Least he could do was help out Taught him everything
I WAS TOO SURPRISED TO SPEAK.ย Otherwise I would have warned Percy what was about to happen.
Hellhounds are not fond of heights. When startled, they respond in a predictable way. The moment Percyโs faithful pet landed on top of the
moving Colossus, she yelped and proceeded to wee-wee on said Colossusโs head. The statue froze and looked up, no doubt wondering what was trickling down his imperial sideburns.
Percy leaped heroically from his mount and slipped in hellhound pee. He nearly slid off the statueโs brow. โWhat theโMrs. OโLeary, jeez!โ
The hellhound bayed in apology. Austin flew our chariot to within shouting distance. โPercy!โ
The son of Poseidon frowned across at us. โAll right, who unleashed the giant bronze guy? Apollo, did you do this?โ
โI am offended!โ I cried. โI am only indirectly responsible for this! Also, I have a plan to fix it.โ
โOh, yeah?โ Percy glanced back at the destroyed dining pavilion. โHowโs that going?โ
With my usual levelheadedness, I stayed focused on the greater good. โIf you could please just keep this Colossus from stomping the campโs hearth, that would be helpful. I need a few more minutes to enchant this arrow.โ
I held up the talking arrow by mistake, then held up the bent arrow. Percy sighed. โOf course you do.โ
Mrs. OโLeary barked in alarm. The Colossus was raising his hand to swat the trespassing tinkler.
Percy grabbed one of the crownโs sunray spikes. He sliced it off at the base, then jabbed it into the Colossusโs forehead. I doubted the Colossus could feel pain, but it staggered, apparently surprised to suddenly have grown a unicorn horn.
Percy sliced off another one. โHey, ugly!โ he called down. โYou donโt need all these pointy things, do you? Iโm going to take one to the beach.
Mrs. OโLeary, fetch!โ
Percy tossed the spike like a javelin.
The hellhound barked excitedly. She leaped off the Colossusโs head, vaporized into shadow, and reappeared on the ground, bounding after her new bronze stick.
Percy raised his eyebrows at me. โWell? Start enchanting!โ
He jumped from the statueโs head to its shoulder. Then he leaped to the shaft of the rudder and slid down it like a fire pole all the way to the ground. If I had been at my usual level of godly athletic skill, I couldโve done something like that in my sleep, of course, but I had to admit Percy Jackson was moderately impressive.
โHey, Bronze Butt!โ he yelled again. โCome get me!โ
The Colossus obliged, slowly turning and following Percy toward the beach.
I began to chant, invoking my old powers as the god of plagues. This time, the words came to me. I didnโt know why. Perhaps Percyโs arrival had given me new faith. Perhaps I simply didnโt think about it too much. Iโve found that thinking often interferes with doing. Itโs one of those lessons that gods learn early in their careers.
I felt an itchy sensation of sickness curling from my fingers and into the projectile. I spoke of my own awesomeness and the various horrible diseases I had visited upon wicked populations in the past, becauseโฆwell, Iโm awesome. I could feel the magic taking hold, despite the Arrow of Dodona whispering to me like an annoying Elizabethan stagehand,ย SAYEST THOU: โPLAGUEY, PLAGUEY, PLAGUEY!โ
Below, more demigods joined the parade to the beach. They ran ahead of the Colossus, jeering at him, throwing things, and calling him Bronze Butt. They made jokes about his new horn. They laughed at the hellhound pee trickling down his face. Normally I have zero tolerance for bullying,
especially when the victim looks like me, but since the Colossus was ten
stories tall and destroying their camp, I suppose the campersโ rudeness was understandable.
I finished chanting. Odious green mist now wreathed the arrow. It smelled faintly of fast-food deep fryersโa good sign that it carried some sort of horrible malady.
โIโm ready!โ I told Austin. โGet me next to its ear!โ
โYou got it!โ Austin turned to say something else, and a wisp of green fog passed under his nose. His eyes watered. His nose swelled and began to run. He scrunched up his face and sneezed so hard he collapsed. He lay on the floor of the chariot, groaning and twitching.
โMy boy!โ I wanted to grab his shoulders and check on him, but since I had an arrow in each hand, that was inadvisable.
FIE! TOO STRONG IS THY PLAGUE.ย The Dodona arrow hummed with annoyance.ย THY CHANTING SUCKETH.
โOh, no, no, no,โ I said. โKayla, be careful. Donโt breatheโโ โACHOO!โ Kayla crumpled next to her brother.
โWhat have I done?โ I wailed.
METHINKS THOU HAST BLOWN IT,ย said the Dodona arrow, my source of infinite wisdom.ย MOREOโER, HIE! TAKEST THOU THE REINS.
โWhy?โ
You would think a god who drove a chariot on a daily basis would not need to ask such a question. In my defense, I was distraught about my children lying half-conscious at my feet. I didnโt consider that no one was driving. Without anyone at the reins, the pegasi panicked. To avoid running into the huge bronze Colossus directly in their path, they dove toward the earth.
Somehow, I managed to react appropriately. (Three cheers for reacting appropriately!) I thrust both arrows into my quiver, grabbed the reins, and managed to level our descent just enough to prevent a crash landing. We bounced off a dune and swerved to a stop in front of Chiron and a group of demigods. Our entrance might have looked dramatic if the centrifugal force hadnโt thrown Kayla, Austin, and me from the chariot.
Did I mention I was grateful for soft sand?
The pegasi took off, dragging the battered chariot into the sky and leaving us stranded.
Chiron galloped to our side, a cluster of demigods in his wake. Percy Jackson ran toward us from the surf while Mrs. OโLeary kept the Colossus occupied with a game of keep-away. I doubt that would hold the statueโs interest very long, once he realized there was a group of targets right behind him, just perfect for stomping.
โThe plague arrow is ready!โ I announced. โWe need to shoot it into the Colossusโs ear!โ
My audience did not seem to take this as good news. Then I realized my chariot was gone. My bow was still in the chariot. And Kayla and Austin
were quite obviously infected with whatever disease I had conjured up. โAre they contagious?โ Cecil asked.
โNo!โ I said. โWellโฆprobably not. Itโs the fumes from the arrowโโ Everyone backed away from me.
โCecil,โ Chiron said, โyou and Harley take Kayla and Austin to the Apollo cabin for healing.โ
โBut theyย areย the Apollo cabin,โ Harley complained. โBesides, my flamethrowerโโ
โYou can play with your flamethrower later,โ Chiron promised. โRun along. Thereโs a good boy. The rest of you, do what you can to keep the Colossus at the waterโs edge. Percy and I will assist Apollo.โ
Chiron said the wordย assistย as if it meantย slap upside the head with extreme prejudice.
Once the crowd had dispersed, Chiron gave me his bow. โMake the shot.โ
I stared at the massive composite recursive, which probably had a draw weight of a hundred pounds. โThis is meant for the strength of a centaur, not a teen mortal!โ
โYou created the arrow,โ he said. โOnly you can shoot it without succumbing to the disease. Only you can hit such a target.โ
โFromย here? Itโs impossible! Where is that flying boy, Jason Grace?โ
Percy wiped the sweat and sand from his neck. โWeโre fresh out of flying boys. And all the pegasi have stampeded.โ
โPerhaps if we got some harpies and some kite stringโฆโ I said.
โApollo,โ Chiron said, โyou must do this. You are the lord of archery and illness.โ
โIโm not lord of anything!โ I wailed. โIโm a stupid ugly mortal teenager!
Iโmย nobody!โ
The self-pity just came pouring out. I thought for sure the earth would split in two when I called myself aย nobody. The cosmos would stop turning. Percy and Chiron would rush to reassure me.
None of that happened. Percy and Chiron just stared at me grimly.
Percy put his hand on my shoulder. โYouโre Apollo. We need you. You can do this. Besides, if you donโt, I will personally throw you off the top of the Empire State Building.โ
This was exactly the pep talk I neededโjust the sort of thing Zeus used to say to me before my soccer matches. I squared my shoulders. โRight.โ
โWeโll try to draw him into the water,โ Percy said. โIโve got the advantage there. Good luck.โ
Percy accepted Chironโs hand and leaped onto the centaurโs back.
Together they galloped into the surf, Percy waving his sword and calling out various bronze-butt-themed insults to the Colossus.
I ran down the beach until I had a line of sight on the statueโs left ear. Looking up at that regal profile, I did not see Nero. I saw myselfโa monument to my own conceit. Neroโs pride was no more than a reflection of
mine. I was the bigger fool. I was exactly the sort of person who would construct a hundred-foot-tall naked statue of myself in my front yard.
I pulled the plague arrow from my quiver and nocked it in the bowstring.
The demigods were getting very good at scattering. They continued to harry the Colossus from both sides while Percy and Chiron galloped through the tide, Mrs. OโLeary romping at their heels with her new bronze stick.
โYo, ugly!โ Percy shouted. โOver here!โ
The Colossusโs next step displaced several tons of salt water and made a crater large enough to swallow a pickup truck.
The Arrow of Dodona rattled in my quiver.ย RELEASE THY BREATH,ย he advised.ย DROPETH THY SHOULDER.
โIย haveย shot a bow before,โ I grumbled.
MINDETH THY RIGHT ELBOW,ย the arrow said. โShut up.โ
AND TELLEST NOT THINE ARROW TO SHUT UP.
I drew the bow. My muscles burned as if boiling water was being poured over my shoulders. The plague arrow did not make me pass out, but its
fumes were disorienting. The warp of the shaft made my calculations
impossible. The wind was against me. The arc of the shot would be much too high.
Yet I aimed, exhaled, and released the bowstring.
The arrow twirled as it rocketed upward, losing force and drifting too far to the right. My heart sank. Surely the curse of the River Styx would deny me any chance at success.
Just as the projectile reached its apex and was about to fall back to earth, a gust of wind caught itโฆperhaps Zephyros looking kindly on my pitiful attempt. The arrow sailed into the Colossusโs ear canal and rattled in his head with aย clink, clink, clinkย like a pachinko machine.
The Colossus halted. He stared at the horizon as if confused. He looked at the sky, then arched his back and lurched forward, making a sound like a tornado ripping off the roof of a warehouse. Because his face had no other open orifices, the pressure of his sneeze forced geysers of motor oil out his ears, spraying the dunes with environmentally unfriendly sludge.
Sherman, Julia, and Alice stumbled over to me, covered head to toe with sand and oil.
โI appreciate you freeing Miranda and Ellis,โ Sherman snarled, โbut Iโm going to kill you later for taking my chariot. What did you do to that
Colossus? What kind of plague makes you sneeze?โ
โIโm afraid IโI summoned a rather benign illness. I believe I have given the Colossus a case of hay fever.โ
You know that horrible pause when youโre waiting for someone to
sneeze? The statue arched his back again, and everyone on the beach cringed in anticipation. The Colossus inhaled several cubic acres of air through his ear canals, preparing for his next blast.
I imagined the nightmare scenarios: The Colossus would ear-sneeze Percy Jackson into Connecticut, never to be seen again. The Colossus would clear his head and then stomp all of us flat. Hay fever could make a person cranky. I knew this because Iย inventedย hay fever. Still, I had never intended it to be a killing affliction. I certainly never anticipated facing the wrath of a towering metal automaton with extreme seasonal allergies. I cursed my shortsightedness! I cursed my mortality!
What I hadย notย considered was the damage our demigods had already done to the Colossusโs metal jointsโin particular, his neck.
The Colossus rocked forward with a mightyย CHOOOOO!ย I flinched and almost missed the moment of truth when the statueโs head achieved first-
stage separation from his body. It hurtled over Long Island Sound, the face spinning in and out of view. It hit the water with a mightyย WHOOSHย and bobbed for a moment. Then the airย bloopedย out of its neck hole and the gorgeous regal visage of yours truly sank beneath the waves.
The statueโs decapitated body tilted and swayed. If it had fallen backward, it might have crushed even more of the camp. Instead, it toppled forward. Percy yelped a curse that would have made any Phoenician sailor proud. Chiron and he raced sideways to avoid being crushed while Mrs.
OโLeary wisely dissolved into shadows. The Colossus hit the water, sending forty-foot tidal waves to port and starboard. I had never before seen a centaur hang hooves on a tubular crest, but Chiron acquitted himself well.
The roar of the statueโs fall finally stopped echoing off the hills.
Next to me, Alice Miyazawa whistled. โWell, that de-escalated quickly.โ
Sherman Yang asked in a voice of childlike wonder: โWhat the Hades just happened?โ
โI believe,โ I said, โthe Colossus sneezed his head off.โ