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Chapter no 22 – I Get a Cupcake and a Surprise

The Chalice of the Gods

It takes strength and courage to bring dessert to my momโ€™s for dinner. My mom is a famously good dessert maker. Most people would be too nervous to bake anything for fear it wouldnโ€™t hold up to comparison. Fortunately, Annabeth is both strong and courageous, which meant I got cupcakes.โ€Œ

โ€œSweetheart, these look amazing!โ€ my mom said, accepting a tray of Annabethโ€™s latest creations.

Annabeth teared up with gratitude. I have seen her shrug off compliments from gods, but my momโ€™s praise really got to her. I guess it was because sheโ€™d grown up with Athena as her distant maternal figure.

Sometimes I wondered if Annabeth was open to the idea of marrying me someday only because she was excited about getting Sally Jackson-Blofis as her mother-in-law. Honestly, I couldnโ€™t blame her.

Annabeth had started baking because she literally ran out of classes she needed to take for graduation. Despite having the same crazy demigod problems I did, despite having a miserable junior year while I was missing in action, despite being just as dyslexic and ADHD as I was, she had accumulated so many advanced-placement courses and made such good grades that the counselor at SODNYC suggested Annabeth just take a study hall for her seventh course.

Me, I would have said,ย Yes, please, and can I have a pillow with that?

But coasting was not in Annabethโ€™s nature. Sheโ€™d signed up for the elective Beginning Culinary Design. So far, sheโ€™d only been working on cupcakes (which was totally cool with me), but I was pretty sure by the end

of the year sheโ€™d be constructing bridges and skyscrapers out of angel food cake.

One thing Annabeth didnโ€™t do, however, was make blue food. That was kind of an inside joke between my mom and me. Annabeth considered it sacred and off-limits. Her cupcakes today were green with purple sprinkles, for reasons known only to her.

While she and my mom chatted about frosting, I checked in with my stepdad, Paul, who was clearing stacks of student essays off the dining table. The dude worked nonstop, I swear. It almost made me feel bad I didnโ€™t put more effort into my own homework. Almost.

โ€œHey, Paul.โ€ I gave him a fist bump.

โ€œBeat any good monsters lately?โ€ he asked. โ€œYou know. Just the usual.โ€

Paul chuckled. He was still in his work clothes: blue dress shirt, faded jeans, wildly colored tie with pictures of books on it. His gray-flecked hair had gotten grayer and fleckier over the last few years, and I tried not to think it was my fault. He worried for me, knowing my demigod history. He worried for my mom worrying for me. He was a great guy. I just preferred to think the teaching job was aging him rather than the constant life-and-death fights I went through. I tried to keep the worst details to myself, but Paul knew. As much as any mortal could, he had seen my world up close and personal during the Battle of Manhattan.

Tonight, though, he seemed tenser than usual. You would never be able to tell if you didnโ€™t know him, but he did this thing where he tapped his fingertips to his thumb when he was nervous, like he was trying to pinch a string that he couldnโ€™t quite find.

โ€œGoing okay?โ€ I asked him.

โ€œMe?โ€ He smiled. โ€œNo monster fights this week. Unless you count freshman essays onย Romeo and Juliet. Help me set the table?โ€

There was something else going on, but I decided not to push. I set places for four. In the kitchen, garlic bread was toasting. Lasagna was bubbling in the oven. Annabeth was laughing about something my mom said, and the way they both grinned in my direction, I figured it had to do with me. Annabeth had already seen my baby pictures, so I wasnโ€™t worried about what they were saying. I had no dignity left. Annabeth and I were still together. I figured that was good enough.

Some Bob Dylan vinyl was playing on Paulโ€™s turntable, soft enough to be background music, but with Dylanโ€™s voice, you can never quite ignore him. Not my jam, but I can deal with it. Paul says Dylan was one of the best twentieth-century poets. I mean, the guy can rhymeย leadersย withย parking meters. I guess thatโ€™s something?

Once we were all seated, passing around the salad, I noticed something else strange. My mom was drinking sparkling water.

She wasnโ€™t a big drinker, but she usually had one glass of red wine with dinner.

โ€œNo vino?โ€ I asked her.

She shook her head, her eyes twinkling like she was still thinking about a private joke. โ€œNo. Actually, I wanted to talk to you about that.โ€

โ€œAbout wine?โ€

โ€œAhem,โ€ Paul coughed. He was now pinching with both hands, looking for that invisible string. Why so edgy?

Annabeth gave me a look.ย Seriously, Seaweed Brain? You donโ€™t get

it?

Maybe my mom had told her something in the kitchen, or maybe

Annabeth had just figured out what was going on by herself. She notices things. Being with her is like being with somebody whoโ€™s watching the same movie, but fifteen minutes ahead of where you are.

โ€œNot about wine,โ€ my mom said. โ€œMore about why Iโ€™m not drinking it tonight. But first, I want to be clear that this should not affect your plans, Percy. I donโ€™t want it to distract you from everything youโ€™ve got going on . . . especially getting into New Rome University.โ€

My mouth dried up. My first thought was, Oh, gods, sheโ€™s got some terrible disease.

โ€œMom, Iโ€”Iย liveย in distracted. Itโ€™s my zip code. Whatever is wrong, I want to help.โ€

โ€œOh, sweetheart.โ€ She reached across the table and took my hand. โ€œNothingโ€™s wrong. Iโ€™m pregnant.โ€

She could have hit me upside the head with a rainbow staff and the message would have stunned me less.

โ€œPregnant . . .โ€ I repeated.

She gave me a brave smileโ€”the same kind she used to give me when she found me a new school after I got kicked out of the last one.ย Surprise!

โ€œLike . . . you and Paul.โ€

I looked at my stepdad, who hadnโ€™t touched his lasagna. I realized everybody at the table was holding their breath. Maybe they were afraid I would make all the plumbing in the apartment building explode. Which, for the record, I only did thatย one time.

โ€œYes, me and Paul.โ€ My mom took his hand. I wondered if theyโ€™d had some awkward conversations about whether it was safe to have a human child after having a demigod. Afterย me.

Annabeth was watching me carefully, gauging my reaction. Concerned for me? Concerned for Paul and my mom?

A warm feeling washed over me. I started to grin. โ€œThat isย awesome.โ€

The tension broke, which was a lot better than the pipes breaking. I jumped out of my chair and hugged Paul because he was closer. I think I startled the poor guy. He accidentally dragged one of his shirtsleeves through the lasagna.

Then I rounded the table and hugged my mom. She let out a laugh/sob that was a great sound: total relief, total happiness. There was some crying. I am not going to point fingers at who it was, though. Finally, we got settled back into our places, though I still felt like I was floating a couple of inches off the floor.

โ€œIโ€™m really glad youโ€™re happy,โ€ my mom said.

โ€œOfย courseย Iโ€™m happy.โ€ I couldnโ€™t seem to stop smiling, which is a problem when youโ€™re hungry and you have a plate of lasagna in front of you. โ€œHold up.ย When?โ€

โ€œThe due date is March fifteenth,โ€ she said. Annabethโ€™s eyebrows shot up. โ€œThe Ides of March?โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s just a best guess.โ€ My mom winked at her. โ€œPercyย came much later than expected.โ€

โ€œI was stubborn,โ€ I said. โ€œSo this means Iโ€™ll be here when the baby comes. Thatโ€™s awesome. Iโ€™ll have a few months before . . .โ€

My smile finally faded. If all went well and I got into school with Annabeth, I would be leaving for California during the summer. That meant Iโ€™d miss so much with the new baby. I wanted to hear the kidโ€™s first laugh, see their first steps. I wanted to play peekaboo and teach the little rug rat to make rude noises and eat blue baby food.

โ€œHey,โ€ my mom said, โ€œyou will be here for the delivery. And you can come home from California as often as you want. But you also need to stick

to your plans. They are excellent plans!โ€ โ€œYeah, of course,โ€ I said.

โ€œBesides,โ€ she said with a mischievous smile, โ€œweโ€™re going to need your bedroom for the baby.โ€

I was in a fog for the rest of dinner. I was still floating, partly from happiness . . . partly from a feeling like Iโ€™d been cut free from my moorings and was now drifting away. I was thrilled for my mom and Paul. Absolutely. I couldnโ€™t believe they were going to have a kid I could watch grow up. That baby was going to be so lucky.

But also, it made my own departure seem even more real. I would be leaving just as my mom and Paul were starting a new chapter. I wasnโ€™t sure how I felt about that. . . .

Iย didย remember to compliment Annabeth on her cupcakes. They were really good: buttery and sugary, the icing a little too thick . . . just the way I like them.

She and I did the dishes together. By the time I walked her down the street to the subway, it was growing dark.

โ€œIโ€™m glad you were okay with the news,โ€ she said. I hadnโ€™t realized until that moment how relieved she was.

โ€œYou were thinking about your stepbrothers,โ€ I guessed.

The arrival of those babies had meant the beginning of the end for Annabethโ€™s relationship with her dad. At least, at the time. Sheโ€™d run away from home shortly afterward, feeling forgotten and unwanted.

She kissed me. โ€œYouโ€™re not in the same place as I was, thank the gods.

Youโ€™re going to be a great big brother.โ€

A warm flush of joy washed through me again. โ€œYou think?โ€

โ€œ โ€™Course. And I canโ€™t wait to see you learn how to change diapers.โ€ โ€œHey, I cleaned Geryonโ€™s stables of flesh-eating horses. How bad can

baby diapers be?โ€

She laughed. โ€œIn April or May, Iโ€™m going to remind you that you said that. Youโ€™re going to be begging to leave for college then.โ€

โ€œI dunno,โ€ I said. โ€œI mean . . . to be with you, sure. Itโ€™s just . . .โ€

She nodded. โ€œI know. Families are hard. Long-distance families are even harder.โ€

That was something we both understood.

She squeezed my hand. โ€œSee you Monday, bright and early.โ€ And she headed down the steps of the station.

At least I have Annabeth, I thought. We would stay together. Assuming, of course, we solved this whole chalice issue. Otherwise, Iโ€™d be stuck in New York, and Iโ€™d have a whole lot more diaper changing to look forward to. At that moment, though, both options felt okay. . . . I could make either one work.

Multiple positive outcomes?

Wow. There was a first time for everything.

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