They were halfway to the car when Meg stopped, noticing that the lights were on in the greenhouses.
‘Meg,’ her father said, his voice as broken as the gravel under their feet. ‘Come on, sweetheart.’
‘But Er-klees,’ she said. ‘And the others.’
‘We can’t bring them,’ Daddy said, swallowing back a sob.
Meg had never heard her father cry before. It made her feel like the earth was dropping out from underneath her.
‘The magic seeds?’ she asked. ‘We can plant them – where we’re going?’
The idea of going somewhere else seemed impossible, scary. She’d never known any home but Aeithales.
‘We can’t, Meg.’ Daddy sounded like he could barely talk. ‘They have to grow here. And now …’
He looked back at the house, floating on its massive stone supports, its windows ablaze with gold light. But something was wrong. Dark shapes moved across the hillside – men, or something like men, dressed in black, encircling the property. And more dark shapes swirling overhead, wings blotting out the stars.
Daddy grabbed her hand. ‘No time, sweetheart. We have to leave. Now.’
Meg’s last memory of Aeithales: she sat in the back of her father’s station wagon, her face and hands pressed against the rear window, trying to keep the lights of the house in view for as long as possible. They’d driven only halfway down the hill when their home erupted in a blossom of fire.
I gasped, my senses suddenly yanked back to the present. Meg removed her hand from my wrist.
I stared at her in amazement, my sense of reality wobbling so much I was afraid I might fall into the strawberry pit. ‘Meg, how did you …?’
She picked at a callus on her palm. ‘Dunno. Just needed to.’
Such a very Meg answer. Still, the memories had been so painful and vivid they made my chest hurt, as if I’d been hit with a defibrillator.
How had Meg shared her past with me? I knew satyrs could create an empathy link with their closest friends. Grover Underwood had one with Percy Jackson, which he said explained why he sometimes got an inexplicable craving for blueberry pancakes. Did Meg have a similar talent, perhaps because we were linked as master and servant?
I didn’t know.
I did know that Meg was hurting, much more than she expressed. The tragedies of her short life had started before her father’s death. They had started here. These ruins were all that remained of a life that could have been.
I wanted to hug her. And, believe me, that was not a feeling I had often. It was liable to result in an elbow to my ribcage or a sword hilt to my nose.
‘Did you …?’ I faltered. ‘Did you have these memories all along? Do you know what your father was trying to do here?’
A listless shrug. She grabbed a handful of dust and trickled it into the pit as if sowing seeds.
‘Phillip,’ Meg said, as if the name had just occurred to her. ‘My dad’s name was Phillip McCaffrey.’
The name made me think of the Macedonian king, father of Alexander. A good fighter, but no fun at all. Never any interest in music or poetry or even archery. With Philip it was all phalanxes, all the time. Boring.
‘Phillip McCaffrey was a very good father,’ I said, trying to keep the bitterness out of my voice. I myself did not have much experience with good fathers.
‘He smelled like mulch,’ Meg remembered. ‘In a good way.’
I didn’t know the difference between a good mulch smell and a bad mulch smell, but I nodded respectfully.
I gazed at the row of greenhouses – their silhouettes barely visible against the red-black night sky. Phillip McCaffrey had obviously been a talented man. Perhaps a botanist? Definitely a mortal favoured by the goddess Demeter. How else could he have created a house like Aeithales, in a place with such natural power? What had he been working on, and what had he meant when he said his family had been doing the same research for thousands of years? Humans rarely thought in terms of millennia. They were lucky if they even knew the names of their great-grandparents.
Most important, what had happened to Aeithales, and why? Who had driven the McCaffreys from their home and forced them east to New York? That last question, unfortunately, was the only one I felt I could answer.
‘Caligula did this,’ I said, gesturing at the ruined cylinders on the hillside. ‘That’s what Incitatus meant when he said the emperor took care of this place.’
Meg turned towards me, her face like stone. ‘We’re going to find out. Tomorrow. You, me, Grover. We’ll find these people, Piper and Jason.’
Arrows rattled in my quiver, but I couldn’t be sure if it was the Arrow of Dodona buzzing for attention, or my own body trembling. ‘And if Piper and Jason don’t know anything helpful?’
Meg brushed the dust from her hands. ‘They’re part of the seven, right? Percy Jackson’s friends?’
‘Well … yes.’
‘Then they’ll know. They’ll help. We’ll find Caligula. We’ll explore this mazy place and free the Sibyl and stop the fires and whatever.’
I admired her ability to summarize our quest in such eloquent terms.
On the other hand, I was not excited about exploring the mazy place, even if we had the help of two more powerful demigods. Ancient Rome had had powerful demigods too. Many of them tried to overthrow Caligula. All of them had died.
I kept coming back to my vision of the Sibyl, apologizing for her terrible news. Since when did an Oracle apologize?
I would spare you if I could. I would spare her.
The Sibyl had insisted I come to her rescue. Only I could free her, though it was a trap.
I never liked traps. They reminded me of my old crush Britomartis. Ugh, the number of Burmese tiger pits I’d fallen into for the sake of that goddess.
Meg swung her legs round. ‘I’m going to sleep. You should too.’
She hopped off the wall and picked her way across the hillside, heading back towards the Cistern. Since she had not actually ordered me to go to sleep, I stayed on the ledge for a long time, staring down into the strawberry-clogged chasm below, listening for the fluttering wings of ill omen.
12
O, Pinto, Pinto!
Wherefore art thou puke yellow?
I’ll hide in the back
Gods of Olympus, had I not suffered enough?
Driving from Palm Springs to Malibu with Meg and Grover would have been bad enough. Skirting wildfire evacuation zones and the LA morning rush hour made it worse. But did we have to make the journey in Gleeson Hedge’s mustard-coloured 1979 Ford Pinto coupé?
‘Are you kidding?’ I asked when I found my friends waiting with Gleeson at the car. ‘Don’t any of the cacti own a better – I mean, another vehicle?’
Coach Hedge glowered. ‘Hey, buddy, you should be grateful. This is a classic! Belonged to my granddaddy goat. I’ve kept it in great shape, so don’t you guys dare wreck it.’
I thought about my most recent experiences with cars: the sun chariot crashing nose-first into the lake at Camp Half-Blood; Percy Jackson’s Prius getting wedged between two peach trees in a Long Island orchard; a stolen Mercedes swerving through the streets of Indianapolis, driven by a trio of demon fruit spirits.
‘We’ll take good care of it,’ I promised.
Coach Hedge conferred with Grover, making sure he knew how to find the McLean house in Malibu.
‘The McLeans should still be there,’ Hedge mused. ‘At least, I hope so.’
‘What do you mean?’ Grover asked. ‘Why would they not be there?’
Hedge coughed. ‘Anyway, good luck! Give Piper my best if you see her. Poor kid …’
He turned and trotted back up the hill.
The inside of the Pinto smelled like hot polyester and patchouli, which brought back bad memories of disco-dancing with Travolta. (Fun fact: in Italian, his surname means overwhelmed, which perfectly describes what his cologne does.)
Grover took the wheel, since Gleeson trusted only him with the k
eys. (Rude.)
Meg rode shotgun, her red sneakers propped on the dashboard as she amused herself by growing bougainvillea vines around her ankles. She seemed in good spirits, considering last night’s share session of childhood tragedy. That made one of us. I could barely think about the losses she’d suffered without blinking back tears.
Luckily, I had lots of room to cry in privacy, since I was stuck in the back seat.
We started west on Interstate 10. As we passed by Moreno Valley, it took me a while to realize what was wrong: rather than slowly changing to green, the landscape remained brown, the temperature oppressive, and the air dry and sour, as if the Mojave Desert had forgotten its boundaries and spread all the way to Riverside. To the north, the sky was a soupy haze, like the entire San Bernardino Forest was on fire.
By the time we reached Pomona and hit bumper-to-bumper traffic, our Pinto was shuddering and wheezing like a warthog with heatstroke.
Grover glanced in the rear-view mirror at a BMW riding our tail.
‘Don’t Pintos explode if they’re hit from behind?’ he asked.
‘Only sometimes,’ I said.
Back in my sun-chariot days, riding a vehicle that burst into flames was never something that bothered me, but after Grover brought it up I kept looking behind me, mentally willing the BMW to back off.
I was in desperate need of breakfast – not just cold leftovers from last night’s enchilada run. I would’ve smote a Greek city for a good cup of coffee and perhaps a nice long drive in the opposite direction from where we were going.
My mind began to drift. I didn’t know if I was having actual waking dreams, shaken loose by my visions the day before, or if my consciousness was trying to escape the back seat of the Pinto, but I found myself reliving memories of the Erythraean Sibyl.
I remembered her name now: Herophile, friend of heroes.
I saw her homeland, the Bay of Erythrae, on the coast of what would some day be Turkey. A crescent of windswept golden hills, studded with conifers, undulated down to the cold blue waters of the Aegean. In a small glen near the mouth of a cave, a shepherd in homespun wool knelt beside his wife, the naiad of a nearby spring, as she gave birth to their child. I will spare you the details, except for this: as the mother screamed in her final push, the child emerged from the womb not crying but singing – her beautiful voice filling the air with the sound of prophecies.
As you can imagine, that got my attention. From that moment on, the girl was sacred to Apollo. I blessed her as one of my Oracles.
I remembered Herophile as a young woman wandering the Mediterranean to share her wisdom. She sang to anyone who would listen – kings, heroes, priests of my temples. All struggled to transcribe her prophetic lyrics. Imagine having to commit the entire songbook of Hamilton to memory in a single sitting, without the ability to rewind, and you can appreciate their problem.
Herophile simply had too much good advice to share. Her voice was so enchanting it was impossible for listeners to catch every detail. She couldn’t control what she sang or when. She never repeated herself. You just had to be there.
She predicted the fall of Troy. She foresaw the rise of Alexander the Great. She advised Aeneas on where he should establish the colony that would one day become Rome. But did the Romans listen to all her advice, like Watch out for emperors, Don’t go crazy with the gladiator stuff or Togas are not a good fashion statement? No. No, they didn’t.
For nine hundred years, Herophile roamed the earth. She did her best to help, but, despite my blessings and occasional deliveries of pick-me-up flower arrangements, she became discouraged. Everyone she’d known in her youth was dead. She’d seen civilizations rise and fall. She’d heard too many priests and heroes say, Wait, what? Could you repeat that? Let me get a pencil.
She returned home to her mother’s hillside in Erythrae. The spring had dried up centuries before, and with it her mother’s spirit, but Herophile settled in the nearby cave. She helped supplicants whenever they came to seek her wisdom, but her voice was never the same.
Gone was her beautiful singing. Whether she’d lost her confidence, or whether the gift of prophecy had simply changed into a different sort of curse, I couldn’t be sure. Herophile spoke haltingly, leaving out important words that the listener would have to guess. Sometimes her voice failed altogether. In frustration, she scribbled lines on dried leaves, leaving them for the supplicant to arrange in the proper order to find meaning.
The last time I saw Herophile … yes, the year was 1509 CE. I’d coaxed her out of her cave for one last visit to Rome, where Michelangelo was painting her portrait on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Apparently, she was being celebrated for some obscure prophecy long ago, when she’d predicted the birth of Jesus the Nazarene.
‘I don’t know, Michael,’ Herophile said, sitting next to him on his scaffold, watching him paint. ‘It’s beautiful, but my arms are not that …’ Her voice seized up. ‘Eight letters, starts with M.’
Michelangelo tapped his paintbrush to his lips. ‘Muscular?’
Herophile nodded vigorously.
‘I can fix that,’ Michelangelo promised.
Afterwards, Herophile returned to her cave for good. I’ll admit I lost track of her. I assumed she had faded away, like so many other ancient Oracles. Yet now here she was, in Southern California, at the mercy of Caligula.
I really should have kept sending those floral arrangements.
Now, all I could do was try to make up for my negligence. Herophile was still my Oracle, as much as Rachel Dare at Camp Half-Blood, or the ghost of poor Trophonius in Indianapolis. Whether it was a trap or not, I couldn’t leave her in a chamber of lava, shackled with molten manacles. I began to wonder if maybe, just maybe, Zeus had been right to send me to earth, to correct the wrongs I had allowed to happen.
I quickly shoved that thought aside. No. This punishment was entirely unfair. Still, ugh. Is anything worse than realizing you might agree with your father?
Grover navigated around the northern edge of Los Angeles, through traffic that moved almost as slowly as Athena’s brainstorming process.
I don’t wish to be unfair to Southern California. When the place was not on fire, or trapped in a brown haze of smog, or rumbling with earthquakes, or sliding into the sea, or choked with traffic, there were things I liked about it: the music scene, the palm trees, the beaches, the nice days, the pretty people. Yet I understood why Hades had located the main entrance to the Underworld here. Los Angeles was a magnet for human aspirations – the perfect place for mortals to gather, starry-eyed with dreams of fame, then fail, die and circle down the drain, flushed into oblivion.
There, you see? I can be a balanced observer!
Every so often I looked skyward, hoping to see Leo Valdez flying overhead on his bronze dragon, Festus. I wanted him to be carrying a large banner that said EVERYTHING’S COOL! The new moon wasn’t for two more days, true, but maybe Leo had finished his rescue mission early! He could land on the highway, tell us that Camp Jupiter had been saved from whatever threat had faced them. Then he could ask Festus to blowtorch the cars in front of us to speed up our travels.
Alas, no bronze dragon circled above, though it would’ve been hard to spot. The entire sky was bronze coloured.
‘So, Grover,’ I said, after a few decades on the Pacific Coast Highway, ‘have you ever met Piper or Jason?’
Grover shook his head. ‘Seems strange, I know. We’ve all been in SoCal for so long. But I’ve been busy with the fires. Jason and Piper have been questing and going to school and whatever. I just never got the chance. Coach says they’re … nice.’
I got the feeling he’d been about to say something other than nice.
‘Is there a problem we should know about?’ I asked.
Grover drummed his fingers on the steering wheel. ‘Well … they’ve been under a lot of stress. First, they were looking for Leo Valdez. Then they did some other quests. Then things started to go bad for Mr McLean.’
> Meg glanced up from braiding a bougainvillea. ‘Piper’s dad?’
Grover nodded. ‘He’s a famous actor, you know. Tristan McLean?’
A frisson of pleasure went up my back. I loved Tristan McLean in King of Sparta. And Jake Steel 2: The Return of Steel. For a mortal, that man had endless abs.
‘How did things go badly?’ I asked.
‘You don’t read celebrity news,’ Grover guessed.
Sad but true. With all my running around as a mortal, freeing ancient Oracles and fighting Roman megalomaniacs, I’d had zero time to keep up with juicy Hollywood gossip.
‘Messy break-up?’ I speculated. ‘Paternity suit? Did he say something horrible on Twitter?’
‘Not exactly,’ Grover said. ‘Let’s just … see how things are going when we get there. It might not be so bad.’
He said that in the way people do when they expect it to be exactly that bad.
By the time we made it to Malibu, it was nearly lunchtime. My stomach was turning itself inside out from hunger and car sickness. Me, who used to spend all day cruising in the sun Maserati, car sick. I blamed Grover. He drove with a heavy hoof.
On the bright side, our Pinto had not exploded, and we found the McLean house without incident.
Set back from the winding road, the mansion at 12 Oro del Mar clung to rocky cliffs overlooking the Pacific. From street level, the only visible parts were the white stucco security walls, the wrought-iron gates and an expanse of red-clay-tiled roofs.
The place would have radiated a sense of privacy and Zen tranquility had it not been for the moving trucks parked outside. The gates stood wide open. Troops of burly men were carting away sofas, tables and large works of art. Pacing back and forth at the end of the driveway, looking bedraggled and stunned, as if he’d just walked away from a car wreck, was Tristan McLean.
His hair was longer than I’d seen it in the films. Silky black locks swept across his shoulders. He’d put on weight, so he no longer resembled the sleek killing machine he’d been in King of Sparta. His white jeans were smeared with soot. His black T-shirt was torn at the collar. His loafers looked like a pair of overbaked potatoes.