The Battle of the Labyrinth Read online

Page 28

Page 28

 

  “I…” Her voice broke. “I’ll see you in the morning. Sleep well. ”

  She ran off toward the beach. I was too confused to do anything but watch until she disappeared in the dark.

  ***

  I don’t know exactly how much time passed. Like Calypso said, it was hard to keep track on the island. I knew I should be leaving. At the very least, my friends would be worried. At worst, they could be in serious danger. I didn’t even know if Annabeth had made it out of the volcano. I tried to use my empathy link with Grover several times, but I couldn’t make contact. I hated not knowing if they were all right.

  On the other hand, I really was weak. I couldn’t stay on my feet more than a few hours. Whatever I’d done in Mount St. Helens had drained me like nothing else I’d ever expected.

  I didn’t feel like a prisoner or anything. I remembered the Lotus Hotel and Casino in Vegas, where I’d been lured into this amazing game world until I almost forgot everything I cared about. But the island of Ogygia wasn’t like that at all. I thought about Annabeth, Grover, and Tyson constantly. I remembered exactly why I needed to leave. I just…couldn’t. and then there was Calypso herself.

  She never talked much about herself, but that just made me want to know more. I would sit in the meadow, sipping nectar, and I would try to concentrate on the flowers or the clouds or the reflections on the lake, but I was really staring at Calypso as she worked, the way she brushed her hair over her shoulder, and the little strand that fell in her face whenever she knelt to dig in the garden. Sometimes she would hold out her hand and birds would fly out of the woods to settle on her arm—lorikeets, parrots, doves. She would tell them good morning, ask how it was going back at the nest, and they would chirp for a while, then fly off cheerfully. Calypso’s eyes gleamed. She would look at me and we’d share a smile, but almost immediately she’d get that sad expression again and turn away. I didn’t understand what was bothering her.

  One night we were eating dinner together at the beach. Invisible servants had set up a table with beef stew and apple cider, which may not sound all that exciting, but that’s because you haven’t tasted it. I hadn’t even noticed the invisible servants when I first got to the island, but that’s because you haven’t tasted it. I hadn’t even noticed the invisible servants when I first got to the island, but after a while I became aware of the beds making themselves, meals cooking on their own, clothes being washed and folded by unseen hands.

  Anyway, Calypso and I were sitting at dinner, and she looked beautiful in the candlelight. I was telling her about New York and Camp Half-Blood, and then I started telling her about the time Grover had eaten an apple while we were playing Hacky Sack with it. She laughed, showing off her amazing smile, and our eyes met. Then she dropped her gaze.

  “There it is again,” I said.

  “What?”

  “You keep pulling away, like you’re trying not to enjoy yourself. ”

  She kept her eyes on her glass of cider. “As I told you, Percy, I have been punished. Cursed, you might say. ”

  “How? Tell me. I want to help. ”

  “Don’t say that. Please don’t say that. ”

  “Tell me what the punishment is. ”

  She covered her half-finished stew with a napkin, and immediately an invisible servant whisked the bowl away. “Percy, this island, Ogygia, is my home, my birthplace. But it is also my prison. I am under…house arrest, I guess you would call it. I will never visit this Manhattan of yours. Or anywhere else. I am alone here. ”

  “Because your father was Atlas. ”

  She nodded. “The gods do not trust their enemies. And rightly so. I should not complain. Some of the prisons are not nearly as nice as mine. ”

  “But that’s not fair,” I said. “Just because you’re related doesn’t mean you support him. This other daughter I knew, Zoë, Nightshade—she fought against him. She wasn’t imprisoned. ”

  “But, Percy,” Calypso said gently, “I did support him in the first war. He is my father. ”

  “What? But the Titans are evil!”

  “Are they? All of them? All the time?” She pursed her lips. “Tell me, Percy. I have no wish to argue with you. but do you support the gods because they are good, or because they are your family?”

  I didn’t answer. She had a point. Last winter, after Annabeth and I had saved Olympus, the gods had had a debate about whether or not they should kill me. That hadn’t been exactly good. But still, I felt like I supported them because Poseidon was my dad.

  “Perhaps I was wrong in the war,” Calypso said. “And in fairness, the gods have treated me well. They visit me from time to time. They bring me word of the outside world. But they can leave. And I cannot. ”

  “You don’t have any friends?” I asked. “I mean…wouldn’t anyone else live here with you? it’s a nice place. ”

  A tear trickled down her cheek. “I…I promised myself I wouldn’t speak of this. But—”

  She was interrupted by a rumbling sound somewhere out on the lake. A glow appeared on the horizon. It got brighter and brighter, until I could see a column of fire moving across the surface of the water, coming toward us.

  I stood and reached for my sword. “What is that?”

  Calypso sighed. “A visitor. ”

  As the column of fire reached the beach. Calypso stood and bowed to it formally. The flames dissipated, and standing before us was a tall man in gray overalls and a metal leg brace, his beard and hair smoldering with fire.

  “Lord Hephaestus,” Calypso said. “This is a rare honor. ”

  The fire god grunted. “Calypso. Beautiful as always. Would you excuse us, please, my dear? I need to have a word with our young Percy Jackson. ”

  ***

  Hephaestus sat down clumsily at the dinner table and ordered a Pepsi. The invisible servant brought him one, opened it too suddenly, and sprayed soda all over the gods work clothes. Hephaestus roared and spat a few curses and swatted the can away.

  “Stupid servants,” he muttered. “Good automatons are what she needs. They never act up!”

  “Hephaestus,” I said, “what’s going on? Is Annabeth—”

  “She’s fine,” he said. “Resourceful girl, that one. Found her way back, told me the whole story. She’s worried sick, you know. ”

  “You haven’t told her I’m okay?”

  “That’s not for me to say,” Hephaestus said. “Everyone thinks you’re dead. I had to be sure you were coming back before I s tarted telling everyone where you were. ”

  “What do you mean?” I said. “Of course I’m coming back!”

  Hephaestus studied me skeptically. He fished something out of his pocket—a metal disk the size of an iPod. He clicked a button and it expanded into a miniature bronze TV. On the screen was news footage of Mount St. Helens, a huge plume of fire and ash trailing into the sky.

  “Still uncertain about further eruptions,” the newscaster was saying. “Authorities have ordered the evacuation of almost half a million people as a precaution. Meanwhile, ash has fallen as far away as Lake Tahoe and Vancouver, and the entire Mount St. Helens area is closed to traffic within a hundred-mile radius. While no deaths have been reported, minor injuries and illnesses include—”

  Hephaestus switched it off. “You caused quite an explosion. ”

  I stared at the blank bronze screen. Half a million people evacuated? Injuries. Illness. What had I done?

  “The telekhines were scattered,” the god told me. “Some vaporized. Some got away, no doubt. I don’t think they’ll be using my forge any time soon. On the other hand, neither will I. the explosion caused Typon to stir in his sleep. We’ll have to wait and see—”

  “I couldn’t release him, could I? I mean, I’m not that powerful!”

  The god grunted. “Not that powerful, eh? Could have fooled me. You’re the son of the Earthshaker, lad. You don’t know your own strength. ”

  That’s the last thing I
wanted him to say. I hadn’t been in control of myself in that mountain. I’d released so much energy I’d almost vaporized myself, drained all the life out of me. Now I found out I’d nearly destroyed the Northwest U. S. and almost woken the most horrible monster ever imprisoned by the gods. Maybe I was too dangerous. Maybe it was safer for my friends to think I was dead.

  “What about Grover and Tyson?” I asked.

  Hephaestus shook his head. “No word, I’m afraid. I suppose the labyrinth has them. ”

  “So what am I supposed to do?”

  Hephaestus winced. “Don’t ever ask an old cripple for advice, lad. But I’ll tell you this. You’ve met my wife?”

  “Aphrodite. ”

  “That’s her. She’s a tricky one, ad. Be careful of love. It’ll twist your brain around and leave you thinking up is down and right is wrong. ”

  I thought about my meeting with Aphrodite, in the back of a white Cadillac in the desert last winter. She’d told me that she had taken a special interest in me, and she’d be making things hard for me in the romance department, just because she liked me.

  “Is this part of her plan?” I asked. “Did she land me here?”

  “Possibly. Hard to say with her. But if you decide to leave this place—and I don’t say what’s right or wrong—then I promised you an answer to your quest. I promised you the way to Daedalus. Well now, here’s the thing. It has nothing to do with Ariadne’s string. Not really. Sure, the string work. That’s what the Titan’s army will be after. Btu the best way through the maze…Theseus had the princess’s help. And the princess was a regular mortal. Not a drop of god blood in her. But she was clever, and she could see, lad. She could see very clearly. So what I’m saying—I think you know how to navigate the maze. ”

  It finally sank in. why hadn’t I seen it before? Hera had been right. The answer was there all the time.

  “Yeah,” I said. “Yeah, I know. ”

  “Then you’ll need to decide whether or not you’re leaving. ”

  “I…” I wanted to say yes. Of course I would. But the words stuck in my throat. I found myself looking out at the lake, and suddenly the idea of leaving seemed very hard.

  “Don’t decide yet,” Hephaestus advised. “Wait until daybreak. Daybreak is a good time for decisions. ”

  “Will Daedalus even help us?” I asked. “I mean, if he gives Luke a way to navigate the Labyrinth, we’re dead. I saw dreams about…Daedalus killed his nephew. He turned bitter and angry and—”

  “It isn’t easy being a brilliant inventor,” Hephaestus rumbled. “Always alone. Always misunderstood. Easy to turn bitter, make horrible mistakes. People are more difficult to work with than machines. And when you break a person, he can’t be fixed. ”

  Hephaestus brushed the last drops of Pepsi off his work clothes. “Daedalus started well enough. He helped the Princess Ariadne and Theseus because he felt sorry for them. He tried to do a good deed. And everything in his life went bad because of it. Was that fair?” The god shrugged. “I don’t know if Daedalus will help you, lad, but don’t judge someone until you’ve stood at his forge and worked with his hammer, eh?”

 

    The Blood of Olympus Read onlineThe Blood of OlympusThe Lightning Thief Read onlineThe Lightning ThiefThe Hidden Oracle Read onlineThe Hidden OracleThe Dark Prophecy Read onlineThe Dark ProphecyThe Sea of Monsters Read onlineThe Sea of MonstersThe Sword of Summer Read onlineThe Sword of SummerThe Lost Hero Read onlineThe Lost HeroThe Ship of the Dead Read onlineThe Ship of the DeadCamp Half-Blood Confidential Read onlineCamp Half-Blood ConfidentialThe Burning Maze Read onlineThe Burning MazeThe Battle of the Labyrinth Read onlineThe Battle of the LabyrinthThe Hammer of Thor Read onlineThe Hammer of ThorThe Last Olympian Read onlineThe Last OlympianThe Red Pyramid Read onlineThe Red PyramidThe Maze of Bones Read onlineThe Maze of BonesThe Son of Sobek Read onlineThe Son of SobekThe Titans Curse Read onlineThe Titans CurseThe Staff of Serapis Read onlineThe Staff of SerapisThe Crown of Ptolemy Read onlineThe Crown of PtolemyBig Red Tequila Read onlineBig Red TequilaPercy Jackson: The Complete Series Read onlinePercy Jackson: The Complete SeriesVespers Rising Read onlineVespers RisingThe Lightning Thief: The Graphic Novel Read onlineThe Lightning Thief: The Graphic NovelThe Mark of Athena Read onlineThe Mark of AthenaThe House of Hades Read onlineThe House of HadesThe Son of Neptune Read onlineThe Son of NeptuneThe Demigod Diaries Read onlineThe Demigod DiariesThe Serpents Shadow Read onlineThe Serpents ShadowThe Titan's Curse pjato-3 Read onlineThe Titan's Curse pjato-3The Demigods of Olympus: An Interactive Adventure Read onlineThe Demigods of Olympus: An Interactive AdventureThe Tyrant's Tomb Read onlineThe Tyrant's TombThe Demigod Files Read onlineThe Demigod FilesPercy Jackson and the Battle of the Labyrinth Read onlinePercy Jackson and the Battle of the LabyrinthThe Throne of Fire Read onlineThe Throne of FireThe Serpent's Shadow (The Kane Chronicles, Book Three) Read onlineThe Serpent's Shadow (The Kane Chronicles, Book Three)Mission Road Read onlineMission RoadThe Devil Went Down to Austin Read onlineThe Devil Went Down to AustinThe Tower of Nero Read onlineThe Tower of NeroThe Heroes of Olympus: The Complete Series Read onlineThe Heroes of Olympus: The Complete SeriesRebel Island Read onlineRebel IslandThe Trials of Apollo Camp Jupiter Classified: A Probatio's Journal Read onlineThe Trials of Apollo Camp Jupiter Classified: A Probatio's JournalPercy Jackson's Greek Gods Read onlinePercy Jackson's Greek GodsThe Last King of Texas Read onlineThe Last King of TexasThe Throne of Fire kc-2 Read onlineThe Throne of Fire kc-2Magnus Chase and the Sword of Summer Read onlineMagnus Chase and the Sword of SummerMaze of Bones - 39 Clues 01 Read onlineMaze of Bones - 39 Clues 01Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard, Book 2: The Hammer of Thor Read onlineMagnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard, Book 2: The Hammer of ThorKane 2 - The Throne of Fire Read onlineKane 2 - The Throne of FireThe Last Olympian pjato-5 Read onlineThe Last Olympian pjato-5The Battle of the Labyrinth pjato-4 Read onlineThe Battle of the Labyrinth pjato-4From Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training Camp (Trials of Apollo) Read onlineFrom Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training Camp (Trials of Apollo)For Magnus Chase: Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse Worlds: Your Introduction to Deities, Mythical Beings, & Fantastic Creatures Read onlineFor Magnus Chase: Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse Worlds: Your Introduction to Deities, Mythical Beings, & Fantastic CreaturesSouthtown tn-5 Read onlineSouthtown tn-5From Percy Jackson_Camp Half-Blood Confidential Read onlineFrom Percy Jackson_Camp Half-Blood ConfidentialThe Lightning Thief pjatob-1 Read onlineThe Lightning Thief pjatob-1The Sea of Monsters pjatob-2 Read onlineThe Sea of Monsters pjatob-2For Magnus Chase_Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse Worlds Read onlineFor Magnus Chase_Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse WorldsPercy Jackson and the Bronze Dragon Read onlinePercy Jackson and the Bronze DragonPercy Jackson: The Complete Series (Books 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) Read onlinePercy Jackson: The Complete Series (Books 1, 2, 3, 4, 5)The Mark of Athena (The Heroes of Olympus, Book Three) Read onlineThe Mark of Athena (The Heroes of Olympus, Book Three)The Heroes of Olympus: The Demigod Diaries Read onlineThe Heroes of Olympus: The Demigod DiariesThe Last King of Texas - Rick Riordan Read onlineThe Last King of Texas - Rick RiordanPercy Jackson and the Sword of Hades Read onlinePercy Jackson and the Sword of HadesBrooklyn House Magician's Manual Read onlineBrooklyn House Magician's ManualThe Kane Chronicles, Book One: The Red Pyramid Read onlineThe Kane Chronicles, Book One: The Red PyramidThe Trials of Apollo, Book Three: The Burning Maze Read onlineThe Trials of Apollo, Book Three: The Burning MazeThe Demigods of Olympus Read onlineThe Demigods of OlympusBig Red Tiquila - Rick Riordan Read onlineBig Red Tiquila - Rick RiordanDemigods and Magicians Read onlineDemigods and MagiciansPercy Jackson and The Stolen Chariot Read onlinePercy Jackson and The Stolen ChariotThe Mark of Athena hoo-3 Read onlineThe Mark of Athena hoo-3From Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training Camp Read onlineFrom Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training CampThe House of Hades hoo-4 Read onlineThe House of Hades hoo-4The Devil went down to Austin tn-4 Read onlineThe Devil went down to Austin tn-49 from the Nine Worlds (Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard) Read online9 from the Nine Worlds (Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard)The Trials of Apollo, Book One: The Hidden Oracle Read onlineThe Trials of Apollo, Book One: The Hidden OracleThe Serpent's Shadow kc-3 Read onlineThe Serpent's Shadow kc-3The Son of Neptune hoo-2 Read onlineThe Son of Neptune hoo-2The widower’s two step tn-2 Read onlineThe widower’s two step tn-2The Lost Hero hoo-1 Read onlineThe Lost Hero hoo-1