Annabeth Asks to See the Manager I had some โsplaining to do. I told Annabeth what had happened at Aeaea and Fancy Water. She shook her head. โAnd you didnโt even wear raincoats?โ Grover splayed his hands. โThankย you.โ
โWe had things under control,โ I said.
She marched up to me, smirked, then pulled the bow off my forehead.
โOkay. Please tell me youโre not wrapping up this naiad to send her Hermes Express to Mount Olympus.โ
โWhy wouldโOh.โ Iโd momentarily forgotten about that thing with Medusaโs head and the gods. They hadnโt found it funny. โNo. No tricks.
Just treats. You want some perfume?โ
โIโm good.โ She wiped the side of my mouth. โBut I amย notย kissing you until you wash your face. Usually, you donโt drool when youโre awake.โ
โHow did you find us, anyway?โ
โI got the note you left at my school. Skipped my last class and ran down here.โ
โYour presentation went okay?โ
โAced it,โ she said, likeย Duh.ย โAnyway, I got the feeling you didnโt have any idea what you were up against, so I came as fast as I could.โ
โThanks,โ I said. โBut honestly, weโre fineโโ
โYouโve still got two more naiads to face. You wouldnโt have been fine.โ She glanced at our gift-wrapped salesperson. โSorry about all this, Silbe. Boys. What are you going to do?โ
Silbe drooled in agreement.
Annabeth turned to me and Grover. โCome on. Weโll talk outside.โ
She led us down the street, removing her raincoat as she walked. โI take it you didnโt recognize the naiads?โ
โFrom where?โ Grover asked.
โYou werenโt with us,โ Annabeth told him. โYou were stuck in a Cyclopsโs cave at the time.โ
Grover shivered. โThe Sea of Monsters.โ
โYep. The naiads are from the island of Aeaea.โ
I rubbed my sore neck. โI think I wouldโve remembered a name like Aeaea.โ
Annabeth considered that. โActually, youโre right. I donโt think anyone called it that when we were there. Itโs another name for Circeโs Island.โ
The smell of cedar shavings filled my nostrils. It had nothing to do with perfume. I flashed back to the time Iโd spent as a guinea pig, stuck in a cage with guinea pig pirates. C.C.โs Spa & Resort had not been my favorite vacation destination.
โOh,โ I said. โThat whole day is kind of a blur.โ
There had been a lot of people on Circeโs Island. Two of her attendants,
Reyna and Hylla, I got to know much later. Now they were good friends of ours. But Silbe and Filomena? I didnโt remember them at all.
โCirce had four main handmaidens,โ Annabeth said. โThe Aeaean nymphs. They were responsible for preparing her potions. I guess when the pirates burned down C.C.โs Spaโโ
โThe naiads came to Manhattan,โ Grover finished. โAnd set up competing perfume shops. As one does.โ
Annabeth nodded. โYou just met two of the four sisters.โ โPossibly exploded one,โ I said. โGift wrapped the other.โ โAnd weโve got two more to go,โ Grover muttered. โSuper.โ
โSo will they recognize you on sight?โ I asked Annabeth. โThey sure recognized me.โ
I could almost see the gears turning in Annabethโs head.
โI donโt know,โ she said. โI met them when โฆ when Circe sent me for that makeover. But if they recognized you, we should assume theyโll recognize me, too.โ
I remembered Annabethโs makeover. That had been back when we were in seventh grade, way before we started dating. Circe had tried her best to
convince Annabeth to join her crew of super-fashionable witches, and for a hot minute, Iโd thought Annabeth had given in. I remembered the way she looked in her elegant dress, with her coiffed hair and perfect makeup. Iโd been a guinea pig at the time, but my little guinea-pig jaw had hit the floor of the cage.
โRight,โ I said. โSo, Iโm going to take a wild guess that you have a plan to defeat the last two nymphs?โ
โWorking on it,โ she agreed.
Grover and I exchanged a look of relief. Whenever Annabeth joined the chat, the odds of us doing something idiotic went way down. The odds were never zero, mind you, because I was still in the mix.
โFirst,โ she said, โwe need to dress the part. Glad itโs almost Halloween. Thereโs a pop-up costume store right down the street.โ
โCan I be Spider-Man?โ I asked.
โCan I be Spider-Goat?โ Grover asked. โWe could do a multiverse thing
โฆ.โ
โNo spiders.โ Annabeth shuddered. โI have something better in mind.โ
An hour later, we rolled up to Scents Forever in our new costumes, which wereย notย better than Spider-Man.
Well โฆ maybeย Annabethโsย costume was better. She was dressed as a Roman noblewoman, with a flowing white gown that draped diagonally over one shoulder. Gold costume bangles glittered on her arms. Sheโd also picked the gaudiest golden necklace she could find. Up close, you could tell it was plastic, but we were hoping the naiads wouldnโt get that close.
With the help of one of the costume people, Annabeth had done her hair and makeup like it had been on Circeโs Island. She looked incredible, but you donโt have to take my word for it. The costume personโs exact reaction was โYou look incredible.โ Then she turned to Grover and me and said,
โNow, these two are a challenge.โ
We were dressed as Annabethโs servants/bodyguards/loyal gladiators? Iโm not even sure, but we werenโt rocking the look very well.
Grover wore a gladiatorโs breastplate and a leather kilt sort of thing, with a big plastic sword at his side. I got dressed like aย retiariusโone of those Colosseum fighters with the weighted nets and the tridents. The trident seemed a little on the nose for me, but it wasnโt my biggest complaint. My
โarmorโ was basically an oversize loincloth with a thick leather belt, sandals, and a weird shield-sleeve thing on my left arm that reminded me of a pizza pan. This meant I would basically be walking around Manhattan in late October in my underwear. Annabeth added a big helmet with a faceplate so nobody would recognize me unless they literally got up in my grill.
When I came out of the dressing room, Grover frowned. โI thought you had muscles and stuff.โ
โDude,โ I said. โFirst of all, Muscles and Stuff sounds like a bankrupt fitness chain. Second, Iโm a swimmer, not a bodybuilder.โ
โOkay โฆโ he said, but it was clear he was not impressed with my level of ripped-ness.
By the time we got to Scents Forever, I was shivering. I had goose bumps down my arms. At least no one on the street looked twice at usโnot that they wouldโve anyway, since you see all kinds in New York, but with Halloween, it was especially easy to walk around dressed as a gladiator in a plastic diaper. The only one who got any stares was Annabeth, and the
people checking her out were lucky I didnโt poke them with my fake trident.
The perfume shop looked nicer than the first two weโd terrorized. The black- marble facade was two stories high, columned like a Greek temple.
The glowing white display windows made the vials and bottles inside look like sacred relics about to float off into the heavens. I hoped I wouldnโt get spritzed with sacred floaty potion. I did not want to ascend while wearing a loincloth.
Annabeth didnโt give us any advance pep talk. She just strode right into the shop with us in tow like she owned the place, us, and everything else in the neighborhood.
โI want to see the manager!โ she announced.
Grover and I exchanged looks again. Iโd never seen Annabeth play this role before. Entitlement? Check. Arrogance? Check. Nothing saysย Pay attention to me because Iโm horribleย like demanding to see the manager. It wasnโt part of Annabethโs personality, but she pretended well.
The place had a few other customers. They all stopped browsing and quickly left. Nobody wanted to be caught in the cross fire of a manager-customer- gladiator throwdown.
An employee in a black pantsuit scrambled over to us. โMiss, perhaps I can helpโโ
Annabeth gave her a glare that could cut through titanium.
โIโIโll get the managers,โ the employee stammered. โRight away.โ She hurried off to the back room, leaving us by ourselves.
The storeโs interior had glowing white walls and dark tables. Transparent
tubes ran along the ceiling. Maybe they deliver your perfume in pneumatic canisters, I thought. Against the back wall sprawled a display of chemistry beakers, decanters, Bunsen burners, and bubbling copper kettlesโ
everything the twenty-first-century witch needed to brew a good cup of organic fair-trade potion.
โNo polecat,โ I noticed.
โPatience,โ Annabeth said. She walked over to the nearest display and picked up a bottle. She sniffed it, then set it back down.
She checked a few more tables, then zeroed in on a locked glass display case. Inside were three boxes, black and gold, with the label GALE, BY
SCENTS FOREVER.
โAha!โ Annabeth said.
โThey decanted our polecat?โ Grover cried. โWeโre dead!โ
โStay calm.โ Easy for Annabeth to say. She looked powerful. Us? We were armed with plastic weapons.
Then the managers appeared. Two womenโclearly twinsโmarched in from the back room looking ready for a confrontation. Their dark hair was the
same shade as the other two sistersโ but cut short and spiky. They wore matching black pantsuits. The only difference was that the one on the left wore silver earrings and the one on the right wore gold.
โPhaedra and Daedra,โ Annabeth said.
That stopped them in their tracks. They studied Annabeth. โI know you,โ said the lady on the right.
โThatโs right,โ Annabeth said. โAnd you are both in serious trouble.โ