We Have a Good Old-Fashioned Witch Burning. (Itโs Us. Weโre the Witches.)
In the demigod business, we have a technical term for situations like this. We call themย bad.
I collapsed on the porch. The ghosts rushed in, ready to feast.
Fortunately, there was Annabeth. (That sentence describes a lot of my life, actually.) She lunged, snatched the fallen torch before the flames could gutter out completely, and positioned herself between me and the dead.
โGet back!โ she yelled. โBegone!โ
She crossed the torches in front of her, the way Hecate had done in Eudoraโs waterspout. The spirits crashed against the edge of the torchlight and reeled backward, hissing and howling, but they didnโt disappear. They raged through the front yard, rattling the fence, then zipped up and down Gramercy Park West with such force they shook streetlamps and peeled flagstones off
the sidewalk.
Annabeth muttered, โWhy arenโt they going away?โ
(That sentence also describes a lot of my life.) I was too worn-out to respond. Maybe weโd messed things up by passing the torches between us. I tried to get up, but my chest hurt. My arms were limp spaghetti. Nope valiantly tried to help by tugging at the hem of my jeans, but it was no use.
Grover, Hecuba, and Gale rushed to join us on the porch, because thatโs where all the cool kids who didnโt want to get eaten by ghouls were.
โNot good, not good, not good,โ Grover fretted. โWhat do we do?โ
Gale barked and ran inside the mansion, though this seemed like a bad time for a chicken-carcass break. Hecuba stood her ground, growling at the blizzard of ghosts.
โWeโre going to die!โ said the lion door knocker. โWeโll be fine!โ said the horse.
โIโm gonna stick with STROOPWAFELS!โ said the dog.
For the moment, the torchlight seemed to be keeping the dead at bay.
They tore up the street and ripped limbs off the trees in the park in
frustration, but the manse itself appeared to be within the protective radius of the blue fire.
We needed to keep it that way. Whatever else happened, we couldnโt let the ghosts wreck the mansion and undo all our hard work. Okay, allย theirย hard work, but still โฆ
โThese are getting heavy.โ Annabethโs arms shook under the weight of the torches. โI donโt know how much longer I can keep the ghosts out.โ
Gale reemerged from the mansion, dragging a bandolier of little glass vials behind her. She dropped them at Groverโs feet and chittered urgently.
โShe says you both need these!โ Grover fumbled with the vials, pulled the stopper from one, and dribbled the contents into my mouth. I worried I might turn into Octopus Boy again, develop beast breath, or go full flaming purple armadillo, but I wasnโt in any shape to protest. I gulped it down. A surge of warmth washed through my organs.
I recognized the sensation. It was nectarโthe drink of the gods. The flavor varied every time I tried it. Usually, the taste reminded me of some favorite form of comfort food. This time โฆ it was candy corn.
The taste brought me back to kindergarten. I was trick-or-treating with my mom in our apartment building. Everybody was giving out little bags of candy corn โฆ. I guess because thereโd been a sale at Duane Reade. I got such a stomachache I swore Iโd never eat the stuff again.
It was a simple memory, but it was enough to clear my head. My arms tingled. I struggled to my feet. While Grover poured nectar into Annabethโs mouth, I managed to pull out Riptide and uncap the blade without decapitating myself.
I still felt awful. It wouldโve taken another twenty or thirty vials to get me back to full strength, but I knew that wasnโt possible. In small amounts,
ambrosia and nectar did wonders for demigods. In larger amounts, they could make you spontaneously combust, which didnโt fit in with my healthy lifestyle.
โThanks, Grover, Gale.โ I jabbed my blade at the nearest ghost, who was getting a little too close to the edge of the torchlight. โHowโs everybody feeling?โ
โFine,โ Grover said. โJust an average night, you know.โ
โSqueak!โย said Gale.
The dogs snarled in their respective sizes: extra large and childโs medium.
โIโm better.โ Annabeth waved the torches at the spirit mob. โNot great, but Iโll manage.โ
Years ago, when sheโd been Atlasโs prisoner, sheโd held up the sky for much longer than I had. I knew she had next-level stamina. Still, I didnโt want her carrying those torches any longer than she had to. Oh, wait โฆ
carrying a torchย for someone. Wasnโt that an old-fashioned way to say you loved somebody? That was kind of sweet.
Stop that!ย I told myself.ย Focus!
โMaybe if we keep holding them off,โ I suggested, โtheyโll eventually get bored and drift away?โ
Annabeth frowned. โUntil when, morning? It just got dark.โ โIโm trying to be optimistic here.โ
The ghosts attacked. In wave after wave, they threw themselves at the circle of blue light. Each time one got close to the flames, the spirit disintegrated, only to re-form at the far end of the yard. Great, they had multiple lives.
Why didnโtย Iย have multiple lives?
So far, the torches were keeping them at bay, but the ghosts kept trying.
With each assault, Annabeth flinched and swayed like she was weathering a gauntlet of punches.
Hecuba barked.
โShe says the lead ghost is holding them together,โ Grover told us. โThey wonโt leave before theyโve broken through.โ
โSo weโre in a standoff,โ I said.
โTime is not on my side,โ Annabeth warned. The torchlight was already starting to dim and cool. Her hair picked up streaks of gray from the light, like she was aging before my eyes.
โWhat did we ever do to them?โ I grumbled. โBesides making them work on Halloween night? What do they want?โ
I was immediately sorry Iโd asked.
A howl rose from the mob. Frost crackled across Hecateโs garden. The ranks of ghosts parted, and Stuyvesant limped forward, so dark and solid now he might have been sketched with a smudge stick.
Your heretic souls, his voice whispered in my mind.ย You must burn. The witchโs house must burn.
โOh, yeah?โ Grover called back. โWell, jokeโs on you, Pete. Some of us donโtย haveย souls! Iโll just reincarnate โฆ probably as a pumpkin patch if I die on Halloween, but thatโs not so bad!โ
For some reason, this failed to discourage Stuyvesant. He drew his coal-dust rapier.ย Witches must burn.
He really seemed stuck on that point. I was starting to think that raising a
dude from the 1600s to rebuild the manse might not have been the best plan.
โThis isnโt justย anyย witchโs house,โ I said. โThis place belongs to Hecate, the goddess of magic. Youโre messing with the wrong real estate!โ
The ghosts shrieked in outrage, nearly rupturing my eardrums. The spirits swirled together into a massive funnel cloud of ice and dust, and then splintered off in every directionโwisps of ghostly gray racing into the night. Even Peg-Leg Pete disappeared.
The yard fell silent except for the crackling of the torches. โYouโyou think they gave up?โ I asked.
Somewhere down the block, a scream cut through the night. A car honked. Metal crunched against metal.
โNope,โ Annabeth guessed. โNope!โ barked Nope.
When the ghosts came back, they were wearing upgrades.
Some shambled along in piles of garbage that formed vaguely human shells of plastic bags, aluminum cans, tattered blankets, and fast-food boxes. They would have gotten solid grades on SODNYCโs โrecycled clothingโ project. Other ghouls had apparently ripped the costumes off unsuspecting trick-or- treaters. I spotted characters from Star Wars, some superheroes, pretty princesses, and a whole bunch of Mickey and Minnie Mouses like they were on their way to work the crowds at Times Square. It was horrifying.
Even worse, trailing behind the trash- and costume-ghosts were actual living people. They moved like they had forgotten how to operate their own bodies.
Parents and kids lurched along, hissing in Dutch. They were joined by taxi drivers and bike-delivery guys โฆ and in the back of the horde, a police officer mounted on a black horse. The cop wore the face of a jack-oโ-
lanternโlike he had ripped it off an actual pumpkin and attached it to his face, which raised his ax-murderer vibe by a factor of twenty. His eyes glowed silver. In his hand was a black baton that kept flickering and shifting form, sometimes elongating into a rapier. Stuyvesant himself โฆ now with a badge.
We know whose house this is, he said.ย My mother must pay for her pagan crimes.
I glanced at Annabeth. โPeter Stuyvesant โฆ son of Hecate?โ โThat wasnโt in the assigned reading,โ Grover complained.
Annabeth muttered a curse. โI didnโt know. Will the torchlight keep out physical bodies, do you think?โ
โGRRRRR,โย said Hecuba, which I took to meanย I wouldnโt bet your candy corn on it.
โGuard the doors,โ I told Annabeth. โThe rest of us will take down as many as we can.โ
I charged into battle, followed by Grover, two hellhounds, and an angry polecat