ME BURN A METAL SHR0UD
I dreamed Rachel Elizabeth Dare was throwing darts at my picture.
She was standing in her roomโฆOkay, back up. I have to explain that Rachel doesnโt have a room. She has the top floor of her familyโs mansion, which is a renovated brownstone in Brooklyn. Her โroomโ is a huge loft with industrial lighting and floor-to-ceiling windows. Itโs about twice as big as my momโs apartment.
Some alt rock was blaring from her paint-covered Bose docking system. As far as I could tell, Rachelโs 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 sheโd been sleeping. Her bed was messed up. Sheets hung over a bunch of artistโs easels. Dirty clothes and old energy bar wrappers were strewn around the floor, but when youโve got a room that big, the mess doesnโt look so bad. Out the windows you could see the entire nighttime 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 fierceโdisturbing, evenโso it was hard to tell if I was the good guy or the bad guy, but Rachel said Iโd looked just like that after the battle.
โDemigods,โ Rachel muttered as she threw another dart at the canvas. โAnd theirย stupidย quests.โ
Most of the darts bounced off, but a few stuck. One hung off my chin like a goatee.
Someone pounded on her bedroom door.
โRachel!โ a man shouted. โWhat in the world are you doing? Turn off thatโโ
in!โ
Rachel scooped up her remote control and shut off the music. โCome
Her dad walked in, scowling and blinking from the light. He had rust-
colored hair a little darker than Rachelโs. It was smushed on one side like heโd lost a fight with his pillow. His blue silk pajamas had โWDโ monogrammed on the pocket. Seriously, who has monogrammed pajamas?
โWhat is going on?โ he demanded. โItโs three in the morning.โ โCouldnโt sleep,โ Rachel said.
On the painting, a dart fell off my face. Rachel hid the rest behind her back, but Mr. Dare noticed.
โSoโฆI take it your friend isnโt coming to St. Thomas?โ Thatโs what Mr. Dare called me. Neverย Percy. Justย your friend. Orย young manย if he was talking to me, which he rarely did.
Rachel knit her eyebrows. โI donโt know.โ
โWe leave in the morning,โ her dad said. โIf he hasnโt made up his mind yetโโ
โHeโs probably not coming,โ Rachel said miserably. โHappy?โ
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.
โAre you still having bad dreams?โ he asked. โHeadaches?โ
Rachel threw her darts on the floor. โI should never have told you about that.โ
โIโm your father,โ he said. โIโm worried about you.โ โWorried about the familyโs reputation,โ Rachel muttered.
Her father didnโt reactโmaybe because heโd heard that comment before, or maybe because it was true.
โWe could call Dr. Arkwright,โ he suggested. โHe helped you get through the death of your hamster.โ
โI was six then,โ she said. โAnd no, Dad, I donโt need a therapist. I justโฆโ She shook her head helplessly.
Her father stopped in front of the windows. He gazed at the New York skyline as if he owned itโwhich wasnโt true. He only owned part of
it.
โIt will be good for you to get away,โ he decided. โYouโve had some
unhealthy influences.โ
โIโm not going to Clarion Ladies Academy,โ Rachel said. โAnd my friends are none of your business.โ
Mr. Dare smiled, but it wasnโt a warm smile. It was more like,
Someday youโll realize how silly you sound.
โTry to get some sleep,โ he urged. โWeโll be at the beach by tomorrow night. It will be fun.โ
โFun,โ Rachel repeated. โLots of fun.โ
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.
โI hope theyโre dreams,โ she said.
She uncovered the easel. On it was a hastily sketched charcoal, 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 couldโve known what he looked like back then, but the portrait was so good I had a feeling she wasnโt guessing. From what I knew about Lukeโs life (which wasnโt much), the picture showed him just before heโd 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 gatheredโฆbut it wasnโt a normal crowd of tourists and pedestrians. I saw spears, javelins, and bannersโthe trappings of an army.
โPercy,โ Rachel muttered, as if she knew I was listening, โwhat is going on?โ
The dream faded, and the last thing I remember was wishing I could answer her question.
The next morning, I wanted to call her, but there were no phones at camp. Dionysus and Chiron didnโt 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. Itโs like sending up a flare:ย Here I am! Please rearrange my face!ย Even within the safe borders of camp, thatโs not the kind of advertising we wanted to do.
Most demigods (except for Annabeth and a few others) donโt even own cell phones. And I definitely couldnโt tell Annabeth, โHey, let me borrow your phone so I can call Rachel!โ To make the call, I wouldโve 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 wouldโve been on the plane to Saint 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 didnโt exactly improve my appetite.
After breakfast, Annabeth and I walked down to inspect the cabins. Actually, it was Annabethโs 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 wouldnโt be so heinous.
We started at the Poseidon cabin, which was basically just me. Iโd 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. โYouโre being generous.โ She used the end of her pencil to pick up an old pair of running shorts.
I snatched them away. โHey, give me a break. I donโt have Tyson cleaning up after me this summer.โ
โThree out of five,โ Annabeth said. I knew better than to argue, so we moved along.
I tried to skim through Chironโs 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 didย notย 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, hadnโt been heard from in months, and if Artemis knew what had happened to them, she wasnโt sharing information.
We visited the Aphrodite cabin, which of course got a five out of five. The beds were perfectly made. The clothes in everyoneโs footlockers were color 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.
โGreat job as usual, Silena,โ 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 heโd caught the attention of Aphrodite.
โYou want a bonbon?โ Silena asked. โMy dad sent them. He thought
โhe thought they might cheer me up.โ โAre they any good?โ I asked.
She shook her head. โThey taste like cardboard.โ
I didnโt 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 firebombs flew over the Ares cabin in a chariot pulled by two pegasi. Iโd 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 kidsโ 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: โCurse me, eh? Iโll make you pay! / I donโt want to rhyme all day!โ
Annabeth sighed. โNot that again. Last time Apollo cursed a cabin, it took a week for the rhyming couplets to wear off.โ
I shuddered. Apollo was god of poetry as well as archery, and Iโd heard him recite in person. Iโd almost rather get shot by an arrow.
โWhat are they fighting about anyway?โ 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 Iโd seen her a billion times. She and I were about the same height this summer, which was a relief. Still, she seemed so much more mature. It was kind of intimidating. I mean, sure, sheโd always been cute, but she was starting to be seriously beautiful.
Finally she said, โThat flying chariot.โ โWhat?โ
โYou asked what they were fighting about.โ โOh. Oh, right.โ
โThey captured it in a raid in Philadelphia last week. Some of Lukeโs demigods were there with that flying chariot. The Apollo cabin seized it during the battle, but the Ares cabin led the raid. So theyโve been fighting about who gets it ever since.โ
We ducked as Michael Yewโs 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.
โWeโre fighting for our lives,โ I said, โand theyโre bickering about some stupid chariot.โ
โTheyโll get over it,โ Annabeth said. โClarisse will come to her senses.โ
I wasnโt so sure. That didnโt 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 shouldโve 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 didnโt 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 Athenaโs cabin, which was orderly and clean as usual. Books were straightened on the shelves. The armor was polished.
Battle maps and blueprints decorated the walls. Only Annabethโs bunk was messy. It was covered in papers, and her silver laptop was still running.
โVlacas,โย Annabeth muttered, which was basically calling herself an idiot in Greek.
Her second-in-command, Malcolm, suppressed a smile. โYeah, umโฆ we cleaned everything else. Didnโt know if it was safe to move your notes.โ
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. โWeโll wait outside while you finish inspection.โ 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 to beโฆlike,ย aloneย 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, Arenโt all demigods related on the godly side, and doesnโt that make dating gross? But the thing is, the godly side of your family doesnโt count, genetically speaking, since gods donโt 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?
Theyโre not related. So itโs no problem.
Anyway, for some strange reason I was thinking about this as I watched Annabeth straighten up. She closed her laptop, which had been given to her as a gift from the inventor Daedalus last summer.
I cleared my throat. โSoโฆget any good info from that thing?โ โToo much,โ she said. โDaedalus had so many ideas, I could spend
fifty years just trying to figure them all out.โ
โYeah,โ I muttered. โThat would be fun.โ
She shuffled her papersโmostly drawings of buildings and a bunch of handwritten notes. I knew she wanted to be an architect someday, but Iโd learned the hard way not to ask what she was working on. Sheโd start talking about angles and load-bearing joints until my eyes glazed over.
โYou knowโฆโ She brushed her hair behind her ear, like she does when sheโs nervous. โThis whole thing with Beckendorf and Silena. It kind of makes you think. Aboutโฆwhatโs important. About losing people who are important.โ
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.
โUm, yeah,โ I stammered. โLikeโฆis everything cool with your family?โ
Okay, really stupid question, but hey, I was nervous. Annabeth looked disappointed, but she nodded.
โMy dad wanted to take me to Greece this summer,โ she said wistfully. โIโve always wanted to seeโโ
โThe Parthenon,โ I remembered. She managed a smile. โYeah.โ
โThatโs okay. Thereโll be other summers, right?โ
As soon as I said it, I realized it was a boneheaded comment. I was facing theย end of my days. Within a week, Olympus might fall. If the Age of the Gods really did end, the world as we knew it would dissolve into chaos. Demigods would be hunted to extinction. There would be no more summers for us.
Annabeth stared at her inspection scroll. โThree out five,โ she muttered, โfor a sloppy head counselor. Come on. Letโs finish your reports and get back to Chiron.โ
On the way to the Big House, we read the last report, which was handwritten on a maple leaf from a satyr in Canada. If possible, the note made me feel even worse.
โโDear Grover,โโ I read aloud. โโWoods outside Toronto attacked by giant evil badger. Tried to do as you suggested and summon power of Pan. No effect. Many naiadsโ trees destroyed. Retreating to Ottawa. Please advise. Where are you? โGleeson Hedge, protector.โโ
Annabeth grimaced. โYou havenโt heardย anythingย from him? Even with your empathy link?โ
I shook my head dejectedly.
Ever since last summer when the god Pan had died, our friend Grover had been drifting farther and farther away. The Council of Cloven Elders treated him like an outcast, but Grover still traveled all over the East Coast, trying to spread the word about Pan and convince nature spirits to protect their own little bits of the wild. Heโd only come back to camp a few times to see his girlfriend, Juniper.
Last Iโd heard he was in Central Park organizing the dryads, but nobody had seen or heard from him in two months. Weโd tried to send Iris- messages. They never got through. I had an empathy link with Grover, so I hoped I would know if anything bad happened to him. Grover had told me one time that if he died, the empathy link might kill me too. But I wasnโt sure if that was still true or not.
I wondered if he was still in Manhattan. Then I thought about my dream of Rachelโs sketchโdark clouds closing on the city, an army gathered around the Empire State Building.
โAnnabeth.โ I stopped her by the tetherball court. I knew I was asking for trouble, but I didnโt know who else to trust. Plus, Iโd always depended on Annabeth for advice. โListen, I had this dream about, um, Rachelโฆโ
I told her the whole thing, even the weird picture of Luke as a child.
For a while she didnโt say anything. Then she rolled up her inspection scroll so tight she ripped it. โWhat do you want me to say?โ
โIโm not sure. Youโre the best strategist I know. If you were Kronos planning this war, what would you do next?โ
โIโd use Typhon as a distraction. Then Iโd hit Olympus directly, while the gods were in the West.โ
โJust like in Rachelโs picture.โ
โPercy,โ she said, her voice tight, โRachel is just a mortal.โ โBut what if her dream is true? Those other Titansโ they said
Olympus would be destroyed in a matter of days. They said they had
plenty of other challenges. And whatโs with that picture of Luke as a kid
โโ
โWeโll just have to be ready.โ
โHow?โ I said. โLook at our camp. We canโt even stop fighting each other. And Iโm supposed to get my stupid soul reaped.โ
She threw down her scroll. โI knew we shouldnโt have shown you the prophecy.โ Her voice was angry and hurt. โAll it did was scare you. You run away from things when youโre scared.โ
I stared at her, completely stunned. โMe? Run away?โ
She got right in my face. โYes, you. Youโre a coward, Percy Jackson!โ
We were nose to nose. Her eyes were red, and I suddenly realized that when she called me a coward, maybe she wasnโt talking about the prophecy.
โIf you donโt like our chances,โ she said, โmaybe you should go on that vacation with Rachel.โ
โAnnabethโโ
โIf you donโt like our company.โ โThatโs not fair!โ
She pushed past me and stormed toward the strawberry fields. She hit the tetherball as she passed and sent it spinning angrily around the pole.
Iโd like to say my day got better from there. Of course it didnโt. That afternoon we had an assembly at the campfire to burn
Beckendorfโs burial shroud and say our good-byes. Even the Ares and
Apollo cabins called a temporary truce to attend.
Beckendorfโs shroud was made out of metal links, like chain mail. I didnโt see how it would burn, but the Fates mustโve been helping out. The metal melted in the fire and turned to golden smoke, which rose into the sky. The campfire flames always reflected the campersโ moods, and today they burned black.
I hoped Beckendorfโs spirit would end up in Elysium. Maybe heโd even choose to be reborn and try for Elysium in three different lifetimes so he could reach the Isles of the Blest, which was like the Underworldโs ultimate party headquarters. If anyone deserved it, Beckendorf did.
Annabeth left without a word to me. Most of the other campers drifted off to their afternoon activities. I just stood there staring at the
dying fire. Silena sat nearby crying, while Clarisse and her boyfriend, Chris Rodriguez, tried to comfort her.
Finally I got up the nerve to walk over. โHey, Silena, Iโm really sorry.โ
She sniffled. Clarisse glared at me, but she always glares at everyone.
Chris would barely look at me. Heโd been one of Lukeโs men until Clarisse rescued him from the Labyrinth last summer, and I guess he still felt guilty about it.
I cleared my throat. โSilena, you know Beckendorf carried your picture. He looked at it right before we went into battle. You meant a lot to him. You made the last year the best of his life.โ
Silena sobbed.
โGood work, Percy,โ Clarisse muttered.
โNo, itโs all right,โ Silena said. โThankโฆthank you, Percy. I should
go.โ
โYou want company?โ Clarisse asked. Silena shook her head and ran off.
โSheโs stronger than she looks,โ Clarisse muttered, almost to herself.
โSheโll survive.โ
โYou could help with that,โ I suggested. โYou could honor Beckendorfโs memory by fighting with us.โ
Clarisse went for her knife, but it wasnโt there anymore. Sheโd thrown it on the Ping-Pong table in the Big House.
โNot my problem,โ she growled. โMy cabin doesnโt get honor, I donโt fight.โ
I noticed she wasnโt speaking in rhymes. Maybe she hadnโt been around when her cabinmates got cursed, or maybe she had a way of breaking the spell. With a chill, I wondered if Clarisse could be Kronosโs spy at camp. Was that why she was keeping her cabin out of the fight? But as much as I disliked Clarisse, spying for the Titans didnโt seem like her style.
โAll right,โ I told her. โI didnโt want to bring this up, but you owe me one. Youโd be rotting in a Cyclopsโs cave in the Sea of Monsters if it wasnโt for me.โ
She clenched her jaw. โAny other favor, Percy. Not this. The Ares cabin has been dissed too many times. And donโt think I donโt know what people say about me behind my back.โ
I wanted to say,ย Well, itโs true. But I bit my tongue.
โSo, whatโyouโre just going to let Kronos crush us?โ I asked. โIf you want my help so bad, tell Apollo to give us the chariot.โ โYouโre such a big baby.โ
She charged me, but Chris got between us. โWhoa, guys,โ he said. โClarisse, you know, maybe heโs got a point.โ
She sneered at him. โNot you too!โ
She trudged off with Chris at her heels. โHey, wait! I just meantโ Clarisse, wait!โ
I watched the last sparks from Beckendorfโs fire curl into the afternoon sky. Then I headed toward the sword-fighting arena. I needed a break, and I wanted to see an old friend.