Guess What? Weasel Butt
We got up at way too early oโclock, thanks to the hellhoundโs and polecatโs growling stomachs. We fed them breakfast, threw the eels some dead fish, and coaxed Hecuba into swallowing her seven million Vitamin McNuggets. Then we enjoyed the wonders of Hecateโs antigravity showers and enchanted toilets before heading to the kitchen, where I got dog hair in my orange juice and a weasel butt in my cereal bowl. (Polecat buttโ
whatever.)
Grover suggested a daily walking schedule for the pets. He figured there should always be at least two of us on leash duty. Every morning, he and I
could escort Annabeth down to SODNYC. Then, in the afternoon, he and Annabeth would come meet me with the pets at AHS and weโd walk to the manse together from Astoria. My school was a lot farther away than Annabethโs, but I didnโt mind the plan if she didnโt. I was just happy to spend extra time with her and Grover, even if it involved being dragged
across town by our new fuzzy supernatural overlords.
โGrover, what about you?โ Annabeth asked. โThat means youโre doingย all
the walking.โ
โOh, I donโt mind. Fresh air!โ
You donโt seeย fresh airย on a lot of Tripadvisor reviews for Manhattan, but I appreciated Groverโs enthusiasm.
We packed our stuff for school, got the pets geared up in their heavy-metal and Hello Kitty accoutrements, then headed out to escort Annabeth to SODNYC. As we locked up, the door knockers told us: 1) to have a great day, 2) we would die in agony, and 3) PORK BELLIES! Honestly, Iโd had stranger multiple-choice tests.
We were more prepared for Hecubaโs and Galeโs walking habits this time, so we werenโt surprised when Hecuba led us on a series of high-speed, high-terror sprints through traffic, stopping to smell all the things and then
pee on them. Annabeth had even found a pair of sneakers in one of Hecateโs closets, which seemed to help. I just hoped the shoes didnโt end up being
cursed. I didnโt want Annabeth to accidentally float to the moon or bust out in a fit of Irish line dancing.
As for Gale, we found out she had a strange affinity for drugstores. Every time we passed one, the polecat tried to tug Grover inside. Maybe she realized she needed some anti-gas medicine in the worst way. Or maybe Duane Reade was having a sale on chicken carcasses.
By the time we reached SODNYC, I was feeling almost optimistic about our chances of surviving through Halloween. We were laughing and having fun, which Iโll take any Tuesday morning of a school week.
It felt good. Almostย domestic. Just three besties and their magical rent-a- pets enjoying life. I didnโt say anything, because that would jinx it, but we could totally make it to Friday night โฆ right?
โHave a good day at school, dear,โ I told Annabeth. โThanks, Mom!โ She gave me a big wet kiss.
โYou guys and your public displays of affection,โ Grover grumbled.
On cue, Annabeth and I got on either side of him, wrapped him in a hug, and kissed him on either cheek with a bigย Mmm-whah!
โMuch better,โ he muttered, blushing hard.
โSee you this afternoon,โ Annabeth told us, handing me Hecubaโs leash. I wished her borrowed sneakers could magically grow bigger to fit me, but no such luck. Then she was off.
Grover and I headed back toward the manse. We had some trouble on Third Avenue when Hecuba decided to attack a Lil Zeus Greek food cart, but I managed to pull her off before she killed the cook or devoured his meat supply. Dude wasnโt too happy. He yelled something in Greek at meโ
maybeย Please control your rhinocerosโbut I couldnโt be too mad at Hecuba. For one thing, the food smelled good. For another, anything labeledย Zeusย sent me into attack mode, too.
Back at Gramercy Park, I realized I had about twenty minutes to make the forty-minute trip to school. Fortunately, my first-period teacher was pretty lax about attendance.
โYou sure youโll be okay?โ I asked Grover at the front door once the pets were safely back inside.
โOh, yeah!โ His eye twitched. โI got a ton to do. Going to send out the party invitations for Friday, play with the animals, maybe bake a cake.
Weโll pick you up at AHS. Then we can have a nice walk home over the Queensboro Bridge!โ
โOkay,โ I said. โDonโt forget to put the ice cream potion stuff in theโโ โFreezer, I know! Iโll be fine, โkay? Thanks, bye!โ
He closed the door.
โHeโll do well!โ one of the door knockers assured me. โHeโll ruin everything!โ said another. โRAINFOREST CAFร!โ said the third.
Hmm โฆ probably nothing to worry about. It wasnโt until I got to the subway that I realized I wasnโt sure which door knocker had said that Grover would ruin everythingโthe truth-teller or the liar. I tried to put it out of my mind. Grover was smart. He was responsible. Heโd been my protector for years, and weโd both grown wiser over that time. I knew I could trust him to do the right thing.
I made it to school late enough for the secretary to give me a disappointed sigh, but not late enough to get a full scolding. I considered that a win.
On the way to class, I saw my counselor, Eudora, again. She was creeping down the hall on tiptoe. When she spotted me, she froze like a polecat in headlights.
โIs she gone?โ she stage-whispered. โUm โฆ you mean Hecate?โ
โShe canโt see me!โ She dove into the nearest room and locked the door behind her. I waited to see if she would come back out, since sheโd just shut herself in the janitorโs closet. She didnโt. I was already late, so I decided to keep going. At some point, though, I was going to have to find out why the Nereid was so terrified of Hecate. I mean, aside from the obvious reason that the goddess was terrifying.
My classes went okay. I hadnโt done my homework, but that wasnโt unusual.
Back in August, my stepdad Paul had tried to help me organize my schoolwork when he saw that it was way too much for me to keep straight on my own. He suggested I think of homework as triage. โLook at your
assignments like theyโre wounded patients,โ heโd said, โand handle them in order of severity. โOkay, you need immediate attention, or youโll die. You can wait a bit. You arenโt that badโgo home, take some aspirin, and call me tomorrow.โโ
I gave my homework a lot of aspirin.
Paulโs system worked most of the time. I could usually tell which projects were important and which ones my teachers had only assigned because they felt they had to and they didnโt want to grade any more than I wanted to do them. Having a teacher in the family can be handy.
I was feeling pretty good by the end of the school day. I hadnโt failed any quizzes. I hadnโt fallen asleep. Miraculously, my history teacher said, โVery good, Mr. Jackson,โ when I answered a question, which was probably a sign she was actually a monster, but I wasnโt going to judge unless she attacked me. Some of my best friends are monsters.
After swim practice I waited in front of AHS, my hair still smelling of chlorine. I was looking forward to seeing my friends, even Hecuba and Gale.
Thatโs the weird thing about pets, I guess. Even when theyโre a total pain, they still manage to burrow their way into your heart. I kept looking down 37th Avenue, expecting a huge hellhound to come barreling over the horizon, possibly dragging Annabeth on roller skates.
Twenty minutes passed. For an ADHD guy like me, that translated into about forty Percy hours. Maybe Grover and Annabeth had gotten stuck in a traffic jam โฆ walking across the river to Queens. Maybe the pets had pulled them off course to Hackensack. It could be nothing.
Having no cell phone is something Iโd gotten used to. Yes, it sucked not to be able to look things up quickly, scroll through funny videos, or text my friends to see where they were. But none of my friends could have cell
phones either, so it didnโt matter much. Plus, watching cats ride Roombas or frat dudes failing at backflips is cool, but not worth getting eaten by monsters. Every year or so, I borrowed a mortalโs cell phone to see if the
magic had worn off or gotten weakerโif maybe I could use a phone now without causing a Great Monster Migration and a Kill Percy Rodeo. Every year, the experiment failed. Once I touched a phone screen, the average
time until a monster showed up was thirty-six seconds.
Long story short: I had no way of knowing where Grover and Annabeth were. Iris-messages only worked in certain situations, like I said before, and if the person youโre trying to reach is movingโfor instance, being dragged across the Tri-State Area by a hellhoundโan Iris-message often wonโt connect.
So I waited. After an hour, I started to panic. If something had happened to Annabeth and Grover and I was just standing here not helping โฆ If
theyโd been swallowed by Janet and her gang of moray eels, or if the manse had exploded from a buildup of polecat gas โฆ
I took out Riptide. With the tip of the blade, I etched a message on the sidewalk:ย Went to Gramercy.
That was another trick Iโd only learned in the last month. One day when I was bored, sitting on a sidewalk while my mom shopped for clothes for her first author signing, I discovered that Riptide could sketch glowing lines on asphalt that no regular mortals could see. The markings lasted about three hours before fading awayโless if it rained. It made me wonder why Iโd never seen Celestial bronze graffiti around from other demigods. Maybe theyโd never gotten bored enough to try it. Or maybe their weapons didnโt have a side hustle as writing utensils.
I began walking back to Manhattan, taking the route I figured Annabeth and Grover would take so I would intercept them if they were still coming my way.
I still hadnโt met them when I got to the Upper East Side. By the time I reached East 60th, I was so concerned I started to jog.
It was still a long way to Gramercy Park, with crosswalk lights that didnโt cooperate and plenty of cars and pedestrians to navigate. I got honked at, cursed at, scowled at, and almost creamed a few times by motorized delivery bikes, but I am a native New Yorker. Such obstacles barely slowed me down.
A block out, I spotted Annabeth running toward the manse from the
opposite direction. A chunk of ice formed in my stomach. Apparently, Grover hadnโt come to pick her up, either.
We met in front of the house. โYou okay?โ she asked. โFine, you?โ
โYeah, but โฆ I guess I lost track of time studying. Grover never showed.
I thought maybe he fell asleep, or โฆโ Her voice faltered when she looked at the mansion. โOh, gods.โ
I was so anxious I had troubling focusing through the Mist.
When the facade of Hecateโs house finally revealed itself, I couldnโt believe what I was seeing. The front windows were all broken, their shattered glass strewn across the garden as if the panes had been busted from within.
Several tombstone tiles had fallen off the walls. Blue smoke billowed from the front porch, where the massive three-paneled door had
exploded outward, like someone had hit it with a battering ram from the inside.
โGrover,โ we both said at once. And we ran into the disaster zone.