Chapter Eight: Capture The Flag or Someone Else

630 42 15
                                    

Percy POV

Everybody cheered. We all headed down towards the amphitheater, where Apollo's cabin led a sing-along. We sang camp songs about the gods and ate toasted marshmallows and joked around, and the funny thing was, I didn't feel that anyone was staring at me anymore. I felt that I was home.


Later in the evening, when the sparks from the campfire were curling into a starry sky, the conch horn blew again, and we all filed back to our cabins. I didn't realize how exhausted I was until I collapsed on my borrowed sleeping bag.


My fingers curled around the Minotaur horn. I thought about my mom, but I had good thoughts: her smile, the bedtime stories she would read me when I was a kid, the way she would tell me not to let the bedbugs bite.


When I closed my eyes, I fell asleep instantly.


That was my first day at Camp Half-Blood.


I wish I'd known how briefly I would get to enjoy my new home.


The next few days I settled into a routine that felt almost normal, if you don't count the fact that I was getting lessons from satyrs, nymphs and a centaur.


Each morning I took Ancient Greek from Annabeth and Isabella, who took turns and we talked about the gods and goddesses in the present tense, which was kind of weird.


I haven't seen Y/N in a while after what hearing the new that he could have saved me and my mother. At first I was upset, but the anger slowly died down.


I also discovered Annabeth was right about my dyslexia: Ancient Greek wasn't that hard for me to read. At least, no harder than English. After a couple of mornings, I could stumble through a few lines of Homer without too much headache.


The rest of the day, I'd rotate through outdoor activities, looking for something I was good at. Chiron tried to teach me archery, but we found out pretty quick I wasn't any good with a bow and arrow. He didn't complain, even when he had to desnag a stray arrow out of his tail.


Foot racing? No good either. The wood-nymph instructors left me in the dust. They told me not to worry about it. They'd had centuries of practice running away from lovesick gods. But still, it was a little humiliating to be slower than a tree.


And wrestling? Forget it. Every time I got on the mat, Clarisse would pulverize me.


"There's more where that came from, punk," she'd mumble in my ear.


The only thing I really excelled at was canoeing, and that wasn't the kind of heroic skill people expected to see from the kid who had beaten the Minotaur.


I knew the senior campers and counsellors were watching me, trying to decide who my dad was, but they weren't having an easy time of it. I wasn't as strong as the Ares kids, or as good at archery as the Apollo kids. I didn't have Hephaestus's skill with metalwork or – gods forbid – Dionysus's way with vine plants. Luke told me I might be a child of Hermes, a kind of jack-of-all-trades, master of none. But I got the feeling he was just trying to make me feel better. He really didn't know what to make of me either.

The Irregular of Olympus (Annabeth Chase x Male Reader)Where stories live. Discover now