DISCLAIMER: I DO NOT OWN ANTHING PERCY JACKSON RELATED! IT IS STILL OWNED BY THE GREAT AND POWERFUL RICK RIORDAN!
ENJOY!
The surface of the river churned with
bubbles. The crocodile was gone, but standing in the marsh about twenty feet
away was a teenage guy in jeans and a faded orange T-shirt that said CAMP
something. I couldn’t read the rest. He looked a little older than me—maybe
seventeen—with tousled black hair and sea-green eyes. What really caught my
attention was his sword—a straight double-edged blade glowing with faint bronze
light.
I’m
not sure which of us was more surprised.
For a second, Camper Boy just stared at
me. He noted my khopesh and wand, and I got the feeling that he actually saw
these things as they were. Normal mortals have trouble seeing magic. Their
brains can’t interpret it, so they might look at my sword, for instance, and see
a baseball bat or a walking stick.
But
this kid . . . he was different. I figured he must be a magician. The only
problem was, I’d met most of the magicians in the North American nomes, and I’d
never seen this guy before. I’d also never seen a sword like that. Everything
about him seemed . . . un-Egyptian.
“The crocodile,” I said, trying to keep
my voice calm and even. “Where did it go?”Camper Boy frowned. “You’re
welcome.”
“What”
“I stuck that croc in the rump.” He
mimicked the action with his sword. “That’s why it vomited you up. So, you’re
welcome. What were you doing in there?”
I’ll admit I wasn’t in
the best mood. I smelled. I hurt. And, yeah, I was a little embarrassed: the
mighty Carter Kane, head of Brooklyn House, had been disgorged from a croc’s
mouth like a giant hairball.
“I was resting,” I snapped. “What do you
think I was doing? Now, who are you, and why are you fighting my
monster?”
“Your monster?” The guy trudged
toward me through the water. He didn’t seem to have any trouble with the mud.
“Look, man, I don’t know who you are, but that crocodile has been terrorizing
Long Island for weeks. I take that kind of personal, as this is my home turf. A
few days ago, it ate one of our pegasi.”
A jolt went up my spine like I’d backed
into an electric fence. “Did you say pegasi?”
He
waved the question aside. “Is it your monster or not?”
“I don’t own it!” I growled. “I’m trying
to stop it! Now, where—”
“The croc headed that way.” He pointed
his sword to the south. “I would already be chasing it, but you surprised
me.”
He sized me up, which was disconcerting
since he was half a foot taller. I still couldn’t read his T-shirt except or
the word CAMP. Around his neck hung a leather strap with some colorful clay
beads, like a kid’s arts and crafts project. He wasn’t carrying a magician’s
pack or a wand. Maybe he kept them in the Duat? Or maybe he was just a
delusional mortal who’d accidentally found a magic sword and thought he was a
superhero. Ancient relics can really mess with your mind.
Finally he shook his
head. “I give up. Son of Ares? You’ve got to be a half-blood, but what happened
to your sword? It’s all bent.”
“It’s a khopesh.” My shock was
rapidly turning to anger. “It’s supposed to be curved.”
But
I wasn’t thinking about the sword. Camper Boy had just called me a
half-blood? Maybe I hadn’t heard him right. Maybe he meant something
else. But my dad was African American. My mom was white. Half-blood
wasn’t a word I liked.
“Just get out of here,” I said, gritting
my teeth. “I’ve got a crocodile to catch.”
“Dude, I have a crocodile to
catch,” he insisted. “Last time you tried, it ate you.
Remember?”
My
fingers tightened around my sword hilt. “I had every-thing under control. I was
about to summon a fist—”
For
what happened next, I take full responsibility. I didn’t mean it. Honestly. But
I was angry. And as I may have mentioned, I’m not always good at channeling
words of power. While I was in the crocodile’s belly, I’d been preparing to
summon the Fist of Horus, a giant glowing blue hand that can pulverize doors,
walls, and pretty much anything else that gets in your way. My plan had been to
punch my way out of the monster. Gross, yes; but hopefully effective. I guess
that spell was still in my head, ready to be triggered like a loaded gun. Facing
Camper Boy, I was furious, not to mentioned dazed and confused; so when I meant
to say the English word fist, it came out in Ancient Egyptian instead:
Khefa.
Such a simple
hieroglyph:
You
wouldn’t think it could cause so much trouble.
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