Grover Gets Grounded
Kids, always remember to shadow-travel responsibly. If you overdo it, that post-shadow hangover is a KILLER. By the time Annabeth and Grover
woke me up the next morning, it was already seven thirty. I shouldโve been showered, dressed, and giving aspirin to my homework by then.
โYou needed the sleep,โ Grover said. โSo did they.โ
He pointed to Hecubaโs dog bed. The queen of Troy was curled up and snoring, with Nope tucked contentedly up against her belly, making happy little yips in his sleep. Next time I saw Mrs. OโLeary, I owed her a large
chew toy. Without her, we never wouldโve found the pup that brought home Hecuba.
โShe was in no mood for a morning walk.โ Annabeth gestured to the front door, which was now reinforced with a vertical tabletop on duct-tape hinges. Nothing but the best security for us. โReally wore herself out last night. Here, eat and tell us what happened.โ
Sheโd made me breakfast: a bacon, egg, and cheese bagel sandwich. If I hadnโt already been in love with her, that wouldโve sealed the deal. Grover was also in loveโwith my sandwichโbecause he kept stealing bites while I told them about the Midnight Ride of Percy Jackson.
โOh, a German nightclub!โ Grover nodded vigorously. โWas it Berghain? Iโve always wanted to go there.โ
I frowned. โI didnโt figure you for a nightclub guy.โ
โAre you kidding? I can hoof-boogie with the best of them! Iโve still got that wedding-dress outfit from the Sea of Monsters, too.โ He sighed.
โMaybe someday.โ
I decided I didnโt want to know any more about Groverโs secret disco
dreams at the moment. It was bad enough weโd probably have to cancel our Halloween party tomorrow. At some point today, unless we managed to
solve all our problems, I would need to remind Grover to send warnings to all our friends not to come unless they wanted to watch us get incinerated.
But I didnโt have the heart to bring that up right now. โI donโt suppose Gale turned up on her own?โ I asked.
Annabeth shook her head. โThatโs your job for today. You and Grover.โ My spirits lifted. โYou mean โฆ?โ
โAfraid so,โ she said. โI have to go to school. Dave, Hana, and I have a presentation I canโt get out of. I already Iris-messaged your mom, and sheโs going to call AHS. Youโre taking a sick day.โ
โAwesome!โ
โTo find a polecat.โ โIโll take it.โ
โWell, good luck.โ She kissed me. โI left some notes about Gale in the library.โ Then she turned to Grover. โKeep an eye on him, okay, Mr.
Protector?โ
Grover gulped down the last of my bagel sandwich. โAlways.โ
After Annabeth left, Grover and I got ready for our day. He cleaned up breakfast by eating everything that was left. I fed the eels, showered in an antigravity bathroom (donโt ask how that went), got dressed, and headed into the library.
The Room of Dangerous Knowledge did not disappoint. It was shaped like a trident: three vast halls of floor-to-ceiling ebony bookshelves with a statue of Hecate at the intersection because โฆ Oh, right, goddess of the crossroads. I see what she did there. Iron candelabras hung from the vaulted ceiling, illuminating the room with guttering torchlight. Flames and books seemed like a bad combo, but what did I know? At least Groverโs strawberry rampage hadnโt made it this far into the mansion.
The books went on foreverโleatherbound spines, gilt titles, fancy silk bookmark ribbons. I kind of expected to find a guy in a smoking jacket sitting in an overstuffed chair and holding a pipe. But it was just me and the statue in the room.
None of the books called out to me, tempting me with secret spells or forbidden wisdom. They probably saw it was just Percy Jackson and decided to save their breath.
On the nearest table, next to a pile of books, Annabeth had left a yellow legal pad scribbled with notes. Iโd never understood how Annabeth could be just as dyslexic as me and still have legible handwriting. Mine looked like cuneiform chiseled by a drunk Sumerian. I was grateful that sheโd left me such a helpful cheat sheet, though.
According to the notes, Gale had been a mortal witch back in ancient times. (I knew that.) She had terrible personal hygiene and gas. (I smelled
that.) Sheโd been a seller of potions and magical fragrances and had
somehow gotten on Hecateโs bad side, possibly because she was a terrible spokesperson for magic, what with the constant farting and all. (Just a guess.) In a rage, Hecate turned her into a polecat, but then took pity on her and decided to keep her around. In the margin of one page, Annabeth had scrawled some questions:ย Potions? Fragrances? Anti-gas medicine?
Chickens?
I imagined those were the things she thought Gale might go after now that she was free. Maybe Grover and I should wander around Manhattan with a package of Gas-X and a dead chicken and see what happens, I thought.
I was staring at the nearest bookshelf, thinking about our polecat problem, when something caught my eye. On one of the shelves, covered in glass, was a display of papers and small shiny objects.
I walked over to check it out. Books might not have much power over me, but Iโm a sucker for small shiny objects.
On the left side of the display were yellowed pamphlets with old-timey lettering with titles likeย Practickal forceryย andย Potionf for Beginnyng Uferf.
In the middle, a flyer forย HECATEโS SCHOOL OF MAGIC, 1913โ14
Academic Yearย had been ripped to pieces, then matted and framed that way, as if Hecate wanted to memorialize the moment of rage when it was shredded. On the right was a collection of old seeing devicesโbinoculars, monocles, some contact lenses preserved in a bottle of solution, and half a
dozen pairs of childrenโs eyeglasses. Yeah. Not creepy at all. Under this collection was a brass plaque engraved with WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN.
I lifted the top of the display case. I picked up a pair of blue-framed glasses that were snapped in half at the bridge. They were the same ones Iโd seen in my vision of the child pedaling away from the manse in terror. On the right stem, the initials SEJ were monogrammed in gold.
I felt like I had shadow-traveled into a block of ice. I couldnโt move. I couldnโt breathe.ย SEJ.ย I knew those initials.
Chiron had tried to warn me. Ghosts seemed to crowd around meโnot just the spirits of the dead, but the memories and regrets entombed in this little display. I managed to put the glasses back. I couldnโt process what this meant right away. It was already Thursday morning. We had a polecat to find, a mansion to repair, and only forty-eight hours before Hecate came
home โฆ.
I backed out of the library, doing my best not to break into a run. โWhatโs wrong?โ Grover asked when I joined him in the great room. โYou look likeโโ
โDonโt sayย like youโve seen a ghost,โ I pleaded.
He studied my expression. I knew he could sense my fear and confusion, but he didnโt press the issue. โOkay โฆ Did you learn anything? About
Gale?โ
I nodded weakly. I did my best to shelve my unanswered questions and anxiety inside a glass case in the back of my mind. I told Grover what Iโd read in Annabethโs notes.
Grover scratched his goatee. โFragrances or medicine for gas โฆ We need to narrow things down or weโll never find her.โ
I looked over at the sleeping hellhounds. I had a feeling they wouldnโt be joining us on this particular hunt. I also wasnโt too worried about Hecuba
trying to escape again. If my experience with Mrs. OโLeary was any guide, Hecuba and Nope would be asleep all day. I just wished I could join them.
โSo, we walk around town with chicken carcasses, then?โ I asked.
Grover looked troubled, like Annabethโs comment about being a protector was still replaying in his mind. โNo. I have aโwell, maybe not aย betterย idea, but one that might work. Come on.โ
He grabbed the house keys. โWhere we going?โ I asked.
โI need to ground myself,โ he said. โJust for a few minutes.โ He led me across the street to Gramercy Park.
I wasnโt sure what Grover had in mind. Maybe he just needed a moment to focus his thoughts in a natural environment. Peaceful spots like that are tough to find in Manhattan.
I didnโt realize that when heโd saidย ground himself, heโd meant literally cover himself with the ground. He sat down in a flower bed and started to heap leaves and dirt over his legs.
โUm โฆ you good there, G-man?โ
He closed his eyes like he wanted to be at one with the bark mulch.
โYes,โ he muttered, trancelike. โPreparing for squirrels. Need silence, please.โ
That totally cleared things up.
I sat on the nearest bench and waited. If anyone walked past, Iโd have had a hard time explaining why my friend was digging himself a fort, but
we had the park to ourselves.
The morning air was cool and crisp. The leaves were turning from gold to red. Under other circumstances, I wouldโve been happy to enjoy my
โsick dayโ hanging out with my best friend, but last nightโs trip was still making my stomach churn. I felt like Iโd ingested some shadows along with a few lacy undergarments. My short visit to Hecateโs library hadnโt helped, either.
After a few minutes, Grover was almost completely buried up to the waist. I was getting worried. I wanted to say something likeย Can I get you
anything? More leaves? More dirt?
Then the squirrels began to arrive. Three scrambled down the nearest tree trunk and hopped onto Groverโs back. Another raced out of the bushes and leaped onto his shoulder. Two more tunneled through the leaves and skittered up Groverโs legs. Within a minute, there were dozens, maybe hundreds. Honestly, I had no idea. Iโd never had to count squirrels in
numbers that high before.
Groverโs torso disappeared under a tidal wave of chittering fur and twitching bushy tails. Somewhere in the mix of brown and gray, I spotted one very large black rat, who quickly disappeared in the sea of its squirrely comrades.
โEr, Grover โฆ?โ
One of the squirrels turned and barked at me like,ย Silence, human!
Apparently, the parkโs vegetation wanted in on the fun. The nearest tree
roots started snaking toward Grover. Vines wrapped around his chest. Tree branches bent and swayed, trying to reach him.
Groverโs eyes rolled back in his head. He started to shake. I couldnโt take it anymore.
โOkay, thatโs enough,โ I decided.
I marched over, ready to kick some squirrel posterior in my usual heroic fashion, but the party ended on its own. The squirrels broke formation and scattered in every direction. The rat was the last one to leave the sinking satyr. It waddled off into the bushes with one last disapproving glance at me over its shoulder.
โGrover?โ I knelt next to him. The vines and branches retreated. I brushed away the dirt and leaves and was shocked to find that Grover had descended about half a foot into the ground, like the earth had been trying to swallow him.
โHey, buddy.โ I shook his shoulder gently. His eyes fluttered open.
โOh. Hi.โ He blinked groggily. โIโm still here. Good.โ โWait, what?โ
He sat up. โNothing. Just โฆ Wow. That was a lot.โ โWhat just happened?โ
He wouldnโt meet my eyes. โI told you. I got grounded. Tried to find Gale by connecting with โฆ well, everything alive on Manhattan. Except for humans. You all donโt really count. No offense.โ
โYou can do that?โ
โI mean, yes โฆ.โ
There was a lot to process here. Like, why had Grover never told me about
this before? Why was he acting so cagey about it? Had he learned anything?
But since Iโm ADHD, the first question out of my mouth was โWhatโs the deal with the rat? You had, like, a million squirrels and one rat.โ
โOh, thatโs just Eustis,โ Grover said. โHeโs adopted.โ
Let it go, Percy, I told myself.
โSo, are you okay?โ I asked. โThat looked painful.โ
โIโm fine.โ He was lying. You canโt share an empathy link with somebody and not know when something is hurting them. โI got some information.
Turns out there arenโt many polecats in Manhattan. Skunks, yes, but not polecats. When one is running around wild, the other animals tend to notice. The last time one was seen was Tuesday, on Lafayette Street.โ
I tried to picture where he was talking about. โLike in Chinatown?โ โI donโt know how far downtown,โ he admitted. โBut Lafayette starts
around Ninth Street, right? We could head down there, just start walking south.โ
It sounded like as good a plan as any.
I also kind of appreciated the randomness of it. An Annabeth plan would have been more effective, more targeted, and more logical. Butย just start walkingย was the kind of thinking I could support.
I helped him up. We went to check on the hellhounds and found them still sleeping. Leaving them alone wasnโt optimal, but nothing about this week had been optimal. We put out fresh food, told the eels weโd be back, and headed downtown.
SODNYC was on our route, and I stopped and left a message with Annabethโs dorm advisor so when Annabeth got out of class, sheโd have some idea of where we were going.
We continued walking. Every now and then I glanced at Grover, who seemed even shakier than Iโd felt after all my shadow-travel. A few times he stumbled, and once I caught his arm.
โAre you sureโ?โ โIโm fine,โ he insisted.
โYou wonโt have to, uh, ground yourself again when we get closer, will you?โ
He laughed weakly. โNo. That would be โฆ No.โ
I stopped, took him by the shoulders, and made him look me in the eye.
โGrover, what arenโt you telling me? Why havenโt I ever seen you do that before, with the squirrels and everything?โ
He hesitated. I got the feeling he was about to faint.
โCome.โ I sat him down on the nearest bench, which happened to be
outside a bakery. It wasnโt Papouโs Pastries, but the stuff inside smelled pretty good. โWait here a sec.โ
I went in and bought a slice of strawberry cheesecake for Grover, plus a couple of ice teas. I figured food might help him get his energy back.
As he nibbled his cake, I said, โOkay. Tell me.โ
He shrugged listlessly. โItโs just โฆ grounding myself like that? Itโs pretty powerful magic. I can only do it because Iโm a Cloven Elder.โ
Grover was too modest. He rarely talked about it, but after the Battle of Manhattan, heโd been promoted to the council of the three most important satyrs in the world, which in my mind made him an elite boss.
โItโs dangerous?โ I guessed.
โOh โฆ nothing Iโd worry about,โ he said. โNot a big deal. Itโs just when I do that, when I connect with nature on that level, thereโs always a small
chance โฆโ โYes?โ
He nibbled more cheesecake. โThat I might dissolve into nothing.โ