If nostalgia was the door back to youth, I felt like Hebe had opened that door and drop-kicked me through it.โ
My entire body hurt. Muscles ached in my gut and back where I didnโt even know I had muscles. My brain throbbed like it was too big for my skull.
I lay flat on the floor, the carpet sticky and bristly against my arms. When I sat up, I felt both sluggish and too light, as if someone had given me a transfusion of liquid helium. Annabeth was lying on my left, just starting to stir. Grover was facedown a few feet away, snoring into the rug.
We were alive. We had not been turned into glitter or arcade tickets. Hebe had vanished. Something was wrong, though. My hands felt stubby. My pant legs were too long. The cuffs pooled around my ankles.
I didnโt really understand what had happened until Annabeth groaned and sat up. She, too, was swimming in her too-big clothes. Her face . . . well, look, I would know Annabethโs face anywhere. I love her face. But this was a version of her Iโd never seen beforeโexcept in a few old pictures and dream visions.
This was Annabeth the way sheโd looked soon after sheโd arrived at Camp Half-Blood. Sheโd regressed to about eight years old.
She rubbed her head and stared at me, her eyes going wide, then let out a curse that sounded strange coming from the mouth of a third grader. โHebeย youngedย us.โ
โBLAAAAAHHHH!โ Grover sat up and rubbed his head.
His horns had shrunk to tiny stubs. His goatee was now a gone-tee. His fake feet and shoes had rolled away from his suddenly baby-size hooves, and
his shirt was so big it looked like a nightgown.
โI donโt feel so good.โ He picked a string of cheese off his face, then looked at his hooves and moaned. โOh, no. I donโt want to be a kid again!โ
I didnโt know if he meant the human kind or the goat kind . . . probably both. Satyrs mature half as fast as humans, I remembered Grover telling me. Which meant . . . multiply by two, carry the one, divide by . . . Nope, never mind. Iโd save the math for my homework. If I ever got home again.
โMaybe weโll change back if we leave the building?โ I suggested.
Annabeth stood up shakily. It was strange seeing her as a younger girl. I had an irrational fear that she would yell,ย Gross! Boy cooties!ย and run away from me.
Instead, she said doubtfully, โWorth a try.โ
We made our way back through the amusement center. When we passed the coop, the chickens looked at us with renewed interest. I didnโt even know chickensย couldย look interested, but they cocked their heads and clucked and flapped their wings. One of the chicks in particular, which had pink fluff around its eyes and beak, followed us along the fence, strutting and peeping.
โWow, rude,โ Grover said. โWhat?โ
โSheโs threatening to tear the flesh from our bones.โ
I glanced nervously at the chick. โOkay, liโl killer. Calm down. Weโre leaving.โ
Suddenly, Grover rounded on me, lowered his head, and butted me in the chest hard enough to push me back a step.
โOw!โ I complained. โDude, why?โ
โSorry, sorry!โ Grover rubbed his horns. โIโI need to play. Iโm practicing social dominance in the herd.โ
He butted me in the chest again.
โThis is going to get old real quick,โ I said.
โRight now, Iโd love to get old real quick,โ Annabeth said. โLetโs keep going.โ
None of the other patrons paid us any attention. I guess we were just three more children in the crowd. I looked for Sparky, or somebody else in an employee uniform, but I didnโt see anyone. I tried to keep my focus on finding the exit, but every blinking light and beeping sound caught my attention, tempting me to try the games.
Itโs hard having ADHD, but now I remembered how muchย harderย it had been when I was younger, before Iโd learned how to channel my focus, control my fidgeting, or, for all practical purposes, even operate my own body.
Being eight years old again was terrifying. The idea that I might have to go through all those years again . . . I felt tears welling in my eyes. I wanted my mommy. I pushed down the sense of panic as best I could. The exit. Just find the exit.
No one tried to stop us. No one had chained the doors. We simply stepped back into the afternoon sunlight of Times Square. . . .
And we were still little kids.
I grabbed Groverโs arm to keep him from head-butting a street performer in a Mickey Mouse costume.
โSo, what now?โ Annabeth asked, her voice tight. โWe canโt just . . . go home like this.โ
When Annabeth asks for advice, I know things are bad. Sheโs always the one with the plan. Also, home for her was a dorm room at SODNYC. She couldnโt exactly show up nine years younger.
โItโll be okay,โ I said.
She scowled at me. โYou think so? Then youโre a dummy!โ
She put her palms to her temples. โSorry, Percy . . . IโI canโt think straight. I think Hebe changed more than just how we look.โ
I knew what she meant. I hadnโt felt this panicky in a long timeโit was like Iโd eaten a combination of sugar and glass, and I would either get cut to pieces or shake apart from the inside.
โIโm not doing nine years over again,โ I said. โLetโs go back in and find Hebe.โ
โAnd then what?โ Grover bleated. โShe might turn us into babies!โ โStop it!โ Annabeth said.
โNo,ย youย stop it. Meanie!โ โAm not!โ
โAre too!โ
โGuys!โ I grabbed their arms and held them apart. โWe can figure this out. Back inside.โ
I was trying to be the reasonable one. Definitely a sign of the apocalypse.
I led them back into Hebe Jeebies, which was the last place I wanted to be.
Almost immediately, we ran into Sparky, who looked much more cheerful without her wheel oโ prize tickets.
โHi, welcome to Hebe Jeebies!โ she said. โDo you know your way around?โ
โWe were just here,โ I said. โExcept older.โ
โThat doesnโt narrow it down. . . .โ She looked us over more carefully. โHow much older? Fifty? Eighty?โ
โSeriously?โ Annabeth said.
โWe asked you where Hebe was,โ Grover offered. โYou pointed us to the karaoke bar?โ
โOh, right,โ Sparky said. โYou three. Okay, then, have a good time.โ โWait!โ Grover said. โWe need to see Hebe again!โ
Sparky arched her eyebrows. โWhat, you want to be evenย younger? When Hebe blesses you, you shouldnโt get greedy. Iโm sixty-five myself. It took me months of working here to get this young again!โ
Of course. Sparky was another boomerโjust a nine-year-old boomer. โWe donโt want to get any younger,โ I said. โWe want Hebe to put us
back the way we were.โ
Sparky scowled. โHold on. . . . Are you lodging anย age-based complaint?โ
I didnโt like the way this manager kid/boomer was looking at me, like she was going to bury me in two-for-one pizza coupons. โWell, itโs just . . . I think thereโs been a misunderstanding. Weโd likeโโ
โYouโd like to complain.โ Sparky pulled a bullhorn off her belt and announced to the entire arcade, โWe have an age-based complaint!โ
The crowd erupted in cheers, hoots, and jeers. Many of them grinned at us in a malicious way, like they expected a good show.
โUm . . .โ I said.
โUnleash the predators!โ Sparky screamed. โLet the chase begin!โ
Bells clanged. Money changed hands. A few customers speculated as to who would fall first: me, Annabeth, or Grover. It didnโt look like the odds were in my favor.
My pulse pounded, but scanning the room, I couldnโt see any bloodthirsty predators.
โWe just want to talk to Hebe!โ I insisted.
Sparky pointed her megaphone right in my face and nearly blasted my eyebrows off.
โMaybe you will, if you survive the race. Have fun!โ She lowered her bullhorn and strolled off.
In the depths of the arcade, someone screamed. A chair went flying. A pinball machine toppled over.
Annabeth drew her knife, which looked bigger in her small hand. Grover yelped. โHere they come! I can smell them!โ
โSmell what?โ I demanded. โI donโt seeโโ
Then I did. The chickens from the henhouse were rampaging through the arcade. Normally, I wouldnโt use the wordย rampageย to describe poultry behavior, but these birds were pure feathered chaos. Dozens swarmed over the game cabinets and knocked over furniture, ripping the upholstery with their claws and beaks. Some flew over the heads of the customers, strafing their hairdos. Others snapped hot dogs out of peopleโs hands.
The Hebe Jeebies patrons didnโt seem to mind. They squealed in delight as they ran from the hen-pocalypse like those crowds at bull-running events in Spain, as if they were thinking,ย These animals might kill me, but at least Iโll die in a really cool way!
The hens headed straight toward us, violence in their beady little eyes.
I pulled out my ballpoint pen. โThese chickens want trouble? Iโll give them trouble.โ
Which was probably my worst heroic line ever.
Even more embarrassingโwhen I uncapped Riptide, it remained a ballpoint pen. No sword sprang into my hands.
โWhat the . . . Why?โ I screamed at the pen, which didnโt help with my whole unheroic vibe.
โMaybe it doesnโt work for kids,โ Grover suggested. โYouโre too young now.โ
โYou mean my sword has aย childproof cap?โ
โHey, guys?โ Annabeth said, sheathing her knife. โArgue later. Right now, I have a different plan: RUN!โ