Rick Riordan
Percy Jackson and the Olympians
Chapter Nine
Two Snakes Save My Life
49
49
I love New York. You can pop out of the Underworld in Central Park, hail a taxi, head down
Fifth Avenue with a giant hellhound loping along behind you, and nobody even looks at you funny.
Of course, the Mist helped. People probably couldn't see Mrs. O'Leary, or maybe they
thought she was a large, loud, very friendly truck.
I took the risk of using my mom's cell phone to call Annabeth for the second time. I'd called
her once from the runnel but only reached her voice mail. I'd gotten surprisingly good reception,
seeing as I was at the mythological center of the world and all, but I didn't want to see what my
mom's roaming charges were going to be.
This time, Annabeth picked up.
"Hey," I said. "You get my message?"
"Percy, where have you been? Your message said almost nothing! We've been worried sick!"
"I'll fill you in later," I said, though how I was going to do that I had no idea. "Where are you?"
"We're on our way like you asked, almost to the Queens—Midtown Tunnel. But, Percy, what
are you planning? We've left the camp virtually undefended, and there's no way the gods—"
"Trust me," I said. "I'll see you there."
I hung up. My hands were trembling. I wasn't sure if it was a leftover reaction from my dip in
the Styx, or anticipation of what I was about to do. If this didn't work, being invulnerable wasn't going
to save me from getting blasted to bits.
It was late afternoon when the taxi dropped me at the Empire State Building. Mrs. O'Leary
bounded up and down Fifth Avenue, licking cabs and sniffing hot dog carts. Nobody seemed to
notice her, although people did swerve away and look confused when she came close.
I whistled for her to heel as three white vans pulled up to the curb. They said Delphi
Strawberry Service, which was the cover name for Camp Half-Blood. I'd never seen all three vans in
the same place at once, though I knew they shuttled our fresh produce into the city.
The first van was driven by Argus, our many-eyed security chief. The other two were driven
by harpies, who are basically demonic human/chicken hybrids with bad attitudes. We used the
harpies mostly for cleaning the camp, but they did pretty well in midtown traffic too.
The doors slid open. A bunch of campers climbed out, some of them looking a little green
from the long drive. I was glad so many had come: Pollux, Silena Beauregard, the Stoll brothers,
Michael Yew, Jake Mason, Katie Gardner, and Annabeth, along with most of their siblings. Chiron
came out of the van last. His horse half was compacted into his magic wheelchair, so he used the
handicap lift. The Ares cabin wasn't here, but I tried not to get too angry about that. Clarisse was a
stubborn idiot. End of story.
I did a head count: forty campers in all.
Not many to fight a war, but it was still the largest group of half-bloods I'd ever seen gathered
in one place outside camp. Everyone looked nervous, and I understood why. We were probably
sending out so much demigod aura that every monster in the northeastern United States knew we
were here.
As I looked at their faces—all these campers I'd known for so many summers—a nagging
voice whispered in my mind: One of them is a spy.
But I couldn't dwell on that. They were my friends. I needed them.
Then I remembered Kronos's evil smile. You can't count on friends. They will always let you
down.
Annabeth came up to me. She was dressed in black camouflage with her Celestial bronze
knife strapped to her arm and her laptop bag slung over her shoulder—ready for stabbing or surfing
the Internet, whichever came first.
She frowned. "What is it?"
"What's what?" I asked.
"You're looking at me funny."