to yank the tooth out of her sister
Wasp's mouth. This made Wasp so mad she swerved toward the edge of the Williamsburg
Bridge, yelling, "'Ivit back! 'Ivit back!"
Tyson groaned and clutched his stomach.
"Uh, if anybody's interested," I said, "we're going to die!"
"Don't worry," Annabeth told me, sounding pretty wor-ried. "The Gray Sisters know what
they're doing. They're really very wise."
This coming from the daughter of Athena, but I wasn't exactly reassured. We were skimming
along the edge of a bridge a hundred and thirty feet above the East River.
"Yes, wise!" Anger grinned in the rearview mirror, showing off her newly acquired tooth.
"We know things!"
"Every street in Manhattan!" Wasp bragged, still hitting her sister. "The capital of Nepal!"
"The location you seek!" Tempest added.
Immediately her sisters pummeled her from either side, screaming, "Be quiet! Be quiet! He
didn't even ask yet!"
"What?" I said. "What location? I'm not seeking any—"
"Nothing!" Tempest said. "You're right, boy. It's nothing!"
"Tell me."
"No!" they all screamed.
"The last time we told, it was horrible!" Tempest said.
"Eye tossed in a lake!" Anger agreed.
"Years to find it again!" Wasp moaned. "And speaking of that—give it back!"
"No!" yelled Anger.
"Eye!" Wasp yelled. "Gimme!"
She whacked her sister Anger on the back. There was a sickening pop and something flew out
of Anger's face. Anger fumbled for it, trying to catch it, but she only managed to bat it with
the back of her hand. The slimy green orb sailed over her shoulder, into the backseat, and
straight into my lap.
I jumped so hard, my head hit the ceiling and the eyeball rolled away.
"I can't see!" all three sisters yelled.
"Give me the eye!" Wasp wailed.
"Give her the eye!" Annabeth screamed.
"I don't have it!" I said.
"There, by your foot," Annabeth said. "Don't step on it! Get it!"
"I'm not picking that up!"
The taxi slammed against the guardrail and skidded along with a horrible grinding noise. The
whole car shud-dered, billowing gray smoke as if it were about to dissolve from the strain.
"Going to be sick!" Tyson warned.
"Annabeth," I yelled, "let Tyson use your backpack!"
"Are you crazy? Get the eye!"
Wasp yanked the wheel, and the taxi swerved away from the rail. We hurtled down the bridge
toward Brooklyn, going faster than any human taxi. The Gray Sisters screeched and
pummeled each other and cried out for their eye.
At last I steeled my nerves. I ripped off a chunk of my tie-dyed T-shirt, which was already
falling apart from all the burn marks, and used it to pick the eyeball off the floor.
"Nice boy!" Anger cried, as if she somehow knew I had her missing peeper. "Give it back!"
"Not until you explain," I told her. "What were you talking about, the location I seek?"
"No time!" Tempest cried. "Accelerating!"
I looked out the window. Sure enough, trees and cars and whole neighborhoods were now
zipping by in a gray blur. We were already out of Brooklyn, heading through the middle of
Long Island.
"Percy," Annabeth warned, "they can't find our destina-tion without the eye. We'll just keep
accelerating until we break into a million pieces."
"First they have to tell me," I said. "Or I'll open the window and throw the eye into oncoming
traffic."
"No!" the Gray Sisters wailed. "Too dangerous!"
"I'm rolling down the window."
"Wait!" the Gray Sisters screamed. "30, 31, 75, 12!"
They belted it out like a quarterback calling a play.
"What do you mean?" I said. "That makes no sense!"
"30, 31, 75, 12!" Anger wailed. "That's all we can tell you. Now give us the eye! Almost to
camp!"
We were off the highway now, zipping through the countryside of northern Long Island. I
could see Half-Blood Hill ahead of us, with its giant pine tree at the crest—Thalia's tree,
which contained the life force or a fallen hero.
"Percy!" Annabeth said more urgently. "Give them the eye now!"
I decided not to argue. I threw the eye into Wasp's lap.
The old lady snatched it up, pushed it into her eye socket like somebody putting in a contact
lens, and blinked. "Whoa!"
She slammed on the brakes. The taxi spun four or five times in a cloud of smoke and squealed
to a halt in the middle of the farm road at the base of Half-Blood Hill.
Tyson let loose a huge belch. "Better now."
"All right," I told the Gray Sisters. "Now tell me what those numbers mean."
"No time!" Annabeth opened her door. "We have to get out now."
I was about to ask why, when I looked up at Half-Blood Hill and understood.
At the crest of the hill was a group of campers. And they were under attack.
FOUR
TYSON PLAYS
WITH FIRE
Mythologically speaking, if there's anything I hate worse than trios of old ladies, it's bulls.
Last summer, I fought the Minotaur on top of Half-Blood Hill. This time what I saw up there
was even worse: two bulls. And not just regular bulls—bronze ones the size of elephants. And
even that wasn't bad enough. Naturally they had to breathe fire, too.
As soon as we exited the taxi, the Gray Sisters peeled out, heading back to New York, where
life was safer. They didn't even wait for their extra three-drachma payment. They just left us
on the side of the road, Annabeth with nothing but her backpack and knife, Tyson and me still
in our burned-up tie-dyed gym clothes.
"Oh, man," said Annabeth, looking at the battle raging on the hill.
What worried me most weren't the bulls themselves. Or the ten heroes in full battle armor
who were getting their bronze-plated booties whooped. What worried me was that the bulls
were ranging all over the hill, even around the back side of the pine tree. That shouldn't have
been possible. The camp's magic boundaries didn't allow monsters to cross past Thalia's tree.
But the metal bulls were doing it anyway.
One of the heroes shouted, "Border patrol, to me!" A girl's voice—gruff and familiar.
Border patrol? I thought. The camp didn't have a border patrol.
"It's Clarisse," Annabeth said. "Come on, we have to help her."
Normally, rushing to Clarisse's aid would not have been high on my "to do" list. She was one
of the biggest bullies at camp. The first time we'd met she tried to introduce my head to a
toilet. She was also a daughter of Ares, and I'd had a very serious disagreement with her
father last summer, so now the god of war and all his children basically hated my guts.
Still, she was in trouble. Her fellow warriors were scat-tering, running in panic as the bulls
charged. The grass was burning in huge swathes around the pine tree. One hero screamed and
waved his arms as he ran in circles, the horse-hair plume on his helmet blazing like a fiery
Mohawk. Clarisse's own armor was charred. She was fighting with a broken spear shaft, the
other end embedded uselessly in the metal joint of one bull's shoulder.
I uncapped my ballpoint pen. It shimmered, growing longer and heavier until I held the
bronze sword Anaklusmos in my hands. "Tyson, stay here. I don't want you taking any more
chances."
"No!" Annabeth said. "We need him."
I stared at her. "He's mortal. He got lucky with the dodge balls but he can't—"
"Percy, do you know what those are up there? The Colchis bulls, made by Hephaestus
himself. We can't fight them without Medea's Sunscreen SPF 50,000. We'll get burned to a
crisp."
"Medea's what?"
Annabeth rummaged through her backpack and cursed. "I had a jar of tropical coconut scent
sitting on my night-stand at home. Why didn't I bring it?"
I'd learned a long time ago not to question Annabeth too much. It just made me more
confused. "Look, I don't know what you're talking about, but I'm not going to let Tyson get
fried."
"Percy—"
"Tyson, stay back." I raised my sword. "I'm going in."
Tyson tried to protest, but I was already running up the hill toward Clarisse, who was yelling
at her patrol, trying to get them into phalanx formation. It was a good idea. The few who were
listening lined up shoulder-to-shoulder, lock-ing their shields to form an ox-hide—and-bronze
wall, their spears bristling over the top like porcupine quills.
Unfortunately, Clarisse could only muster six campers. The other four were still running
around with their helmets on fire. Annabeth ran toward them, trying to help. She taunted one
of the bulls into chasing her, then turned invis-ible, completely confusing the monster. The
other bull charged Clarisse's line.
I was halfway up the hill—not close enough to help. Clarisse hadn't even seen me yet.
The bull moved deadly fast for something so big. Its metal hide gleamed in the sun. It had
fist-sized rubies for eyes, and horns of polished silver. When it opened its hinged mouth, a
column of white-hot flame blasted out.
"Hold the line!" Clarisse ordered her warriors.
Whatever else you could say about Clarisse, she was brave. She was a big girl with cruel eyes
like her father's. She looked like she was born to wear Greek battle armor, but I didn't see how
even she could stand against that bull's charge.
Unfortunately, at that moment, the other bull lost interest in finding Annabeth. It turned,
wheeling around behind Clarisse on her unprotected side.
"Behind you!" I yelled. "Look out!"
I shouldn't have said anything, because all I did was star-tle her. Bull Number One crashed
into her shield, and the phalanx broke. Clarisse went flying backward and landed in a
smoldering patch of grass. The bull charged past her, but not before blasting the other heroes
with its fiery breath. Their shields melted right off their arms. They dropped their weapons
and ran as Bull Number Two closed in on Clarisse for the kill.
I lunged forward and grabbed Clarisse by the straps of her armor. I dragged her out of the way
just as Bull Number Two freight-trained past. I gave it a good swipe with Riptide and cut a
huge gash in its flank, but the monster just creaked and groaned and kept on going.
It hadn't touched me, but I could feel the heat of its metal skin. Its body temperature could've
microwaved a frozen burrito.
"Let me go!" Clarisse pummeled my hand. "Percy, curse you!"
I dropped her in a heap next to the pine tree and turned to face the bulls. We were on the
inside slope of the hill now, the valley of Camp Half-Blood directly below us—the cabins, the
training facilities, the Big House—all of it at risk if these bulls got past us.
Annabeth shouted orders to the other heroes, telling them to spread out and keep the bulls
distracted.
Bull Number One ran a wide arc, making its way back toward me. As it passed the middle of
the hill, where the invisible boundary line should've kept it out, it slowed down a little, as if it
were struggling against a strong wind; but then it broke through and kept coming. Bull
Number Two turned to face me, fire sputtering from the gash I'd cut in its side. I couldn't tell
if it felt any pain, but its ruby eyes seemed to glare at me like I'd just made things personal.
I couldn't fight both bulls at the same time. I'd have to take down Bull Number Two first, cut
its head off before Bull Number One charged back into range. My arms already felt tired. I
realized how long it had been since I'd worked out with Riptide, how out of practice I was.
I lunged but Bull Number Two blew flames at me. I rolled aside as the air turned to pure heat.
All the oxygen was sucked out of my lungs. My foot caught on some-thing—a tree root,
maybe—and pain shot up my ankle. Still, I managed to slash with my sword and lop off part
of the monster's snout. It galloped away, wild and disoriented. But before I could feel too
good about that, I tried to stand, and my left leg buckled underneath me. My ankle was
sprained, maybe broken.
Bull Number One charged straight toward me. No way could I crawl out of its path.
Annabeth shouted: "Tyson, help him!"
Somewhere near, toward the crest of the hill, Tyson wailed, "Can't—get—through!"
"I, Annabeth Chase, give you permission to enter camp!"
Thunder shook the hillside. Suddenly Tyson was there, barreling toward me, yelling: "Percy
needs help!"
Before I could tell him no, he dove between me and the bull just as it unleashed a nuclear
firestorm.
"Tyson!" I yelled.
The blast swirled around him like a red tornado. I could only see the black silhouette of his
body. I knew with hor-rible certainty that my friend had just been turned into a column of
ashes.
But when the fire died, Tyson was still standing there, completely unharmed. Not even his
grungy clothes were scorched. The bull must've been as surprised as I was, because before it
could unleash a second blast, Tyson balled his fists and slammed them into the bull's face.
"BAD COW!"
His fists made a crater where the bronze bull's snout used to be. Two small columns of flame
shot out of its ears. Tyson hit it again, and the bronze crumpled under his hands like
aluminum foil. The bull's face now looked like a sock puppet pulled inside out.
"Down!" Tyson yelled.
The bull staggered and fell on its back. Its legs moved feebly in the air, steam coming out of
its ruined head in odd places.
Annabeth ran over to check on me.
My ankle felt like it was filled with acid, but she gave me some Olympian nectar to drink
from her canteen, and I immediately started to feel better. There was a burning smell that I
later learned was me. The hair on my arms had been completely singed off.
"The other bull?" I asked.
Annabeth pointed down the hill. Clarisse had taken care of Bad Cow Number Two. She'd
impaled it through the back leg with a celestial bronze spear. Now, with its snout half gone
and a huge gash in its side, it was trying to run in slow motion, going in circles like some kind
of merry-go-round animal.
Clarisse pulled off her helmet and marched toward us. A strand of her stringy brown hair was
smoldering, but she didn't seem to notice. "You—ruin—everything!" she yelled at me. "I had
it under control!"
I was too stunned to answer. Annabeth grumbled, "Good to see you too, Clarisse."
"Argh!" Clarisse screamed. "Don't ever, EVER try sav-ing me again!"
"Clarisse," Annabeth said, "you've got wounded campers."
That sobered her up. Even Clarisse cared about the soldiers under her command.
"I'll be back," she growled, then trudged off to assess the damage.
I stared at Tyson. "You didn't die."
Tyson looked down like he was embarrassed. "I am sorry. Came to help. Disobeyed you."
"My fault," Annabeth said. "I had no choice. I had to let Tyson cross the boundary line to save
you. Otherwise, you would've died."
"Let him cross the boundary line?'" I asked. "But—"
"Percy," she said, "have you ever looked at Tyson closely? I mean ... in the face. Ignore the
Mist, and really look at him."
The Mist makes humans see only what their brains can process ... I knew it could fool
demigods too, but...
I looked Tyson in the face. It wasn't easy. I'd always had trouble looking directly at him,
though I'd never quite understood why. I'd thought it was just because he always had peanut
butter in his crooked teeth. I forced myself to focus at his big lumpy nose, then a little higher
at his eyes.
No, not eyes.
One eye. One large, calf-brown eye, right in the middle of his forehead, with thick lashes and
big tears trickling down his cheeks on either side.
"Tyson," I stammered. "You're a ..."
"Cyclops," Annabeth offered. "A baby, by the looks of him. Probably why he couldn't get past
the boundary line as easily as the bulls. Tyson's one of the homeless orphans."
"One of the what?"
"They're in almost all the big cities," Annabeth said distastefully. "They're ... mistakes, Percy.
Children of nature spirits and gods ... Well, one god in particular, usually ... and they don't
always come out right. No one wants them. They get tossed aside. They grow up wild on the
streets. I don't know how this one found you, but he obviously likes you. We should take him
to Chiron, let him decide what to do."
"But the fire. How—"
"He's a Cyclops." Annabeth paused, as if she were remembering something unpleasant. "They
work the forges of the gods. They have to be immune to fire. That's what I was trying to tell
you."
I was completely shocked. How had I never realized what Tyson was?
But I didn't have much time to think about it just then. The whole side of the hill was burning.
Wounded heroes needed attention. And there were still two banged-up bronze bulls to dispose
of, which I didn't figure would fit in our normal recycling bins.
Clarisse came back over and wiped the soot off her forehead. "Jackson, if you can stand, get
up. We need to carry the wounded back to the Big House, let Tantalus know what's
happened."
"Tantalus?" I asked.
"The activities director," Clarisse said impatiently.
"Chiron is the activities director. And where's Argus? He's head of security. He should be
here."
Clarisse made a sour face. "Argus got fired. You two have been gone too long. Things are
changing."
"But Chiron ... He's trained kids to fight monsters for over three thousand years. He can't just
be gone. What hap-pened?"
"That happened," Clarisse snapped.
She pointed to Thalia's tree.
Every camper knew the story behind the tree. Six years ago, Grover, Annabeth, and two other
demigods named Thalia and Luke had come to Camp Half-Blood chased by an army of
monsters. When they got cornered on top of this hill, Thalia, a daughter of Zeus, had made
her last stand here to give her friends time to reach safety. As she was dying, her father, Zeus,
took pity on her and changed her into a pine tree. Her spirit had reinforced the magic borders
of the camp, protecting it from monsters. The pine had been here ever since, strong and
healthy.
But now, its needles were yellow. A huge pile of dead ones littered the base of the tree. In the
center of the trunk, three feet from the ground, was a puncture mark the size of a bullet hole,
oozing green sap.
A sliver of ice ran through my chest. Now I understood why the camp was in danger. The
magical borders were fail-ing because Thalia's tree was dying.
Someone had poisoned it.
FIVE
I GET A NEW
CABIN MATE
Ever come home and found your room messed up? Like some helpful person (hi, Mom) has
tried to "clean" it, and suddenly you can't find anything? And even if nothing is missing, you
get that creepy feeling like somebody's been looking through your private stuff and dusting
everything with lemon furniture polish?
That's kind of the way I felt seeing Camp Half-Blood again.
On the surface, things didn't look all that different. The Big House was still there with its blue
gabled roof and its wraparound porch. The strawberry fields still baked in the sun. The same
white-columned Greek buildings were scattered around the valley—the amphitheater, the
combat arena, the dining pavilion overlooking Long Island Sound. And nestled between the
woods and the creek were the same cabins—a crazy assortment of twelve buildings, each
repre-senting a different Olympian god.
But there was an air of danger now. You could tell something was wrong. Instead of playing
volleyball in the sandpit, counselors and satyrs were stockpiling weapons in the tool shed.
Dryads armed with bows and arrows talked nervously at the edge of the woods. The forest
looked sickly, the grass in the meadow was pale yellow, and the fire marks on Half-Blood
Hill stood out like ugly scars.
Somebody had messed with my favorite place in the world, and I was not ... well, a happy
camper.
As we made our way to the Big House, I recognized a lot of kids from last summer. Nobody
stopped to talk. Nobody said, "Welcome back." Some did double takes when they saw Tyson,
but most just walked grimly past and carried on with their duties—running messages, toting
swords to sharpen on the grinding wheels. The camp felt like a military school. And believe
me, I know. I've been kicked out of a couple.
None of that mattered to Tyson. He was absolutely fas-cinated by everything he saw.
"Whasthat!" he gasped.
"The stables for pegasi," I said. "The winged horses."
"Whasthat!"
"Um ... those are the toilets."
"Whasthat!"
"The cabins for the campers. If they don't know who your Olympian parent is, they put you in
the Hermes cabin—that brown one over there—until you're deter-mined. Then, once they
know, they put you in your dad or mom's group."
He looked at me in awe. "You ... have a cabin?"
"Number three." I pointed to a low gray building made of sea stone.
"You live with friends in the cabin?"
"No. No, just me." I didn't feel like explaining. The embarrassing truth: I was the only one
who stayed in that cabin because I wasn't supposed to be alive. The "Big Three" gods—Zeus,
Poseidon, and Hades—had made a pact after World War II not to have any more children
with mortals. We were more powerful than regular half-bloods. We were too unpredictable.
When we got mad we tended to cause problems ... like World War II, for instance. The "Big
Three" pact had only been broken twice—once when Zeus sired Thalia, once when Poseidon
sired me. Neither of us should've been born.
Thalia had gotten herself turned into a pine tree when she was twelve. Me ... well, I was doing
my best not to fol-low her example. I had nightmares about what Poseidon might turn me into
if I were ever on the verge of death— plankton, maybe. Or a floating patch of kelp.
When we got to the Big House, we found Chiron in his apartment, listening to his favorite
1960s lounge music while he packed his saddlebags. I guess I should mention—Chiron is a
centaur. From the waist up he looks like a reg-ular middle-aged guy with curly brown hair
and a scraggly beard. From the waist down, he's a white stallion. He can pass for human by
compacting his lower half into a magic wheelchair. In fact, he'd passed himself off as my
Latin teacher during my sixth-grade year. But most of the time, if the ceilings are high
enough, he prefers hanging out in full centaur form.
As soon as we saw him, Tyson froze. "Pony!" he cried in total rapture.
Chiron turned, looking offended. "I beg your pardon?"
Annabeth ran up and hugged him. "Chiron, what's happening? You're not ... leaving?" Her
voice was shaky. Chiron was like a second father to her.
Chiron ruffled her hair and gave her a kindly smile. "Hello, child. And Percy, my goodness.
You've grown over the year!"
I swallowed. "Clarisse said you were ... you were ..."
"Fired." Chiron's eyes glinted with dark humor. "Ah, well, someone had to take the blame.
Lord Zeus was most upset. The tree he'd created from the spirit of his daughter, poisoned! Mr.
D had to punish someone."
"Besides himself, you mean," I growled. Just the thought of the camp director, Mr. D, made
me angry.
"But this is crazy!" Annabeth cried. "Chiron, you couldn't have had anything to do with
poisoning Thalia's tree!"
"Nevertheless," Chiron sighed, "some in Olympus do not trust me now, under the
circumstances."
"What circumstances?" I asked.
Chiron's face darkened. He stuffed a Latin-English dictionary into his saddlebag while the
Frank Sinatra music oozed from his boom box.
Tyson was still staring at Chiron in amazement. He whimpered like he wanted to pat Chiron's
flank but was afraid to come closer. "Pony?"
Chiron sniffed. "My dear young Cyclops! I am a centaur."
"Chiron," I said. "What about the tree? What hap-pened?"
He shook his head sadly. "The poison used on Thalia's pine is something from the
Underworld, Percy. Some venom even I have never seen. It must have come from a monster
quite deep in the pits of Tartarus."
"Then we know who's responsible. Kro—"
"Do not invoke the titan lord's name, Percy. Especially not here, not now."
"But last summer he tried to cause a civil war in Olympus! This has to be his idea. He'd get
Luke to do it, that traitor."
"Perhaps," Chiron said. "But I fear I am being held responsible because I did not prevent it
and I cannot cure it. The tree has only a few weeks of life left unless ..."
"Unless what?" Annabeth asked.
"No," Chiron said. "A foolish thought. The whole valley is feeling the shock of the poison.
The magical borders are deteriorating. The camp itself is dying. Only one source of magic
would be strong enough to reverse the poison, and it was lost centuries ago."
"What is it?" I asked. "We'll go find it!"
Chiron closed his saddlebag. He pressed the stop but-ton on his boom box. Then he turned
and rested his hand on my shoulder, looking me straight in the eyes. "Percy, you must
promise me that you will not act rashly. I told your mother I did not want you to come here at
all this summer. It's much too dangerous. But now that you are here, stay here. Train hard.
Learn to fight. But do not leave."
"Why?" I asked. "I want to do something! I can't just let the borders fail. The whole camp will
be—"
"Overrun by monsters," Chiron said. "Yes, I fear so. But you must not let yourself be baited
into hasty action! This could be a trap of the titan lord. Remember last summer! He almost
took your life."
It was true, but still, I wanted to help so badly. I also wanted to make Kronos pay. I mean,
you'd think the titan lord would've learned his lesson eons ago when he was over-thrown by
the gods. You'd think getting chopped into a mil-lion pieces and cast into the darkest part of
the Underworld would give him a subtle clue that nobody wanted him around. But no.
Because he was immortal, he was still alive down there in Tartarus—suffering in eternal pain,
hunger-ing to return and take revenge on Olympus. He couldn't act on his own, but he was
great at twisting the minds of mor-tals and even gods to do his dirty work.
The poisoning had to be his doing. Who else would be so low as to attack Thalia's tree, the
only thing left of a hero who'd given her life to save her friends?
Annabeth was trying hard not to cry. Chiron brushed a tear from her cheek. "Stay with Percy,
child," he told her. "Keep him safe. The prophecy—remember it!"
"I—I will."
"Um ..." I said. "Would this be the super-dangerous prophecy that has me in it, but the gods
have forbidden you to tell me about?"
Nobody answered.
"Right," I muttered. "Just checking."
"Chiron ..." Annabeth said. "You told me the gods made you immortal only so long as you
were needed to train heroes. If they dismiss you from camp—"
"Swear you will do your best to keep Percy from danger," he insisted. "Swear upon the River
Styx."
"I—I swear it upon the River Styx," Annabeth said.
Thunder rumbled outside.
"Very well," Chiron said. He seemed to relax just a little. "Perhaps my name will be cleared
and I shall return. Until then, I go to visit my wild kinsmen in the Everglades. It's possible
they know of some cure for the poisoned tree that I have forgotten. In any event, I will stay in
exile until this matter is resolved ... one way or another."
Annabeth stifled a sob. Chiron patted her shoulder awk-wardly. "There, now, child. I must
entrust your safety to Mr. D and the new activities director. We must hope ... well, perhaps
they won't destroy the camp quite as quickly as I fear."
"Who is this Tantalus guy, anyway?" I demanded. "Where does he get off taking your job?"
A conch horn blew across the valley. I hadn't realized how late it was. It was time for the
campers to assemble for dinner.
"Go," Chiron said. "You will meet him at the pavilion. I will contact your mother, Percy, and
let her know you're safe. No doubt she'll be worried by now. Just remember my warning! You
are in grave danger. Do not think for a moment that the titan lord has forgotten you!"
With that, he clopped out of the apartment and down the hall, Tyson calling after him, "Pony!
Don't go!"
I realized I'd forgotten to tell Chiron about my dream of Grover. Now it was too late. The best
teacher I'd ever had was gone, maybe for good.
Tyson started bawling almost as bad as Annabeth. I tried to tell them that things would be
okay, but I didn't believe it.
The sun was setting behind the dining pavilion as the campers came up from their cabins. We
stood in the shadow of a marble column and watched them file in. Annabeth was still pretty
shaken up, but she promised she'd talk to us later. Then she went off to join her siblings from
the Athena cabin—a dozen boys and girls with blond hair and gray eyes like hers. Annabeth
wasn't the oldest, but she'd been at camp more summers than just about anybody. You could
tell that by looking at her camp necklace—one bead for every summer, and Annabeth had six.
No one ques-tioned her right to lead the line.
Next came Clarisse, leading the Ares cabin. She had one arm in a sling and a nasty-looking
gash on her cheek, but otherwise her encounter with the bronze bulls didn't seem to have
fazed her. Someone had taped a piece of paper to her back that said, YOU MOO, GIRL! But
nobody in her cabin was bothering to tell her about it.
After the Ares kids came the Hephaestus cabin—six guys led by Charles Beckendorf, a big
fifteen-year-old African American kid. He had hands the size of catchers' mitts and a face that
was hard and squinty from looking into a blacksmiths forge all day. He was nice enough once
you got to know him, but no one ever called him Charlie or Chuck or Charles. Most just
called him Beckendorf. Rumor was he could make anything. Give him a chunk of metal and
he could create a razor-sharp sword or a robotic warrior or a singing birdbath for your
grandmother's garden. Whatever you wanted.
The other cabins filed in: Demeter, Apollo, Aphrodite, Dionysus. Naiads came up from the
canoe lake. Dryads melted out of the trees. From the meadow came a dozen satyrs, who
reminded me painfully of Grover.
I'd always had a soft spot for the satyrs. When they were at camp, they had to do all kinds of
odd jobs for Mr. D, the director, but their most important work was out in the real world.
They were the camp's seekers. They went undercover into schools all over the world, looking
for potential half-bloods and escorting them back to camp. That's how I'd met Grover. He had
been the first one to recognize I was a demigod.
After the satyrs filed in to dinner, the Hermes cabin brought up the rear. They were always the
biggest cabin. Last summer, it had been led by Luke, the guy who'd fought with Thalia and
Annabeth on top of Half-Blood Hill. For a while, before Poseidon had claimed me, I'd lodged
in the Hermes cabin. Luke had befriended me ... and then he'd tried to kill me.
Now the Hermes cabin was led by Travis and Connor Stoll. They weren't twins, but they
looked so much alike it didn't matter. I could never remember which one was older. They
were both tall and skinny, with mops of brown hair that hung in their eyes. They wore orange
CAMP HALF-BLOOD T-shirts untucked over baggy shorts, and they had those elfish
features all Hermes's kids had: upturned eyebrows, sarcastic smiles, a gleam in their eyes
whenever they looked at you—like they were about to drop a firecracker down your shirt. I'd
always thought it was funny that the god of thieves would have kids with the last name
"Stoll," but the only time I mentioned it to Travis and Connor, they both stared at me blankly
like they didn't get the joke.
As soon as the last campers had filed in, I led Tyson into the middle of the pavilion.
Conversations faltered. Heads turned. "Who invited that?" somebody at the Apollo table
murmured.
I glared in their direction, but I couldn't figure out who'd spoken.
From the head table a familiar voice drawled, "Well, well, if it isn't Peter Johnson. My
millennium is complete."
I gritted my teeth. "Percy Jackson ... sir."
Mr. D sipped his Diet Coke. "Yes. Well, as you young people say these days: Whatever."
He was wearing his usual leopard-pattern Hawaiian shirt, walking shorts, and tennis shoes
with black socks. With his pudgy belly and his blotchy red face, he looked like a Las Vegas
tourist who'd stayed up too late in the casi-nos. Behind him, a nervous-looking satyr was
peeling the skins off grapes and handing them to Mr. D one at a time.
Mr. D's real name is Dionysus. The god of wine. Zeus appointed him director of Camp Half-
Blood to dry out for a hundred years—a punishment for chasing some off-limits wood
nymph.
Next to him, where Chiron usually sat (or stood, in centaur form), was someone I'd never seen
before—a pale, horribly thin man in a threadbare orange prisoner's jump-suit. The number
over his pocket read 0001. He had blue shadows under his eyes, dirty fingernails, and badly
cut gray hair, like his last haircut had been done with a weed whacker. He stared at me; his
eyes made me nervous. He looked ... fractured. Angry and frustrated and hungry all at the
same time.
"This boy," Dionysus told him, "you need to watch. Poseidon's child, you know."
"Ah!" the prisoner said. "That one."
His tone made it obvious that he and Dionysus had already discussed me at length.
"I am Tantalus," the prisoner said, smiling coldly. "On special assignment here until, well,
until my Lord Dionysus decides otherwise. And you, Perseus Jackson, I do expect you to
refrain from causing any more trouble."
"Trouble?" I demanded.
Dionysus snapped his fingers. A newspaper appeared on the table—the front page of today's
New York Post, There was my yearbook picture from Meriwether Prep. It was hard for me to
make out the headline, but I had a pretty good guess what it said. Something like: Thirteen-
Year-Old Lunatic Torches Gymnasium.
"Yes, trouble," Tantalus said with satisfaction. "You caused plenty of it last summer, I
understand."
I was too mad to speak. Like it was my fault the gods had almost gotten into a civil war?
A satyr inched forward nervously and set a plate of bar-becue in front of Tantalus. The new
activities director licked his lips. He looked at his empty goblet and said, "Root beer. Barq's
special stock. 1967."
The glass filled itself with foamy soda. Tantalus stretched out his hand hesitantly, as if he
were afraid the goblet was hot.
"Go on, then, old fellow," Dionysus said, a strange sparkle in his eyes. "Perhaps now it will
work."
Tantalus grabbed for the glass, but it scooted away before he could touch it. A few drops of
root beer spilled, and Tantalus tried to dab them up with his fingers, but the drops rolled away
like quicksilver before he could touch them. He growled and turned toward the plate of
barbecue. He picked up a fork and tried to stab a piece of brisket, but the plate skittered down
the table and flew off the end, straight into the coals of the brazier.
"Blast!" Tantalus muttered.
"Ah, well," Dionysus said, his voice dripping with false sympathy. "Perhaps a few more days.
Believe me, old chap, working at this camp will be torture enough. I'm sure your old curse
will fade eventually."
"Eventually," muttered Tantalus, staring at Dionysus's Diet Coke. "Do you have any idea how
dry one's throat gets after three thousand years?"
"You're that spirit from the Fields of Punishment," I said. "The one who stands in the lake
with the fruit tree hanging over you, but you can't eat or drink."
Tantalus sneered at me. "A real scholar, aren't you, boy?"
"You must've done something really horrible when you were alive," I said, mildly impressed.
"What was it?"
Tantalus's eyes narrowed. Behind him, the satyrs were shaking their heads vigorously, trying
to warn me.
"I'll be watching you, Percy Jackson," Tantalus said. "I don't want any problems at my camp."
"Your camp has problems already ... sir."
"Oh, go sit down, Johnson," Dionysus sighed. "I believe that table over there is yours—the
one where no one else ever wants to sit."
My face was burning, but I knew better than to talk back. Dionysus was an overgrown brat,
but he was an immortal, superpowerful overgrown brat. I said, "Come on, Tyson."
"Oh, no," Tantalus said. "The monster stays here. We must decide what to do with it."
"Him," I snapped. "His name is Tyson."
The new activities director raised an eyebrow.
"Tyson saved the camp," I insisted. "He pounded those bronze bulls. Otherwise they would've
burned down this whole place."
"Yes," Tantalus sighed, "and what a pity that would've been."
Dionysus snickered.
"Leave us," Tantalus ordered, "while we decide this crea-ture's fate."
Tyson looked at me with fear in his one big eye, but I knew I couldn't disobey a direct order
from the camp direc-tors. Not openly, anyway.
"I'll be right over here, big guy," I promised. "Don't worry. We'll find you a good place to
sleep tonight."
Tyson nodded. "I believe you. You are my friend."
Which made me feel a whole lot guiltier.
I trudged over to the Poseidon table and slumped onto the bench. A wood nymph brought me
a plate of Olympian olive-and-pepperoni pizza, but I wasn't hungry. I'd been almost killed
twice today. I'd managed to end my school year with a complete disaster. Camp Half-Blood
was in serious trouble and Chiron had told me not to do anything about it.
I didn't feel very thankful, but I took my dinner, as was customary, up to the bronze brazier
and scraped part of it into the flames.
"Poseidon," I murmured, "accept my offering."
And send me some help while you're at it, I prayed silently. Please.
The smoke from the burning pizza changed into some-thing fragrant—the smell of a clean sea
breeze with wild-flowers mixed in—but I had no idea if that meant my father was really
listening.
I went back to my seat. I didn't think things could get much worse. But then Tantalus had one
of the satyrs blow the conch horn to get our attention for announcements.
"Yes, well," Tantalus said, once the talking had died down. "Another fine meal! Or so I am
told." As he spoke, he inched his hand toward his refilled dinner plate, as if maybe the food
wouldn't notice what he was doing, but it did. It shot away down the table as soon as he got
within six inches.
"And here on my first day of authority," he continued, "I'd like to say what a pleasant form of
punishment it is to be here. Over the course of the summer, I hope to torture, er, interact with
each and every one of you children. You all look good enough to eat."
Dionysus clapped politely, leading to some halfhearted applause from the satyrs. Tyson was
still standing at the head table, looking uncomfortable, but every time he tried to scoot out of
the limelight, Tantalus pulled him back.
"And now some changes!" Tantalus gave the campers a crooked smile. "We are reinstituting
the chariot races!"
Murmuring broke out at all the tables—excitement, fear, disbelief.
"Now I know," Tantalus continued, raising his voice, "that these races were discontinued
some years ago due to, ah, technical problems."
"Three deaths and twenty-six mutilations," someone at the Apollo table called.
"Yes, yes!" Tantalus said. "But I know that you will all join me in welcoming the return of
this camp tradition. Golden laurels will go to the winning charioteers each month. Teams may
register in the morning! The first race will be held in three days time. We will release you
from most of your regular activities to prepare your chariots and choose your horses. Oh, and
did I mention, the victorious team's cabin will have no chores for the month in which they
win?"
An explosion of excited conversation—no KP for a whole month? No stable cleaning? Was
he serious?
Then the last person I expected to object did so.
"But, sir!" Clarisse said. She looked nervous, but she stood up to speak from the Ares table.
Some of the campers snickered when they saw the YOU MOO, GIRL! sign on her back.
"What about patrol duty? I mean, if we drop every-thing to ready our chariots—"
"Ah, the hero of the day," Tantalus exclaimed. "Brave Clarisse, who single-handedly bested
the bronze bulls!"
Clarisse blinked, then blushed. "Um, I didn't—"
"And modest, too." Tantalus grinned. "Not to worry, my dear! This is a summer camp. We are
here to enjoy our-selves, yes?"
"But the tree—"
"And now," Tantalus said, as several of Clarisse's cabin mates pulled her back into her seat,
"before we proceed to the campfire and sing-along, one slight housekeeping issue. Percy
Jackson and Annabeth Chase have seen fit, for some reason, to bring this here." Tantalus
waved a hand toward Tyson.
Uneasy murmuring spread among the campers. A lot of sideways looks at me. I wanted to kill
Tantalus.
"Now, of course," he said, "Cyclopes have a reputation for being bloodthirsty monsters with a
very small brain capacity. Under normal circumstances, I would release this beast into the
woods and have you hunt it down with torches and pointed sticks. But who knows? Perhaps
this Cyclops is not as horrible as most of its brethren. Until it proves worthy of destruction,
we need a place to keep it! I've thought about the stables, but that will make the horses
nervous. Hermes's cabin, possibly?"
Silence at the Hermes table. Travis and Connor Stoll developed a sudden interest in the
tablecloth. I couldn't blame them. The Hermes cabin was always full to bursting. There was
no way they could take in a six-foot-three Cyclops.
"Come now," Tantalus chided. "The monster may be able to do some menial chores. Any
suggestions as to where such a beast should be kenneled?"
Suddenly everybody gasped.
Tantalus scooted away from Tyson in surprise. All I could do was stare in disbelief at the
brilliant green light that was about to change my life—a dazzling holographic image that had
appeared above Tyson's head.
With a sickening twist in my stomach, I remembered what Annabeth had said about
Cyclopes, They're the children of nature spirits and gods ... Well, one god in particular,
usually …
Swirling over Tyson was a glowing green trident—the same symbol that had appeared above
me the day Poseidon had claimed me as his son.
There was a moment of awed silence.
Being claimed was a rare event. Some campers waited in vain for it their whole lives. When
I'd been claimed by Poseidon last summer, everyone had reverently knelt. But now, they
followed Tantalus's lead, and Tantalus roared with laughter. "Well! I think we know where to
put the beast now. By the gods, I can see the family resemblance!"
Everybody laughed except Annabeth and a few of my other friends.
Tyson didn't seem to notice. He was too mystified, try-ing to swat the glowing trident that
was now fading over his head. He was too innocent to understand how much they were
making fun of him, how cruel people were.
But I got it.
I had a new cabin mate. I had a monster for a half-brother.