It always came rushing back to Nico in his dreams.โ
When heโd first confessed to Will that he was hearing a particularly haunted voice from the Underworld, Nico worried he shouldnโt have
said anything. Sometimes Will didnโt seem to understand what it meant for Nico to be โฆ well, Nico. The Underworld spooked Will, to be frank, but Nico needed to tell someone what was happening to him.
Months earlier, Nico had sensed his friend Jason Graceโs death, which had sent him into a tailspin of grief and rage. By the time Lester and Meg had arrived at Camp Half-Blood at the start of summer, Nicoโs emotions were so volatile that heโd raised the dead more than once by accident. (There is nothing more disconcerting than waking in the morning and finding a freshly incarnated zombie standing over you, ready to take your breakfast order.)
Will had listened to him attentively, like he always did. Afterwards heโd posed a few questions, mostly about whether the voice had anything to do with the flashbacks Nico had also been having lately. Will had stayed quiet for a while and then asked, โAre you sure itโs not post-traumatic stress disorder?โ
Sometimes Nicoโs brain thought of a joke and it came out of his mouth a second later without any sort of filter at all. Thatโs exactly what happened when he blurted out, โMy whole life is a disorder!โ
Will hadnโt laughed at that.
Instead, heโd suggested that maybe Nico should talk to Mr D. For all Dionysusโs faults, he was an Olympian god with experience in these matters: dreams, visions and altered states of consciousness.
Heโs also the god of madness, Nico thought. He tried not to dwell on that, or the implications of Will making such a suggestion.
โIโd rather do almost anything else,โ Nico countered. โCan the guy even make it through a single conversation without sarcasm, an insult, or a
combination of the two?โ Will grinned. โCan you?โ
Nico had spent the rest of the day trying to recover from Will murdering him with those two words. Still, there was some truth to what Will had said. This wasnโt the first time Nico had dealt with flashbacks or PTSD. He remembered coaching his sister Hazel Levesque through her own devastating flashbacks after sheโd spent time in the Underworld. Heโd even had a frank conversation with Reyna Avila Ramรญrez-Arellano about post-traumatic stress and how it related to the memories of her father. Yet heโd never really turned that gaze inwards. Was he dealing with the same kind of thing? Honestly, how could he not be? But he was sure the voice was
something else.
After dinner on the day heโd confided to Will, Nico got up the nerve to speak with Mr D. He told the director about his flashbacks during the day, the repetitive dreams, the voice from deep within Tartarus. (He did not, however, tell Mr D the details of the Oracleโs prophecy. That still felt too raw, too personal for a first conversation.)
Mr D sat back in his deck chair, turning his can of Diet Coke in his fingers. With his unkempt black hair, blotchy complexion, and wrinkled leopard-pattern camp shirt, Dionysus looked more like a hung-over Vegas conventioneer than a god.
To Nicoโs surprise, Mr D didnโt tell him to go away or make any snarky comment at Nicoโs expense.
โWe need to get to the bottom of this.โ Mr Dโs violet eyes were unsettling, like crystallized wine โฆ or blood. โI want to see you each morning at breakfast. You are to report on your dreams and keep me apprised if
anything new comes up.โ
The ball of darkness in Nicoโs chest pressed against his stomach. He wouldโve preferred Mr D being dismissive and rude. Seeing the god so serious was disturbing.
โEvery day?โ he asked. โAre you sure thatโs necessary?โ
โBelieve me, Nico di Angelo, Iโd rather not have my breakfast spoiled with your silly mortal problems, but, yes, it is necessary if youโd like to
keep your consciousness intact. And try to have some interesting dreams, will you? Not the usual boring I was flying, I was being chased, I was
singing onstage in my underwear tripe.โ
So it had become a routine. Mr D talked to Nico each morning, the godโs plate piled high with sausage and eggs while Nicoโs was usually empty
except for a few strawberries. That too concerned Mr D, who, as the god of festivity, disapproved of anyone not enjoying food. โI know youโve got the whole gaunt-and-pale-son-of-Hades thing going on, but youโre still human. You need to eat.โ
Nico shrugged. โI guess Iโm used to being hungry. It doesnโt really bother me.โ
Mr D grunted. โBut your appetite is getting worse. Along with the flashbacks, and the voice in your dreams โโ
โItโs nothing I canโt handle,โ Nico insisted.
Mr D pushed his plate away. He turned his whole body towards Nico. โLook here, boy. After living in exile at Camp Half-Blood all these
wretched years, Iโve learned that you mortals are surprisingly resilient.โ โExactly โโ Nico began.
Mr D held up a hand. โIโm not done. You may be resilient, but youโre still
human. There is no need to punish yourself with hunger just because itโs what youโre used to. For your mind to heal, your body must also.โ
Nico grumbled. Then his stomach followed with some grumbling of its own.
Some days, Nico couldnโt share his dreams with Mr D. They were too painful, too vicious, dredging up old memories he didnโt want to examine. But other times Nico had to admit that talking helped. He found that he didnโt have to sugarcoat anything with Dionysus. The same crudeness heโd found annoying in the camp director was actually really helpful when Nico was recounting his flashbacks.
โMy goodness,โ Mr D once said after Nico described a spate of dreams that had less to do with singing in his underwear and more to do with
simultaneously being burned, drowned and crushed inside a giant bronze vase filled with ants. โThatโs marvellous! I must remember to give my worst enemies that nightmare.โ
But none of the talks got to the heart of the matter: why were these visions happening to Nico?
Did he deserve them?