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Chapter no 16 – Grover Busts Out the Snake Songs

The Chalice of the Gods

The next afternoon, I came back with reinforcements.โ€Œ

When I told Annabeth and Grover where we were going, they looked at

me funny, but they didnโ€™t ask questions. Downtown Yonkers was well within our standard deviation for weirdness.

Iโ€™m not sure what the other passengers thought about me carrying the staff of Iris on the subway train. Maybe they figured I was a shepherd commuting to my pastures. Grover, being Grover, had brought a backpack full of snacks along with his panpipes. Because you never know when you might want to dance a jig while eating sour-cream-and-jalapeno corn squiggles. Annabeth had packed a bunch of practical things, like her knife, flashlights, and a thermos of something that I hoped was more potable than the river water.

By four oโ€™clock, we were standing in the creek bed, peering into the mouth of the tunnel.

Grover sniffed the air. โ€œCleanest river in the world?โ€ โ€œThis is after the Furies and snakes bathed in it,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd who knows what else,โ€ Annabeth added.

Grover dipped his shoe in the brown water. โ€œI guess we canโ€™t just roll the staff around in this muck and call it a day.โ€

Iโ€™d had the same thought, but I was glad Grover said it instead of me. โ€œWeโ€™ll have to go inside,โ€ said Annabeth, distributing the flashlights.

โ€œHope itโ€™s cleaner upriver. Letโ€™s hug the bank and try to stay out of the water.โ€

That was advice evenย Iย could recognize as wise. But staying out of the water proved hard to do.

As we forged ahead into the tunnel, the sides turned narrow and slippery. I found it impossible not to slosh around in the stream. My shoes didnโ€™t start smoking, and my pants didnโ€™t catch on fire, so I guessed the water wasnโ€™t that toxic. Still, I addedย really hot showerย to my to-do list, assuming I made it home that evening.

About a hundred yards in, Annabeth stopped. โ€œCheck it out,โ€ she said.

She moved the beam of her flashlight across the tunnelโ€™s ceiling, which was coated with moss and lichen so thick I couldnโ€™t tell if there was man-made asphalt or natural rock underneath. Wherever Annabethโ€™s light passed, it left behind a streak of blue-green luminescence.

โ€œCool.โ€ I used my flashlight to draw a glowing smiley face on the wall. โ€œHow old are you?โ€ Annabeth asked.

โ€œEight just last week.โ€

That got a smile. I loved making her smile when she was trying not to. It always felt like a victory.

We spent a few minutes painting light graffiti. Grover wroteย Pan 4ever.ย I wroteย AC+PJ. Annabeth traced concentric arcs until sheโ€™d made a blue-and-green rainbow. The moss kept glowing for quite a while, filling the tunnel with a cool turquoise light.

Up ahead, the channel widened into a much larger space. The sound of the current became louder and throatier. We stepped into a cavern so massive it seemed like a different world.

Under a cathedral-high ceiling covered with glowing stalactites, the river wound north between rolling plains of yellow grass. Ash-colored trees dotted the landscape, leafless and stunted, their branches curled like arthritic fingers. The scene reminded me of the Fields of Asphodel down in Hadesโ€™s realmโ€”and the fact that I can make that comparison the same way you might sayย Oh, yeah, looks like Midtownย is a really sad statement about my travel history.

Here and there, outcroppings of granite made islands in the grass, but the main attraction was the river itself. It wound lazily through the cavern, making big loops as if it were in no hurry to reach the daylight. Thick stands of reeds edged its banks. The current glimmered darkly in the blue moss light. The water did look cleaner here. The putrid smell was gone. But in a pool about twenty yards upstream, dozens of slithery, slimy whiplike

creatures were rolling and writhing in the shallows, making me never want to eat spaghetti again.

โ€œGross,โ€ Annabeth muttered.

โ€œHey, now, check your mammalian prejudices,โ€ Grover whispered. โ€œReptiles are people, too.โ€

โ€œWith poison,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd cold blood. And a nasty bite. And . . . okay, maybe that also describes humans.โ€

Grover nodded.ย Thank you.

โ€œLights-out,โ€ Annabeth whispered.

We switched off our flashlights, though the snakes didnโ€™t seem to have noticed us yet. They were too busy frolicking and power-washing their scales.

I scanned the horizon. โ€œYou think we can sneak around them, go farther upstream?โ€

Grover sniffed the air. โ€œThis whole place smells like monsters. I canโ€™t tell if thereโ€™s more besides the snakes nearby. Anything could hide in that tall grass.โ€

โ€œIncluding us,โ€ Annabeth said. โ€œIf we canโ€™t fight the serpents, sneaking around them sounds like our best option.โ€

โ€œOkay,โ€ Grover agreed. โ€œLet me go first, though. I might be able to pick out a safe trail through the fields.โ€

It used to be a rare day when Grover volunteered to go first through dangerous territory. I was too impressed to argue. Look at my old friend . . . taking charge and kicking grass. Sometimes I forgot he wasnโ€™t a scared junior satyr protector anymore, but a scared Cloven Council elder. I guess weโ€™d both grown up a lot.

At least here, Grover was in his element, assuming this creepy cave still counted as nature.

We waded through neck-high grass as sharp as hacksaw blades. Grover managed to navigate us around the thickest patches, but I winced every time a wisp of yellow snagged my arm. To make matters worse, the field crackled like bubble wrap as we walked through it. I imagined weโ€™d be audible to any monsters hiding in the undergrowth.

Finally, we reached one of the boulder islands. Grover scrambled to the top as only someone with goat legs could do, then peered toward the river. โ€œThatโ€™s not good.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ I asked.

He helped us up.

From the summit, I could see the whole course of the river stretched out before us. The Elisson poured into the cavern from a crevice in the northern wall, then cascaded down a series of rocky ledges before widening and meandering across the plains. Everywhere you might be able to access the banks, in every shallow pool or swimming hole where you might want to wash off a grungy kerykeion, the water was full of snakes. Hundreds of them.

โ€œAt least I donโ€™t see any Furies,โ€ Grover offered.

โ€œYeah,โ€ I said. โ€œBut spaghetti is definitely off the menu this week.โ€ โ€œWhat?โ€ Grover sounded hurt. He loves spaghetti.

โ€œNothing,โ€ I said.

Annabeth scanned the river. โ€œWhat about there?โ€ She pointed to the northern end of the cave, where the river carved a ravine through jumbled heaps of granite. โ€œThatโ€™s where the water will be cleanest. No easy access for snakes. Probably the current is too treacherous for them.โ€

โ€œBut not for a Poseidon kid?โ€ I asked. She shrugged. โ€œWorth a shot.โ€

โ€œExcept thereโ€™s no way we can make it all the way over there without getting spotted. And if the snakes start chasing us . . . how fast do you think they can go?โ€

Grover shivered. โ€œThrough this grass? A lot faster than we can.โ€ โ€œI kind of wish we had Lukeโ€™s flying shoes,โ€ Annabeth said.

Grover winced. โ€œToo soon.โ€

Five years ago, that pair of cursed shoes had almost dragged Grover into Tartarus. Trauma like that can leave a scar. But what surprised me most was that Annabeth mentioned Luke Castellan, our old friend-turned-enemy. Since the Battle of Manhattan, sheโ€™d almost never said his name. It seemed like a bad omen that she was bringing him up now.

โ€œI have an idea,โ€ Grover said. โ€œItโ€™s terrible, but it might work.โ€ โ€œI love it already,โ€ I said.

He pulled out his panpipes. โ€œYou guys head for the cliffs. Iโ€™ll keep watch from here. If you make it, great. But if the snakes start heading in your direction, I should be able to see them moving through the grass. Then Iโ€™ll distract them with my pipes. I know some pretty good snake songs.โ€

Chalk up another talent I didnโ€™t know Grover had: serpent entertainer.

โ€œAs soon as you start playing, theyโ€™ll come for you,โ€ Annabeth said. โ€œWhich I guess is the terrible part.โ€

โ€œItโ€™ll be even worse than the chickens at Hebe Jeebies,โ€ I guessed. โ€œYeah, I donโ€™t love it,โ€ he admitted. โ€œBut like Annabeth said before, I

can run the fastest. Maybe I can buy you some time. If you hear the pipes, know that the clock is ticking, and it would be great for you to hurry. Get Irisโ€™s staff washed. Iโ€™ll meet you back at the exit.โ€

Annabeth and I exchanged looks. Weโ€™d been on plenty of dangerous missions just the two of us, but we wouldnโ€™t be able to move so stealthily without our super-goat nature guide. I also didnโ€™t like the idea of making Grover our decoy for the second time.

On the other hand, Grover was on a roll with the courageous-satyr stuff.

I didnโ€™t want him to think I doubted him.

โ€œOkay,โ€ I said. โ€œBe safe.โ€ Which was like telling Grover to win the lottery, because we all knew the odds.

Annabeth gave him a hug. โ€œHopefully it wonโ€™t come to the snake songs.โ€ She climbed down the rocks and waded through the grass. I followed,

because I was the guy with the grungy messengerโ€™s staff.

Within a few yards, the grass was over our heads. The jagged reeds tore at my clothes. Every time we moved, the stalks swayed and rustled. If weโ€™d held up flashing signs that readย FREE SNAKE FOOD, we might have drawn more attention to ourselves, but not much.

We used the sounds of the waterfall to navigate north. I kept my eyes on the ground, trying to make each step as careful and quiet as possible. We walked so slowly I wanted to crawl out of my skin from impatience. It didnโ€™t help that I kept imagining snakes darting out of the grass, sinking their fangs into my ankles.

I flashed back to the time basilisks had chased my buddies Frank and Hazel and me through a similar grassy field in California. Come to think of it, Iโ€™d spent entirely too much of my life playing hide-and-seek with deadly reptiles.

It felt like it took us approximately twelve years to reach the river. Then again, since our experience in Hebe Jeebies, Iโ€™d stopped trusting my sense of time.

Finally, we emerged from the grass near the base of the waterfall. We climbed a series of boulders until we stood on a slippery ledge overlooking a wide pool twenty feet below. The water was as clear as glass, free of snakes,

and just begging to be cannonballed into. On the downside, it was ringed by sheer cliffs, with no obvious way to get out again unless I wanted to ride the rapids downriver through Serpent Splash Town.

โ€œYou could jump in with the staff,โ€ Annabeth suggested.

โ€œSure,โ€ I said. โ€œThe problem is climbing back up when Iโ€™m done.โ€ Annabeth pulled a rope from her backpack and smiled.

โ€œYou think of everything,โ€ I said, trying to sound happy about it. That pool was looking a littleย tooย inviting . . . and I remembered Iris mentioning an angry river god, which seemed like the sort of detail that would bite me in the podex later. โ€œMaybe we should plan this out a little bit first. Thatโ€™s your thing right, planning?โ€

Then I heard the musicโ€”the unmistakable trill of panpipes in the distance. It was a song I recognized from my momโ€™s LP collection: Duran Duranโ€™s โ€œUnion of the Snake.โ€ The clock had started. Grover was in trouble.

โ€œTimeโ€™s up,โ€ Annabeth told me. โ€œBon voyage.โ€ And she pushed me over the side.

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