I Make a Bad Plan
Back at the manse, the hellhounds were just waking up.
Nope thought we smelledย reallyย interesting. I guessed that, to him, Groverโs hooves smelled like feet, my arms smelled like seafood, and Annabeth smelled like sheโd been watching over two numbskulls all afternoon and had possibly turned into a bird.
Gale and Hecuba greeted each other with a nose boop. It wasnโt exactly a tearful reunion, but I got the feeling they were glad to see each other. Their body language seemed to say,ย Yes, I am relieved youโre back, now let us
never speak of this again.ย Nope sniffed Galeโs butt and apparently confirmed that she smelled so bad she must be part of the family.
Gale danced around impatiently until Grover agreed to take her to the feeding room for a chicken carcass. I checked on the eels, who were disappointed we hadnโt died and brought our own remains home for them to eat โฆ which didnโt make sense, but eels have their own kind of logic.
Nobody else wanted lobster rolls, so we got pizza delivered instead. We sat in the great room with the animals and scarfed down three large pies, leaving nothing behind. Grover eyed the greasy boxes, but I suggested he not try eating them. I knew from experience his digestive track didnโt do well with cardboard.
I leaned against one of the broken benches, an ice pack on my ankle. I was exhausted and wired at the same time. I wanted to enjoy the fact that weโd retrieved both of Hecateโs pets. Weโd even acquired a bonus puppy.
That seemed like a pretty good weekโs work. Unfortunately, the mansion was still a wreck. Despite our best efforts with shower curtains, dust pans, and duct tape, the place still looked like somebody had driven through in a
monster truck and thrown a few hand grenades. It was hard to believe all the damage had been caused by one hulked-out satyr. Then again, now that Iโd experienced the joys of potion-based combat, I had a better sense of how wrong things could go.
Grover seemed to follow my thoughts. โTomorrow is Halloween. Thereโs no way three people can fix this mansion before Hecate gets back. Itโs
hopeless, isnโt it?โ
โHey,โ I said, โHalloween is the opposite of hopeless. Anything is possible on Halloween.โ
Annabeth gave me a wistful look. I think she wanted to believe in the magic possibilities of Halloween, but the way things were going, she was doubting sheโd get that perfect party sheโd dreamed of. As for me, I meant what I said.
I remembered the stories Mr. Brunner used to tell, back when I thought he was just a cool sixth-grade Latin teacher. He would talk about how ancient the traditions behind Halloween wereโhow almost every culture believed there was a time when the world of the living and the world of the dead
came so close you could cross over. The world of the dead โฆ
My gaze drifted to Hecateโs torches crossed over the doorway.
They should be used only in the event of anย extremeย emergency,ย Hecate had said.
Chiron had been clear that the torches were too dangerous. If we tried to use them, especially on Halloween, an army of angry ghosts might tear us apart.
Hecate must have left the torches as a kind of temptation, like the
strawberry-milkshake potion. Sure, the choice was ours. But Iโd seen Galeโs past now. I knew what kind of choices Hecate offered people who stood at a crossroads.
And yet โฆ
โWhat if we could fix the house with magic?โ I asked.
Grover followed my gaze. โPercy, no. You said the torchesโโ
โI know. Last resort. Just spitballing here.โ I turned to Annabeth. โWhat do you think?โ
Her expression was as distant as ancient Greece. She hesitated so long I got nervous. If I had a bad idea, she let me know right away. But when she hesitated like that, looking all seriousโwell, Iโd seen that expression a lot when we were in Tartarus together. It usually meant she was thinking the
same thing I wasโbut with more nuance, and more understanding of all the horrible ways it could get us killed.
โFor the sake of argument,โ she said (which meant yeah, we were in serious trouble), โletโs say we tried. Hecuba, you know how to summon the dead. Is it possible we could use the torches successfully?โ
Hecuba barked once. I figured that meantย Idiot!
โShe says no mortal has ever tried,โ Grover translated. โShe canโt do it for us. Her undead are only good for terrorizing people. If you used the torches and lost focus even for an instant, or couldnโt bend the spirits to your will, they would destroy everyone and everything in their path. Then they would devour your soul.โ
Once again, I was impressed how much a dog could pack into just one bark. Their novels would be, like, twenty woofs long.
โWhat other options do we have?โ I turned toward the staircase. โHey, Gale! Come down here a sec, would you?โ
A few seconds later, the polecat scurried down the steps. She was covered with flecks of raw chicken. Nope thought this was the most amazing thing ever. He began giving Gale a bath.
The polecat tolerated it pretty well. While Nope was busy with chicken removal, I told Gale what was going on. โDo you think you could brew anything that would help us? Like, give us magical building powers? Or at least shield us from the dead if we have to summon them?โ
Gale seemed to think about this. She stood on her hind legs so Nope could clean her belly, which was both cute and slightly disturbing. She chattered and barked at Grover.
โUmโa lot of what sheโs saying is really technical,โ he said, โabout herbs and reagents and distilling methods. She says there might be some recipes in the library. Itโll take her all day tomorrow. And sheโll need my help.โ
โWe can all help,โ I offered.
โExcept we canโt,โ Annabeth said. โWeย bothย have tests at school tomorrow.โ
Ugh. Theย schoolย thing again. I wanted to argue that school wouldnโt mean much if we died for failing Hecate, but I knew better than to try.
Annabeth took our graduation plans seriously. Death was no excuse. She
was determined that we would finish high school together so we could go to California and do at least four more years of even harder school.
Who had designed this system, anyway? When do you get to chill on the beach and stop working? And donโt tell me sixty-seven unless you want to see a demigod cry.
I reminded myself to be positive. Halloween. Anything is possible. Et cetera. โThat sucks,โ I said, but in a positive way.
Grover sighed. โI get it. You donโt want to leave me alone with the animals again.โ
โWhat?โ I said. โNo, man. That was myย I donโt like schoolย look, not myย I donโt trust Groverย look. I donโt evenย haveย that look.โ
โI wouldnโt blame you if you did.โ He straightened. โBut please, let me watch the house tomorrow. I wonโt let you down again.โ
Annabeth started to answer. Then she met my eyes, maybe realizing that Grover needed to hear it from me.
โOf course,โ I told him. โWe trust you. We trust the animals.โ I wagged a finger at Gale. โJust whatever you cook up in the kitchen, no strawberry, okay?โ
Gale held up her little paw and chittered. Probable translation:ย I solemnly swearโdeath before strawberries.
โThatโs settled, then.โ Annabeth smiled, though her eyes were still stormy. โWho knows? We canโt summon the dead until after dark anyway.
Maybe weโll come up with a better plan in the meantime.โ
When I got back from brushing my teeth (not with cinnamon toothpasteโ never again!), Grover and the animals were asleep and snoring in a big pile.
I looked around for Annabeth. I was worried she might be buried under that mountain of cuddles. Then I noticed our makeshift front door was open.
I padded outside, past the three door knockers, still silent and safely wrapped in their cardboard box.
Annabeth stood on the sidewalk, leaning against the fence, staring back at the manse like โฆ well, like an architect planning a job. I limped my way across the cranium-stone path and joined her at the gate. The facade of the mansion still looked terrible. More gray tombstone tiles had fallen off and broken in the front yard. More windows had shattered. I guess I hadnโt noticed because Iโd been so busy chasing animals around Manhattan.
โItโs getting worse,โ I said. Annabeth nodded.
โHow?โ
She hesitated. โToday, at the perfume shop โฆ when I had theโโshe circled her hand over her face, the universal gesture forย owl headโโI sensed things in a totally different way. That must have happened to you, too. Something passed between you and Gale. You learned something?โ
I wasnโt sure how sheโd guessed that, or what it had to do with the house falling down, but I told her everything sheโd missed while she was at school, starting with Groverโs attempt to ground himself under an army of squirrels.
Annabeth shook her head. โIโm going to kill him โฆ in a loving way.โ โHe knows,โ I said.
Then I told her about my tentacle-sucker mind meld with the ferret.
She fidgeted with her camp necklace. I hadnโt seen her do that in a long time. She turned one bead after another, as if reminding herself how many summers she had survived. Maybe it helped her believe she could survive one more day.
โPercy,โ she said, โI donโt give you enough credit.โ
I blinked. โIโm sorryโcan I get that in writing? Maybe on a billboard?โ
She laughed. โIโm serious. Youโre good at understanding people, making them feel seen. And byย people, I mean polecats and hellhounds, too.โ
โThanks. I think.โ
She took my hand. โBack in Astoria, when the undead touched you โฆ
you saw Hecuba when she was grieving, the moment she turned into a hellhound, yeah?โ
I nodded. I could still hear Hecubaโs anguished howls and feel the heavy Greek shackles around my ankles.
โDo you know what I saw?โ Annabeth said. โI saw the city itself. Troy.โ
She tightened her grip on my fingers. โYour dad built those walls. Did you know that? The whole city was constructed with magic.โ
Maybe Iโd heard that story before, but it still sounded strange to me. I couldnโt imagine my dad as a bricklayer.
โI saw the city collapsing,โ Annabeth continued. โHecuba was dragged out, her family was killed โฆ and the magic unraveled. Itโs like the cityโs reason for existing just stopped. I could feel every column cracking, every support beam collapsing. I wanted to save the city. All those homes, temples, palaces. But I couldnโt.โ She gave me a despondent look. โYou saw the people; I saw the buildings. Why is that?โ
I didnโt answer right away. The obvious thing to say wasย Because youโre an architect-in-training!ย But I knew that wasnโt what she needed to hear.
Sheโd been sitting with this vision for a while now and it was clearly bothering her.
โMaybe you saw what you needed to see,โ I ventured. โA way to help
Hecuba and us. You read people just fine, Wise Girl. Better than me. But architecture? Only one of us can do that.โ
As if on cue, another tombstone sloughed off the side of the manse, crashing into the garden.
I frowned. โWeโre not going to come up with a better plan to fix this place, are we?โ
Annabeth shook her head. โWeโll have to use the torches to summon the dead.ย Iโllย have to use the torches.โ
โHold onโโ
She squeezed my hand. โYou said it yourself. Iโm the architect. But this
place was built by ghosts. Thatโs the basis of Hecateโs power. Iโm going to need help โฆ from someone ghostly, who knows about building in
Manhattan.โ
I flashed back to the beginning of the week, when Annabeth and I had sat in her favorite cemetery near the School of Design. โYouโre not serious.โ
She didnโt need to reply. She was dead serious. (Ouch, bad choice of words.)
โIโll do some research tomorrow at school,โ she said. โBut yeah โฆ I think itโs my best shot.โ
I didnโt like the way she saidย myย best shot, like this was something I couldnโt help with. I thought about her vision of Troyโย like the cityโs reason for existing just stopped. I looked at the black iron trellis draped around Hecateโs front porch like a huge mourning veil. I imagined I could hear the shriek of a frightened child, pedaling away down Gramercy Park West as fast as she could.
โI think โฆโ I took a deep breath. โI think something has been wrong with this place since long before we got here.โ
I told Annabeth about the ghost Iโd been seeing, the display in the library from Hecateโs defunct school, and the collection of broken eyeglasses.
What Could Have Been.
Annabeth isnโt easy to surprise, but my words seemed to hit her like a spritz of Paralysis by Fancy Water.
โYouโre saying โฆโ She didnโt seem able to finish the thought.
โSomething went wrong over a century ago,โ I said. โSomething that made Hecate close her school. Ever since, this place has been losing its reason to exist. I think Groverโs strawberry rampage just hurried things
along. Hecateโs been keeping Hecuba and Gale like prisoners, scared of them escaping. Sheโs been pushing people awayโmaybe prospective students, like those four naiads.โ
โLike SEJ,โ Annabeth said.
I nodded. โI donโt know what happened exactly, but if weโre going to try rebuilding this place with the help of ghosts, then we need to figure it out.
Which means I need to talk to SEJ. Sally Estelle Jackson.โ