Percy gets a roommate

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Ever come home and found your room messed up? Like some helpful person has tried to “clean” it, and suddenly you can’t find anything? And even if nothing is missing, you get that creepy feeling like somebody’s been looking through your private stuff and dusting everything with lemon furniture polish? I don't the closest to that was when Artemis went through my tent saying she was looking for pornos if I had any but she spent a suspicious amount of time near my dirty cloths but that’s kind of the way I imagine that it felt seeing Camp Half-Blood again.

On the surface, things didn’t look all that different. The Big House was still there with its blue gabled roof and its wraparound porch. The strawberry fields still baked in the sun. The same white-columned Greek buildings were scattered around the valley—the amphitheater, the combat arena, the dining pavilion overlooking Long Island Sound. And nestled between the woods and the creek were the same cabins—a crazy assortment of twelve buildings, each representing a different Olympian god.

But there was an air of danger now. You could tell something was wrong. Instead of playing volleyball in the sandpit, counselors and satyrs were stockpiling weapons in the tool shed. Dryads armed with bows and arrows talked nervously at the edge of the woods. The forest looked sickly, the grass in the meadow was pale yellow, and the fire marks on Half-Blood Hill stood out like ugly scars.

Somebody had messed with my second favorite place in the world, and I was not … well, a happy camper.

As we made our way to the Big House, I recognized a lot of kids from last summer. Nobody stopped to talk. Nobody said, “Welcome back.” Some did double takes when they saw Tyson, but most just walked grimly past and carried on with their duties—running messages, toting swords to sharpen on the grinding wheels. The camp felt like a military school. And believe me, I know. I’ve been undercover I'm plenty.

None of that mattered to Tyson. He was absolutely fascinated by everything he saw.

Tyson: “Whasthat!”

Percy: “The stables for pegasi, The winged horses.”

Tyson: “Whasthat!”

Kaze: “Um … those are the toilets.”

Tyson: “Whasthat!”

Percy: “The cabins for the campers. If they don’t know who your Olympian parent is, they put you in the Hermes cabin—that brown one over there—until you’re determined. Then, once they know, they put you in your dad or mom’s group.”

He looked at us in awe.

Tyson: “You … have a cabin?”

Percy: “Number three.”

He pointed to a low gray building made of sea stone.

Kaze: "Number one."

I pointed to my cabin. I don't care what it looked like.

Tyson: “You live with friends in the cabin?”

Percy/Kaze: “No. No, just me.”

I didn’t feel like explaining. The embarrassing truth: I was the only one who stayed in that cabin because I wasn’t supposed to be alive. The “Big Three” gods—Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades—had made a pact after World War II not to have any more children with mortals. We were more powerful than regular half-bloods. We were too unpredictable. When we got mad we tended to cause problems … like World War II, for instance. The “Big Three” pact had only been broken twice—once when Zeus sired Thalia and me, once when Poseidon sired Percy. None of us should’ve been born.

Thalia had gotten herself turned into a pine tree when she was twelve. Me … well, I was doing my best not to follow my sisters example. I had nightmares about what Zeus might turn me into if I were ever on the verge of death— a pine tree like thaila maybe. Or a cloud or even a star. But if he was going to turn me into anything he would of done so already I'm

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