Rick Riordan
Percy Jackson and the Olympians
77
77
"What are you doing here?" I asked her.
"Moo!"
Her voice was urgent, like she was trying to warn me of something.
"How did you get here?" I asked. We were thousands of miles from Long Island, hundreds of
miles inland. There was no way she could've swum all the way here. And yet, here she was.
Bessie swam in a circle and butted her head against the side of the dam. "Moo!"
She wanted me to come with her. She was telling me to hurry.
"I can't," I told her. "My friends are inside."
She looked at me with her sad brown eyes. Then she gave one more urgent "Mooo!," did a
flip, and disappeared into the water.
I hesitated. Something was wrong. She was trying to tell me that. I considered jumping over
the side and following her, but then I tensed. The hairs on my arms bristled. I looked down the dam
road to the east and I saw two men walking slowly toward me. They wore gray camouflage outfits
that flickered over skeletal bodies.
They passed through a group of kids and pushed them aside. A kid yelled, "Hey!" One of the
warriors turned, his face changing momentarily into a skull.
"Ah!" the kid yelled, and his whole group backed away.
I ran for the visitor center.
I was almost to the stairs when I heard tires squeal. On the west side of the dam, a black van
swerved to a stop in the middle of the road, nearly plowing into some old people.
The van doors opened and more skeleton warriors piled out. I was surrounded.
I bolted down the stairs and through the museum entrance. The security guard at the metal
detector yelled, "Hey, kid!" But I didn't stop.
I ran through the exhibits and ducked behind a tour group. I looked for my friends, but I
couldn't see them anywhere. Where was the dam snack bar?
"Stop!" The metal-detector guy yelled.
There was no place to go but into an elevator with the tour group. I ducked inside just as the
door closed.
"We'll be going down seven hundred feet," our tour guide said cheerfully. She was a park
ranger, with long black hair pulled back in a ponytail and tinted glasses. I guess she hadn't noticed
that I was being chased. "Don't worry, ladies and gentlemen, the elevator hardly ever breaks."
"Does this go to the snack bar?" I asked her.
A few people behind me chuckled. The tour guide looked at me. Something about her gaze
made my skin tingle.
"To the turbines, young man," the lady said. "Weren't you listening to my fascinating
presentation upstairs?"
"Oh, uh, sure. Is there another way out of the dam?"
"It's a dead end," a tourist behind me said. "For heaven's sake. The only way out is the other
elevator."
The doors opened.
"Go right ahead, folks," the tour guide told us. "Another ranger is waiting for you at the end of
the corridor."
I didn't have much choice but to go out with the group.
"And young man," the tour guide called. I looked back. She'd taken off her glasses. Her eyes
were startlingly gray, like storm clouds. "There is always a way out for those clever enough to find
it."
The doors closed with the tour guide still inside, leaving me alone.
Before I could think too much about the woman in the elevator, a ding came from around the
corner. The second elevator was opening, and I heard an unmistakable sound—the clattering of
skeleton teeth.
I ran after the tour group, through a tunnel carved out of solid rock. It seemed to run forever.
The walls were moist, and the air hummed with electricity and the roar of water. I came out on a U-
shaped balcony that overlooked this huge warehouse area. Fifty feet below, enormous turbines
were running. It was a big room, but I didn't see any other exit, unless I wanted to jump into the
turbines and get churned up to make electricity. I didn't.