Stories

The Midgard Serpent – Percy Jackson Fanfiction ~ Ch. 13

by Emery Pugh

Chapter 13

Godric

I thought I wouldn’t be able to sleep that night – but I was wrong. I passed out as soon as I laid down, not even changed into my pajamas.

For the first time in years, I had a solid night’s sleep. No demigod dreams or visions. I guess the Fates finally gave me a break.

I woke up naturally as the sun’s rays shone through the cabin window. Springing out of bed, I started packing a small bag for the quest – I had a small Celestial Bronze dagger, some matches, a book, a watch, and dozens of snack bars.

I took a glance back at my cabin as I walked outside, hoping it wouldn’t be the last time I see it.

The warm light of dawn filled the valley as I strolled towards Thalia’s pine tree with the Golden Fleece (which helps protect the camp through its powerful magic). We’re all supposed to meet here before our departure to Charleston, South Carolina, where we would meet the other part of the team from Camp Jupiter.

Sanderson and Andromeda arrived a few minutes later. The air was grim and nobody said a word.

A thought nagged me at the back of my mind. It was a flashback to the horrors of my last quest. I gritted my teeth and pushed the thought away.

Based on the look Sanderson gave me, he was thinking the same thing. We held our gaze for a few moments, but it felt like an eternity. In time-lapse, we both re-experienced the previous quest.

My eyes stung as I tore my eyes away. I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. This quest won’t be like the last one. But even as I said it, I knew I was lying to myself. Was it really going to be different?

Hector was the last one to arrive, by thirty minutes. Nobody blamed him for that – he was a new camper, and he was already having a potential death sentence handed to him.

Beside him were two satyrs, chattering nervously. I caught snippets of their conversation – they were trying to help Hector perceive this new weird world of gods and monsters.

My vocal cords felt like they were glued together with adhesive. I forced them apart. “Are we all ready?”

Sanderson and Andromeda nodded. Hector gave me a shy glance. Garret and Hedge quieted down and stood to attention.

I nudged my chin in the direction of a white van with the design of Camp Half-Blood on it – strawberries. We’d sell the strawberries that grew in the fields in New York City to earn our funding. The vans were often repurposed, though, for quests.

We climbed inside. The driver was already waiting for us in the front seat. I took my place directly behind the driver with Sanderson and Andromeda to my right, and Hector and the two satyrs behind us.

“To Grand Central Terminal, New York City,” I instructed the driver. With a skid, we were off.

___________________________________________________________________________________

The atmosphere started out terse – nobody said a word. Gradually, though, it loosened up. Sanderson and I exchanged jokes while Andromeda laughed at them. Even Hector and the satyrs threw in a few good ones.

I grabbed a snack bar from my backpack and slowly munched on it, pondering the quest. I didn’t know anyone from the Roman side of the quest team. Would we all get along? And would there be conflict as to who would lead the quest? I was only the head of the Greek side – the Romans probably chose someone to represent them too.

I sighed. As a son of Zeus, I had high expectations held to me. Being the quest leader wasn’t anything special – it only loaded more burden onto my shoulders. If the quest failed, I’d be mostly to blame.

Just like last time, that little voice in my head whispered.

Shut up, I told it. It’s going to be different.

Thankfully, the voice said nothing more.

“Godric?” Sanderson tapped me on the shoulder. “Are you okay? You’re sending electric sparks everywhere.”

I blinked, startled out of my daze of thoughts. The remaining chunk of the protein bar dropped into my lap.

“Oh… I’m alright. Sorry about that,” I replied sheepishly. “I got distracted.”

Sanderson seemed to understand my thoughts. We rarely needed to exchange words – our minds were almost like one.

The van trundled to a halt. We had arrived at our destination.

___________________________________________________________________________________

Grand Central Terminal was one of the largest train stations in the world. It’s also one of the most packed.

We said our goodbyes and thanks to the driver, who proceeded to set up a strawberry stand with a sign reading, As the summer season ends, get the last of the fresh strawberries!

Nobody seemed to pay us any attention as we zig-zagged through the crowd. I clutched my ticket in one hand and a protein bar in the other.

The train whistled. We were just in time to board it.

Handing our tickets to the conductor, he let us pass through and we settled in the third to last car. The closer to the dining car, the better.

We took the same seating arrangement as in the van just as the train rumbled, and we started our half-day journey to Charleston, South Carolina.

I prayed that the train ride would be smooth. I received an answer from the seat in front of me. Grrrr.

Arts and Culture, Stories

America’s Shining Girls – Part 2.

by Harper Smith

(Find part one here!)

Mollie’s death was a tragedy, but unfortunately, it did not gain media coverage. For all they knew, it was one girl, who suffered tragically and died horrifically, but with no one to blame. Her story could very well have gone unknown–if it was not for the girls at the factories. In fact, one in particular, Irene Rudolph, may have been the one to truly start it all. In 1922, she began regularly seeing a dentist for much of the same problems that Mollie suffered from. Although the dentists she saw had never crossed paths with the man who operated on Maggia before her death, Irene had been friends with her, and after the similar stories from a few other women who’d also worked at the dial factory, she began to be suspicious. Doctors began to suspect the chemicals from the plant may have had something to do with it, but they could find no proof, the radium companies made too much profit to even consider looking into the issue. Radium is perfectly safe, they would say, and that was that. Meanwhile, former and current employee deaths began to pile up. 

But the girls and their families wouldn’t stand for that. They tried to sue the company, and two professional medical investigators were even hired to inspect the facility. But their reports came back unhelpful–the employees’ blood was “practically normal,” from all they could tell, and Radium Dial remained fully in business. In fact, when another former employee, Hazel Kuser, began to experience a rapid decline in her health, the firm refused to pay any of her crushing medical bills, and her family was soon nearly broke. A brave group of the suffering women–Grace Fryer, Katherine Schuab, Edna Hussman, and Quinta and Albina MacDonald–did eventually press a lawsuit against the firm, but it was a very slow-moving process, and although the presence of radiation was being discovered in the corpses of the fallen girls, the company conducted many schemes to keep them from winning. Despite their efforts, the case fell short.

It seemed hopeless, and it nearly was. But in 1937, seven years after the deaths of the original women who fought for the case, five new women took a stand for their rights. They were very ill–the radium had been working its way into their body for a long time now, and it had been taking its toll. Several of them could not even travel to court, including Catherine Wolfe Donohue, who was so sick by the time of the proceedings that doctors were not sure she’d live to see the hearing. But their ailing health only made them more determined. Their bodies’ luminous glow, which had once signified wonder and prosperity, now spelled their doom: radium poisoning has no cure. But they could not let other women continue to suffer as they did. And so they fought. They found a lawyer, Leonard Grossman, who took the case for free, as they were very poor. Radium Dial was by now very sick of these meddling women indeed–but as the papers began to report on the case, calling them “The Living Dead” and taking their side, the company began to sweat. 

The girls testified on February 10, 1938. They were pushing for money, a settlement from the company to help pay the medical bills they would not have had to face if it was not for radium, but it was more than that. They wanted the truth. They wanted the company to admit what they’d done, to them and to so many others: that they’d lead an entire generation of women to their untimely deaths just for profit. 

It was Catherine who would be their savior. She was so weak that she needed the support of at least two other people to stand, and her voice was quiet and faltering as she told her story. But tell it she did, laying out the years spent working as a dial painter and the illness that followed, the company’s firm insistence that there was nothing wrong with her or the other women. There’s nothing wrong with you–these were the words spoken by the company president when Charlotte Purcell came to him missing her entire left arm. When the firm stole Peg Looney’s body and removed her radiation-drenched bones so that her death could not be tied to them. When the dial painters begged, year after year, for some closure in what was happening to them. Some explanation for why their teeth were rotting, their limbs were shrinking, their bodies were becoming riddled with cancerous growths. We are blameless, Radium Dial would say, and send their fake doctors out with the “proof.” 

Catherine talked for hours at her hearing, but she could not go forever. Halfway through, doctors–real doctors–were brought in to share the reports they had taken of her illness. It was to help prove the existence of radium poisoning, but when they shared the horrible truth–radium is permanent. Radium is terminal.–she collapsed to the ground with a scream so anguished it could be heard from the corridors outside. Catherine had so much to live for: she had her husband, her three children, she had her fellow dial painters, who had become her closest friends. She had been holding out for a cure, and hearing that there was none was too much for her and her ailing body to bear. She was taken back to her home, but her spouse Tom stayed to hear the rest of the report. Months to live. Incurable in her stage. Your wife is going to die. 

She was too ill to leave her bed after the collapse–in fact, her physicians said it would prove immediately fatal. But Catherine Donohue was a fighter. She would not rest until she and her friends, and the countless others before them, saw justice. “It is too late for me…” she said, “ but maybe it will help some of the others.” The hearing resumed the next day, at her bedside.  Lawyers, doctors, judges, and friends all clustered together around her, straining to hear her muffled words. She demonstrated the ‘lip, dip, point’ routine that had led her to ingest so much poison. She told stories of how the firm had told her to paint better, faster, to not get any grease on the dials–but never that radium was toxic. Her voice was tired, and she struggled to keep her eyes open, but she fought. Catherine Donohue fought for all the women of Radium Dial, for her friends, herself, and for the rights of factory workers everywhere.

On April 5th, 1938, the verdict was ruled. 

They had found Radium Dial guilty. 

For years, the Radium Girls have been the unsung heroines of our country. Thanks to their bravery, radium poisoning was recognized as an official, deadly disease. Thanks to their desire for justice, workers’ rights everywhere were improved as they had never been before. Thanks to their determination, their fighting spirits that carried on through horrific suffering and fatal disease, they brought down a cruel organization that would have rather covered up murder than pay an ounce of money to their victims. These women are the true champions of America, and it’s up to you and me to remember their victory for years to come. 

(Author’s note: nearly all the information in this report was gathered from Kate Moore’s nonfiction novel “The Radium Girls.” It is a wonderful, informative book that shines light on these brave women and their individual stories. There was a plethora of information that I was not able to include in this two-part publication, and I sincerely hope that you consider going out and reading it, it is not an exaggeration to say it’s one of my all-time favorite books. The stories of Catherine, Grace, Mollie, Quinta, Albina, Peg, Inez, Charlotte, Marie, and so many more are not tales to be missed.)

Stories

The Midgard Serpent – Percy Jackson Fanfiction ~ Ch. 11 & 12

by Emery Pugh

Chapter 11

Percy

The serpent disappeared as soon as I set my eyes upon it. I blinked to make sure I wasn’t hallucinating. Time returned to normal speed.

Everyone rushed out of the meeting room and scrambled to assemble themselves into a fighting formation. I continued to stare at the spot where the serpent was. No one else appeared to see it. It must have been an illusion.

Across the Little Tiber, a massive siege tower was surrounded by a horde of hundreds of monsters. On top of the siege tower was another weapon – a snake made from Imperial gold, hissing and spitting out a green liquid, presumably venom. The tower could cause no end of trouble for us.

I had no time to dwell on the serpent issue.

I felt someone touch my shoulder. It was Annabeth.

“Are you going to fight?” she asked me.

I turned to face her and looked her in the eyes. “I thought this… was all over. I thought we were finally going to live a normal life together. As much as I want to avoid the chaos of demigod life, I can’t not fight for this camp. This is my home, just as much as Camp Half-Blood.”

She nodded and remained silent. I knew what her decision was without even asking her. That determined look said it all.

We both bolted for our rooms, which was where our weapons were. I uncovered my sword, in pen form, in a pocket of a spare set of jeans.

Outside, I found the legion fully assembled. I located the Fifth Cohort, the cohort I was once in, and positioned myself at the left flank.

The monsters across the Little Tiber gathered in clusters to cross the river into camp. The legion separated into its five cohorts, heading off to defend different weak points in Camp Jupiter’s defenses.

Dozens of massive, dark masses – hellhounds – jumped into the river and made a mad dash to our side. Water was my specialty – it was my job to stop them.

I concentrated and closed my eyes. Whirlpools swirled around the monsters, slowly sucking them down. They panicked and thrashed, but to no avail. A pit slowly formed in my gut – I willed a tidal wave to rise two stories into the air. The hellhounds were thrown into the air with the wave, yelping and waving their paws. (Their yelps, though, were like cannon blasts. Hellhounds are nothing like little puppies.) The wave/hellhound gang slammed into the siege tower, but to my disappointment, the tower was unshaken.

Ballistae cannons fired from the inner camp onto the siege tower and the monsters. I watched the cannonballs reach its apex and arc down, but they hit an invisible barrier and exploded midair.

Annabeth was studying the architecture of the siege tower – looking for weak points. “Percy, target the spot right above the doorway arch.”

I nodded with determination and focused all my energy on the water. These monsters were attacking the camp – my home. I would not let them do this. The pulling sensation in my gut increased, but I hardly noticed it. These monsters were after my friends and I – something I would not tolerate.

All my rage exploded from the river and crashed with tremendous force into the siege tower, right on the weak spot. I let out a primal scream, mostly from the pain in my gut. You try controlling a whole river, and you’ll be able to empathize with me.

The tower shook dangerously, swaying from side to side. The monsters tittered nervously and backed away.

And of course that’s when the venom-spitting snake started going nuts.

Did I mention that I have an intense hatred towards snakes? I’ve seen way too many – normal ones, snakes with 7 heads, massive serpents, and now a metal venom-spitting figurehead atop a tower.

Venom droplets sprayed everywhere. Campers crouched behind cover, but it did little – the venom melted even the Imperial gold shields and swords like butter in a hot pan. They had to get more distance to be safe.

“Get back!” I yelled. “Get behind cover, and get as far away as possible!”

“Everyone, follow me!” Frank held up his half-melted shield in front of his face.

An intense pain jolted up my right arm. I felt like it was being slowly sawed off at a point somewhere between my shoulder and elbow.

Only one word can describe than pain: a pure feeling of ow.

I looked in horror at my arm, which was now turning a green-ish purple. A venom droplet had struck me.

Within a few seconds, I probably cursed more than in the rest of my life. Hey, I couldn’t help it.

I uttered another primal scream, but this one was from pain. Then everything went black.

Chapter 12

Hector

I was, naturally, a little stunned. The son of Zeus (what was his name again?) just randomly selected me for the quest. I barely even knew what a quest was, and I didn’t know the guy.

The camp was silent. Chiron trotted over to me and put a hand on my shoulder.

“Congrats, Hector,” Chiron said, trying to have an encouraging tone. But it sounded like he was leading me to my grave. “Going on a quest is an honor.”

I gave a weak attempt at a timid smile. “Um, thanks.”

Walking back to my seat, I felt the eyes of the entire camp on me. I strained to not stare back at them and yell, What? Stop staring!

“Choose two more quest partners, Godric,” Chiron beckoned to him to continue.

Sanderson raised his hand. “I’ll be going.” He whispered something in Godric’s ear, who nodded.

Can I choose the other quest member? It echoed around the dining pavilion, but nobody else seemed to notice.

Suddenly, I realized why – at school, I’d even sometimes hear whispers across a noisy cafeteria. It was one of my powers as a demigod. Honestly, I didn’t know how extra good hearing could help much, but okay.

Sanderson’s gaze drifted over to a girl at the Iris table – who I presumed was his girlfriend. The girl smiled and stood up.

“I’ll go with Sanderson,” she said, putting an arm around him.

Chiron cleared his throat. “Alright, Andromeda. We have our quest team assembled. Get ready to depart next morning.”

___________________________________________________________________________________

Chiron called me to come over to the Big House that evening.

If you don’t know, the Big House is just a house that Chiron and some of the other camp leaders live in, and where stuff is stored.

I walked across the camp and climbed the stairs to the porch, where Chiron (in wheelchair form with his centaur lower body magically compacted) was sipping a lemonade. He gestured for me to take a seat.

“Hector… I need to tell you a few things about your quest.” Chiron drooped his head.

I held my breath, waiting.

“Quests…” Chiron took a deep breath. “Are very, very dangerous. I must stress the perils you will face. Hades chose to claim you at that moment because he wants you on the quest, and I won’t dispute that, but I feel guilty if I don’t give you a chance to back out.”

I swallowed. I barely even knew what was going on, or even what being a son of Hades meant – I’d never even met the guy. Garret and Hedge the mad whacker did their best to explain everything, but little made any sense.

A thousand and one questions ran through my mind. Would the camp make fun of me for chickening out? Would I die on this quest? Why are strawberries red?

Despite being new, the camp already felt like home. The Hades cabin wasn’t all that comfortable, and the last son of Hades who lived in there was off on a different dangerous quest. I made up my mind.

“I… I don’t know,” I admitted. “I barely know what’s going on. But I’m sure this camp is and was a home to many, and I’m willing to defend it.”

Chiron nodded gravely and made an attempt at a smile. “That’s the spirit of a hero. Good luck out there, Hector, and may the gods be with you.”

“Thanks,” I said weakly as I stood up to leave.

“Oh, and one more thing.” Chiron interrupted. “Usually at least one satyr accompanies the quest team… how would you like your old friend to go along?”

My heart leapt. “You mean… Garret?” Chiron nodded.

I grinned. Maybe this quest wouldn’t be so lonely after all.

Stories

Arctic Fox

by Harper Smith

Content warning for animal death and blood. 

The morning is cold. 

She creeps along quietly, soft paws pattering along the surface of the ice, slick with the same salt water that stains the air. 

She smells something, among the sharp biting wind and tang of the sea spray. Something warm, something sweet, something alive.

There are prints in the fine dusting on snow beneath her paws, small and stick-thin.
Bird.

That’ll do.

The fox runs. 

Wind ruffles her white fur as she speeds across the ice, turning her head this way and that. Searching. 

She has left her litter behind, on the dryer land where they will not run off. They are young, a week old, and they demand food. She will not deny them. They need their strength. 

The day is young, but so are they. A bird may be enough, it may not.
She will have to see. 

The ice is solid beneath her, but she can see, when she lifts her head, that some is not. Grease ice, little flakes of white, drifts along the surface of the ocean, watery and barely formed. Bigger chunks float past that, worn and smooth, liquid dripping off their sides. Melting. 

A lot has been melting, recently. 

The fox wonders what she’ll do if this one slips away as well, disappearing back into the sea water like it’d never been there at all. She can already see it starting, the rounded edges getting smoother and smaller with each passing day. She hopes it stays.
It has to stay. 

She keeps running. 

The ice she’s on is very thick, upturned a little. It doesn’t crack when she moves, but the clinking sounds of her claws echo. 

The bird is closer now. 

She slows.

It’s an arctic tern, back again from its long journey. It moves around the ice, pecking with its thin beak to find some sort of sustenance for its flight. 

It will never have the chance. 

She crouches, low, flattening her ears against her skull. Readying herself.

She pounces.
Feathers fly. 

She catches it with her teeth, first, sinking into the tern’s soft neck. It struggles–they always struggle–twisting this way and that beneath her small, strong form. 

She wins, eventually, blood staining her jaw and teeth as she carries the creature’s corpse back across the plains of sea ice, oceans spray flying around her, wind rushing. 

The fox thinks this will be enough. At least for the strong ones to eat. The strong ones will always eat. 

She holds her head high as she prances back to her litter, infused with the thrill of a successful hunt. 

I win. 

Her paws skate across the slick ice, and it doesn’t crack once. 

Stories

let the world burn – A Short Story

by Aleena Haimor

300 Years Ago:

My throat burns. 

It burns like fire. 

Slender tendrils of ruthless black smoke curl around my neck, slowly, softly, yet so powerful all the same. Surely they are taking my life. The tendrils grasp like long fingers, tighter and tighter still, until I can barely take a breath.

I try to scream, but cannot. I cannot move, cannot breathe. It seems I can do nothing but wait and hope for the sweet relief of death. 

But one thought tortures my mind. My daughter. Who shall watch over her? I hope that my child, my newborn daughter, will live to bore young of her own, who in turn will bear children. I know that they shall all suffer the same fate as me, but there must be a way. And I remember the spell. So long ago I heard it, yet it is fresh in my mind. I chant the spell to remove the curse from one girl, who will destroy the wretched one who cursed us, hundreds of years from now.

“Save my blood from the curse of death. Save her life, oh holy one, let her live.”

I feel peace. I have always been the one who was afraid of everything.

Yet death does not scare me as the world becomes dark.

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Present Day:

I run, run, run, as fast as my legs will carry me. My chest cramps and the air is getting thinner the higher up I go, yet still, I run. Away from my would-be grave, the only home I’ve ever known. A blood curse, in my family and village for generations, a slow but inevident poison spreading through my people. They died quietly, one after another, like dominoes falling over. I am the only one in my village who wasn’t affected, who didn’t have the curse, the only one left alive, but I need to get away. I don’t want to be alone in the remains of my village, among all the graves. But I know that the images of my family on their deathbeds will forever haunt my memories. 

I have always been the girl who fended for herself. My father was crippled and my mother died when I was an infant, so I had to learn to cope.

My vision blurs from the tears that came from the memories of my family. Our kind does not cry, we refuse to, and I dash around the trees, chanting a spell as I do. 

“Be gone,  dreadful sorrow, do not block my sight, be gone, not forgotten, let me see light,” I whisper. The words are almost second nature to me, as I have always had trouble with my emotions and couldn’t let anyone see me cry. My vision clears as the tears evaporate into thin air. I feel a bit happier as the spell seeps into my skin, touching my heart, bones, brain, making me stronger. Sadness and anger are—or were—seen as weaknesses to my people. But now I don’t know if I can fight my feelings for any longer. I’m more troubled than ever before.

I slow to a stop, my legs burning, and take a moment to look at the scenery surrounding me at the top of the hill. I breathe in the fresh air, crisp and sweet with the scent of jasmine flowers and salt water from the ocean on the other side of the mountain. I look behind me and see a vast blue mirror, calm, smooth, beautiful, stretching ahead of me. It is breathtaking.

I am the first in my family to see this ocean.

Again, the tears fall. But this time, I do not bother to wipe them away or clear them with a spell; it isn’t worth it where no one can see me.

I call to the great spirits of air, fire, water and earth, to help me with my grief. But the wind moans and the trees creak, the waves crash and the fire stays dormant. I seem to not possess the gift of voice, the ability to call the elements to my will. My father did. My mother did. My brother did. I seem to be the only one in my family who does not, other than my sister, who passed as a baby. Maybe it is because I am the one who was saved from death. I know that my mother left much too early, being only twenty when she died.

My mother. I do not know much about her, other than the fact that she was kind, selfless and beautiful. Father told me so many stories about her, how she always held me with care, singing lullabies even though the curse was slowly draining her life away. How she would always be the one to calm the crying of me and my twin sister, Alana. How the last words she spoke were our names, even though Alana had been taken a month before, as the curse had spread through my mother’s womb when she was pregnant with us, narrowly avoiding me. But Alana absorbed all of it, leading to her death. Mother seemed wonderful. I wish I remembered her.

Suddenly, a violent breeze rips through my hair, whipping it around my face. I am startled for a moment before I realize that I did it. I called the wind. And once I feel it touch my skin, I am filled with power. But a moment later, it feels like a tornado swirls in my mind, stripping all my happy memories away. I scream. 

And then I feel nothing.

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I wake up in a ring of fire and slowly lift my weary head. I see a dark figure standing before me, her features barely visible. A hood conceals most of her face, and she takes a step towards me.  

“Hello, young one,” she whispers, her voice a deadly purring drawl.

She lifts her hood to reveal a beautiful woman underneath, with eyes black as coal and skin unnaturally pale and smooth, not even the slightest hint of wrinkles, although she is thousands of years old. I know this because this woman is the woman from our village legend, the woman who cursed us. My hands ball into fists of hatred.

“You!” I screech, jumping to my feet, suddenly feeling…alive again. “You murderer!”

“Now child, we must not throw around assumptions, should we?” she smiles at me, a malicious glint in her eye. She reaches her right hand into the fire and seems to take out a ball of flame. She twines the flames around her fingers and all of a sudden hurls the ball at me. I duck just before it hits a tree, making it explode. 

“Tricky one, yes? I seem to remember very well, taking your mother’s life with my bare hands. She tasted so delicious, so sweet, I could not resist,” she says softly, reaching a skeletal hand out to me. As I back away, the woman transforms into a hideous demon, with horns of smoke and teeth sharp as daggers. She lets out a guttural roar that sends me flying back. 

Your village was insignificant, your people were animals that needed to be slaughtered. Your ancestor saved you in the hope that you would save your village. It is too late now.” The monster growls deeply, making me shiver. I get up again and close my eyes. I feel four different currents pulling me in different directions and realize that I did it. The elements have come to help me. Finally. I can feel myself rising, my hair flying, droplets of water touching my skin. 

I open my eyes and use my newfound powers to attack the demon. Her body crackles with the illusion of fire. I wrap strands of water around her, constricting her. She growls, roars as I wrap them tighter and hurl boulders at her.

She stares at me with hate before she explodes. 

 I have one moment to rejoice before I realize that all that is left is fire. It seems that the demon will get what it wished: my death. 

I don’t have the energy to put out the flames, so I let the world burn. 

Stories

The Pilot Who Became an Ace in One Battle

by Emery Pugh

It was all fun and games playing poker with my fellow pilots until the alarms blared and I heard, “General Quarters! All hands to battle stations! Pilots, be ready to take off at a moment’s notice.” loud and clear on the speakers. I bolted from the pilots’ ready room onto the deck as the poker chips clattered to the floor.

It’s a perfectly clear day on February 5th, 1945, in the rolling Pacific, near the Solomon Islands. It seemed like just an ordinary day, but in war, anything could happen.

Guns blazed away at the sky. I squinted and followed the line of tracers (bullets) and sighted four objects dart between the clouds. I raised my eyebrows in surprise and my heart skipped a beat. Four Japanese kamikazes were headed straight towards our ship, the aircraft carrier USS Liberty Belle. The Japanese fighters were Mitsubishi Zeroes – fast, maneuverable, and deadly. However, the maneuverability of the Zero fighter had a caveat – its armor was little better than paper against the American F4U Corsairs, and the hundreds of pounds of bombs the Japanese planes were carrying nullified the advantage it had in maneuverability. The kamikazes intended to slam right into the ship, which would likely send the Liberty Belle to its watery grave.

However, the USS Liberty Belle was not an easy aircraft carrier to take down. At 850 feet long and 150 feet wide, it was a beast so large that it was sometimes mistaken as part of the skyline. The massive boilers and engine powered the bronze propellers, which had a diameter of an NBA basketball hoop, to push its gargantuan displacement of 25,000 tons of seawater. The massive aircraft carrier contained a variety of supplies (like fuel), weapons (bombs, torpedoes, and ammunition), personnel (over 2,500 total pilots, officers, and other crew), and planes (around 100) to function optimally.

One Japanese aircraft was hit by a bullet from a 5-inch turret, the largest gun of them all on the Liberty Belle with the farthest range. The doomed kamikaze spiraled into the sea, leaving a trail of smoke behind it. The Rising Sun on its left wing was the last thing to come to my eyes.

I quickly ascended the ladder to board my Corsair and slid the canopy closed above my head, strapped myself into the seat, and tuned the radio. I anxiously watched the enemy fighters hurtling towards the ship as the gunners put up a wall of lead bullets.

My plane, an F4U Corsair, is a sturdy propeller powered fighter-bomber with 6 wrathful machine guns (3 on each wing), capable of tearing through the armor of a Zero like butter. The Corsair was often recognized by its iconic wings – the inverted gull shape. It was almost like someone had smashed the wings with a long blade – the wing was bent downwards at halfway between the midway point of the wing and the fuselage (main body of the aircraft).

The radio crackled to life. I awaited orders.

“Attention, Corsair pilots. The enemy kamikazes are coming in hot, but the gunners should be able to take care of them. More bogeys [unidentified contacts on the radar] have been detected. Be ready to take off at a moment’s notice to intercept.”

A colossal explosion shook the sky. Shrapnel from the decimated enemy rained down and splashed into the ocean. Two down, two to go.

The remaining Japanese fighters started their ascent in preparation for a steep dive. The 40 mm cannons on the USS Liberty Belle started banging away. Another Zero was hit by a shell and exploded in midair.

“212, 213, 214, 215, launch now.” My number, 212, was abruptly called by the radio. “Five more confirmed enemies 30 miles distant, bearing 280 [horizontal direction: 0 is due north, 90 is due east, etc.].”

“Roger. Launching now.” I called into the speaker.

The catapults on the runway sprung forward, thrusting the wheels of my Corsair with tremendous force. My plane flew so fast that I was blind for a few moments after liftoff – all my blood had flowed to the back of my head. I experienced tons of G-forces, almost enough to render me unconscious. As soon as my vision was restored, I gently eased the control stick backwards (the control stick, often called just the “stick”, controls the aircraft’s tilt (up-down) and bank (right-left)). The plane turned slightly upward and I gained altitude alongside the other three Corsairs that had taken off with me.

Craning my neck to look behind me, I glimpsed the final kamikaze, ablaze like a bonfire, crash into the sea. I smiled, proud of the celebrating gunners on the ship.

Another command came through the radio. “Gain 10,000 feet of altitude as soon as possible. Engage at will.”

After cruising for a few minutes at around 200 miles an hour, I sighted an enemy Japanese kamikaze dart through the thin, gray clouds to my front-left. Immediately, I radioed back to command: “One kamikaze sighted.” The response was simple: “Copy that. Keep us updated.”

Soon after the first Zero, four more whizzed by. For a moment, everything seemed to fly in slow motion. We were flying parallel and in opposite directions, within two city blocks of each other. I could even see details like wear marks, bullet holes, and stains on the Zero.

Time resumed its normal pace. We raced past each other at breakneck speed.

I maneuvered behind the enemies and fired a burst of bullets from my machine guns. It was a hit – my target burst into flames and dived towards the ocean below. The pilot ejected and the parachute blossomed.

There were still four more kamikazes in front of me. I picked another target and squeezed the trigger, the machine guns roaring to life. To my frustration, I missed slightly high.

The enemy attempted to scramble away, but I fired again just in time. Several bullets struck the fuselage of the plane and went clean through. The Zero, however, continued to fly on. The pilot maneuvered sharply to the right, desperately trying to evade my shots, but I stayed on his tail through every twist and turn, continually firing a stream of .50 caliber bullets. One scored a lucky hit and exploded against one of his bombs, tearing the plane into shreds. I pulled backward on the stick hard, just enough to evade the shrapnel of the wrecked Zero.

It was my second victory today, but there was no time to celebrate. Bullets streamed right over my canopy – an enemy was on my tail.

I yanked the stick all the way to the left and held it there, causing my aircraft to barrel roll a full 360 degrees. The Zero’s inexperienced pilot dived downward, wrongly guessing my next move. Instead, my aircraft continued to veer to the left and climb at a slight angle, losing speed. The Japanese pilot realized his mistake and attempted to loop back around onto my tail, but he had overshot me and I had turned the tables– I was now on his tail. I pressed the trigger and more deadly rounds fired from my machine guns, several scoring hits. The pilot was forced to eject as his plane erupted into flames, spiraling down into the ocean.

The excitement was over – all five enemies had been destroyed by either myself or my comrades. I took the time to radio back to base: “Five confirmed kills total. I shot down three.”

“Good work. But be on the lookout, several more bogeys have been detected 50 miles out, 20 miles from your location.”

“Copy that. Low on ammo, but I will engage with all I’ve got.” I responded.

“Turn to heading [aka bearing] 350.” was the instruction. “We’re scrambling additional fighters to assist.”

“Roger, turning to 350.” I adjusted the radio and conversed with my wingmen: “Everyone, turn 350. More bogeys coming our way.”

In what felt like seconds, three Japanese enemies came into view in the distance to my left. Like last time, I maneuvered behind them and started peppering the planes with bullets. They immediately jerked into evasive maneuvers, but my aim was impeccable – one had been hit in the engine and the propeller had stopped spinning. The doomed fighter plummeted through the clouds into the sea.

My fellow Corsairs flew to my left and immediately started targeting the Zero on the left. The other kamikaze desperately attempted to escape by banking hard to the right, but I was one step ahead of him. I cut off his path and fired a burst of bullets that slammed into the tail rudder of the plane, shredding it and crippling the aircraft’s ability to swiftly swing side to side. Now, he was an easy target. I fired the rest of my ammunition at him as he slewed back and forth with his tattered rudder. I took the plane down with several shots to the fuselage, transforming it into a wreath of flames.

Out of the corner of my eye, I sighted the final Japanese kamikaze tumble uncontrollably towards the earth. Grinning with pride, I radioed back to the USS Liberty Belle: “All eight enemies destroyed… I’ve killed five. My wingmen took down the other three.”

“Congrats, you’re an ace now. Excellent work.”

As I turned back to the USS Liberty Belle, I suddenly began to feel exhausted as the adrenaline began to wear off. I realized what I had just done. In one battle, I had become an ace (5 enemy kills are required to earn the status of an ace).

I landed without trouble back onto the aircraft carrier. After later inspection, I found out that my plane had received no damage in that battle – not even one shot!

Stories

Life and Death – A Short Story

by Aleena Haimor

*For ages 10-18, for brief mentions of a kiss, and also death.

When I finally, finally muster the courage to even try to remember the past few days, I immediately regret the action as it hits me. No one is coming. I’m no more than a thin, sallow girl dying alone in the cold. How hard it was already, to survive with the raw ache of loneliness after he died, like a tender wound bleeding in my heart. And now, I have the deadly arctic snow and gale to bear through, the storm that rips and tears at my bare limbs like a blade. I have no will to live.

I’m nothing.

I never lead a happy life. Well, before, at least. I was left alone as a newborn, abandoned in a rickety structure near the sea. My powerful mind was too strange, and wrong, for my people. Although, I shouldn’t call them my people when they deserted me as they did.

Anyway, difference was not accepted. Even my family agreed, giving me over willingly to the elders, who then left me to die. Even though I never really knew those ruthless people, I somehow comprehended what my name was, only after hearing it a few times as an infant. It was Amara, and it means “grace.” Why did my family give me a name with such a meaning when they threw me away days later? They didn’t want me alive. I don’t even know how a helpless baby survived the wrath of nature. Yet, I did survive.

I grew up learning how to fend for myself. I watched the lions and rattlesnakes hunting. I remember thinking about how graceful they looked, catching their prey with ease. It was magical to me. I imitated their movements, killing with a spear instead of claws, with nightshade berries instead of venom. I killed my first buck at the age of ten, months, years, after living off plants. At the age of twelve, I already had the mind strength of an adult. 

Nevertheless, although I had powerful hunting skills and defense, and I had been alone all my life, I wanted someone to hold me. Someone to keep this lonely girl safe as she slept in peace for the night.

I was thirteen when I met the one person who had ever made me happy. It was a warm spring day and I had decided to take a break from my scavenging. The warm sun beat down on my face as I lay in an open field of violets, inhaling their fragrant scent. My eyes slowly closed as my tense body relaxed.

“Who are you?” an angry voice said.

I opened my eyes again. A boy in tattered shorts and no shirt on, maybe two years older than I was at the time, stood over me. He was glaring, with a dead doe slung over his shoulder. The first thing I noticed was how perfect he was. He was strong and well built, with a tan darkening his body slightly. I stared at his flawless form, shocked.

I was speechless for a moment before he repeated his question.

“Who are you?”

I mentally scolded myself and broke out of the trance. I answered in a soft voice.

“Amara.”

“Amara who?”

I closed my mouth and tried to ignore the pain in my heart. I didn’t have a family, least of all a family name.

“Just Amara.”

The boy, or should I say man, shook his head and rolled his eyes. He lay the doe on the ground and held the tip of his spear to my chest.

“What are you doing on my grounds?”

I put my hands above my head and sat up.

Sorry, but I need to eat too. And I had no idea that these were your grounds. What did you think? I’m all alone,” I said sarcastically, quickly getting annoyed with the tall boy I had just met. He threw the spear on the ground and held a hand out.

“Sorry. I’m Emmett,” he said, his voice taking on a softer tone. “I’m alone too.”

“It’s fine,” I said, taking his hand. He pulled me up. I noticed how beautiful his deep blue eyes were and my breath caught in my throat.

         “So…um…?”

“Wanna hunt?” he asked uncertainly. Well, that was quick, I thought.

“Sure?”

Emmett nodded and motioned for me to follow him. He lay the slain doe from earlier in a small hut he had built. Then we set off. He showed me all his best hiding spots, the places he would conceal himself from the animals, so they didn’t see that he was there.

         From then on, as we grew to know each other better, Emmett and I quickly became best friends. We relied on each other to survive and even thrive. I still remember how we used to laugh by the riverbank as we fished. He knew all the best jokes and for once, I was happy.

I didn’t think that life could get any better, but it did.

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The snowstorm had just begun.  It wasn’t as brutal of a winter as it is right now, but it was close. 

Emmett and I huddled together in our cave shelter, trying to stay warm. I was fifteen by then. Emmett and I had known each other for two years, and we were just like siblings. Or so I thought.

He looked at me and I turned up to look back at him from his arms. Something switched between us, and I found him leaning in. His perfect face came closer and closer to mine. Before I knew it, his lips were on my own and his arms were wrapped around me. I blinked, then kissed him back. It was blissful oblivion for God-knows-how-long, just me and him, kissing. I never knew about kissing before he did it to me, but it felt so natural. So peaceful. That was the best moment of my life. 

Of course, because everything good in the world will end one day, my luck had to stop. A few months later, we were out hunting. A mountain lion prowled around us as we held our spears. Quickly, it cornered us against the mountain and pounced, aiming for me. Emmett yelled and jumped in front of me before I could be killed, losing his life in the process. As I watched his lifeblood spill onto the ground, anger overtook me and I stabbed the lion with my spear. After it was dead, I ran over to Emmett’s limp form and took his head into my lap. I held his hand as he made an effort to speak.

“Amara…”

His hand slipped from mine and I knew he was gone. 

I could not bring myself to get up for hours after. Fierce sobs wracked my body and made breathing almost impossible. But I knew after I had mourned for some time that I had to bury him.

I laid him to rest where we had first met, in the violet field. The grave was messy, but it had to do. I couldn’t let his body be ravaged by nature. I had to give him a proper goodbye. So I brought his body to the grave and said a prayer for his soul.

Oddly, I feel peace. And I realize why.

The pain is going away. I can feel myself slipping in the present, and my consciousness is dimming rapidly. I am ready. Nevertheless, I want to remember one thing before I die. One memory. Well, two, I guess. That blissful kiss, and my Emmett himself.

I close my eyes and fall.

Stories

The Woods

by Camden S.

I wake up on a normal morning, the rays of sun shining through the windows, birds chirping after returning from migrating south for the winter. It’s a Saturday morning after a long week at school. I love sleeping in on Saturday mornings, my eyelids still heavy after a long night of dreaming. As I lay in bed peacefully, my Dad calls my name. “Henry, start packing, we’re leaving in an hour!” And then my peacefulness ends as I remember we have a camping trip lasting the whole weekend. It’s not that I don’t like camping, in fact, I love it. But I was looking forward to a nice calm weekend instead of hiking until my legs feel like they’re going to fall off.

I drag myself out of bed and head to the bathroom to brush my teeth. As I exit my bedroom my little brother Gregory (we usually call him Greg) comes running up to me. “Henry, I’m so excited! Do you think we’ll find any animals?!” He says jumping up and down. Can’t you go bother someone else? I say to him, not in the mood to start a long conversation. “But Dad’s busy packing, so there is no one else to talk to.” He says, sounding disappointed. I push past him ignoring his questions and go brush my teeth.

After I brush my teeth, I head downstairs to have some breakfast. My Dad sees me and asks, “Are you excited for the trip, son?”. Sure am, Dad, I say trying not to sound like I don’t really want to go. I feel bad for my Dad. It’s been hard ever since my mom passed away a couple years ago. He’s been trying to comfort us by taking us on many adventures, but it can sometimes be a little bit tiring.

I finish packing and get in the car, ready to go. My dad comes out of the house looking like he’s carrying a whole convenience store’s worth of goods and loads it into the back of the car. Greg comes out of the house, excited to go and begins running in circles.

It takes us about 4 hours to reach our camping location. It’s a really beautiful place; the sound of water flowing down the lush green hills and squirrels leaping from one tree to another. When we arrive at our spot, we begin unloading the car. I grab the tent with my Dad and start assembling it, while trying to figure out where the heck this one pole goes. After that, I grab a book and sit underneath a tree to read.

As dusk approaches, we all head into the one cramped tent that we all share. Our particular tent has a little clear plastic window at the top so you can see the stars. I lay there looking at constellations while I drift asleep.

The next morning, we wake up bright and early, Greg is the first one, wanting to head outside the tent while I was still trying to sleep. “Calm down Greg, I’m trying to sleep,” I say. “How can I calm down!? I want to head outside!” I love Greg but he doesn’t really understand the concept of relaxation. All this commotion wakes my Dad up and he takes Greg outside.

When I head outside the tent, I find them cooking some sausages. I walk up to my Dad, and he hands me a plate. I breathe in and smell the wood burning in the fire and the scent of the trees and flowers all around me. It smells amazing. I sit down on a seat near the fire and begin devouring my sausages.

Once we’re finished eating, we get ready to go on a hike. I grab my boots and favorite hat. My dad steps out of the tent and asks us if we’re ready to go. As ready as I’ll ever be, I say still half asleep. As we start trekking through the forest, I look all around me and see many beautiful things, from the little bugs on the ground fauna to the giant eagles flying above the treetops.

Around noon, and an hour into our hike, we hear rustling in a bush off on the side of the path. As we go to investigate, we see a deer snacking on some leaves. I see Greg the most excited I think I’ve ever seen him. The deer notices us and starts to run away but when Greg sees this, he runs after the deer. Greg! I yell as I run after him. My dad did the same and we run through the forest in an attempt to stop him. I eventually catch up with him and I grab his wrist. “What were you doing Greg? It’s not safe to run out into the woods like that.” I look around to see where my dad is, but I can’t find him. I call out for him but hear no response, we must have gotten separated while chasing Greg. I have no idea where I am, and the trail is nowhere to be seen.

Greg starts crying and says, “I’m so sorry, I shouldn’t have run off like that. I just wanted to say hi to the deer.” It’s ok Greg. Do you remember the way back to the trail? “I don’t. Are we lost?” he asks between sobs. I don’t know, but we should try to find our way back before it gets dark. I think we went this way. Holding Greg’s hand, we start to find our way back to camp.

It’s quite scary being in a forest all alone. I hear noises echoing in the tall trees above my head. I see a squirrel running away, afraid, just like how we feel as we are trying to find the way back to camp.

After a while of walking, I notice the sun starting to set. I realize that we will not be able to find our way back today, and we’ll be stuck out here for the night. Just thinking about being stuck out here in the cold scares me. Just Greg and I alone. What happens if a bear comes? I can’t think about this now, I need to focus on finding somewhere to sleep for the night. After about 10 minutes I spot a cave. Looks like we’ll be spending the night here, Greg. “What! We are sleeping here!? What about camp and Dad!?” he yells. We’re going to have to continue looking tomorrow, but we need rest right now, I say, exhausted.

The cave is pretty big, and it seems safe as I walk into it. I call over Greg, saying to follow me into the cave. My voice echoes off the cave walls creating an eerie effect. I gather some leaves to make a bed, so we don’t have to sleep on the bare rock. As the sun sets, we lay in the cave as the forest starts to fall asleep. Something I never would’ve expected about being in the woods alone was how, after your fear fades, you notice how peaceful it is. The only sound is the light breeze and swaying trees.

Greg and I wake the next morning to a sound outside the cave. A slight bristling in the leaves as something moves through them. We lay in silence, fear creeping in as I wonder if it is a bear. Every second feels like an hour, the suspense unbearable as it gets closer to the cave. And suddenly, I see my father. I feel Happiness, joy and relief all at the same time as I run to my father to give him a big hug with Greg close behind me. As I hug my father, I think to myself how Greg and I just survived a night in the woods, and how this will be the best story I will tell in my life.

The End

Stories

Four Little Hunters ~A short story

by Olive Pea

It was August in a small English town, and the melancholy gray sky over the trees had ceased its weeping for just a moment. Four children pleaded to be let outside and their mothers finally shooed them through the doors to play for a while, but not without the usual warnings, “be safe, don’t ruin your clothes, and do not go near the woods”. Within minutes, the four young boys convened at the northern edge of town, gaping up at the wall of trees that seemed to erupt from the ground like knives.

The foolish four knew of the beast in the woods. The teachers and parents warned, the townsfolk whispered, and recently the paper brought news of three missing young men found dead in the woods. But never mind all that. Today these four children were, according to Adam, to become heroes, monster hunters, the stuff of legends. Adam, of course, was the leader, as always. He had gathered the other three around him, forming a sort of square.

“I shall defend you all, as your leader, with my mighty sword!” Adam declared, hoisting his fantastic sword, an old stick, to the gray sky, tossing back his hazel-brown hair with a flourish. Bertie looked up at him in awe, just as he always did. Bertie was Adam’s best friend, 10 years old like Adam but stalkier with fair hair. They were both best friends since before they could remember and spent every day after school at each other’s houses. 

The other two boys were younger. Connor and Sean Wallace were 9 and 5 respectively. The brothers had flaming red hair and sparkling blue eyes. They had moved to the town in January from Ireland after their father died. They were mostly quiet, but when they did speak their voices rang with the melodious tones of their homeland.

“I don’t reckon you’re plannin’ on goin’ in there,” Connor said, his bright blue eyes nervously flitting across the forest line. “That’s where the beast is.”

Adam shot him an irritated glance. “That is the plan, we are monster hunters after all. We’re going to find that beast and kill it!”

“But–but they told us not to. It’s dangerous! We could get hurt—”

“Shut up. We’re monster hunters, don’t listen to the old people, they’re looney!!”

“I will go in,” Bertie said loyally.

“Alright then, in we go!” Adam declared.

So, in they went. Three excitedly skipping through the first trees, while one cautiously crept. With Adam leading, sword raised, they stormed through the forest like titans. Past a boulder. Around a pond. Over a fallen tree. Dusk had begun to seize the sky when they finally found the perfect cave. The walls dripped with moisture, leafless vines covered the entrance, and a decrepit tree stood on either side, bent and shriveled with death. Little Sean danced around in a circle and giggled, while Bertie looked at the cave with glee. Connor kept glancing over his shoulder; Adam had a stealed look painted on his face. He held up his mighty sword. Then the sky began to weep again, and they pulled their hoods over their heads.

“What is that?” Connor pointed at a muddy mark on the ground. It looked like a footprint. There were more, leading into the cave. 

Adam investigated and announced, “Monster tracks. We’re going in my crew, heave ho!”

Conner did not like this, looked at Adam with a furrowed brow, and said with concern, “if we really have found monster tracks, then I say we should tell the grownups. It’s too dangerous. We could die Adam, we could die!”

Adam laughed. He laughed some more. Then Bertie joined in. Even Sean, aloof, began to giggle. When Adam had finally gained control over his outbursts, he shouted, “we are going in! We are monster hunters, and I shall kill the monster with my sword and rid these lands of this beast!!”

Conner didn’t look so sure of that and said warily, “I’m staying out here.”

“That’s right, you’ll be our guard’” Adam proclaimed. He then turned toward the cave and under his breath muttered, “looney.”

Bertie copied Adam and whispered stupidly, “looney.”

So in they went, except Connor who was stationed just outside the mouth of the cave. All flashlights clicked on at the same time, as was Adam’s orders.

Dark and brooding stood the thing. Its ghastly sunken face loomed 5 feet above their heads, suspended from an unnaturally tall and twisted body like a rotting tree. The thing opened its mouth, revealing a cavern of rows and rows of sharp teeth, and it inhaled with a raspy gurgling sound, sucking out the light of their flashlights. The shadow neared them, and footsteps thundered off of the cave walls. Then the noise abruptly stopped, the tall shadow right before them. Adam screamed and jumped forward, swinging his sword wildly in all directions. Then a piercing shriek came from Bertie, beside him. The monster growled and its footsteps boomed out of the cave. Sean started to cry as moans of agony came from Bertie’s hunched shadow. Adam rushed towards him and dragged him out of the cave, ordering Sean to follow.

Now he could see Bertie’s face; a slash ran across his left eye from his forehead to his left cheek. Adam looked at his mighty sword. Its tip was red with blood, and Adam smiled giddily.

“Look Bertie, I wounded the beast! I sliced at him like a true monster hunter, and scared him away. Now he shall have a great scar to remember me by. Hah!”

Bertie moaned, clutching his ruined eye with both hands.

Connor then rushed from his hiding spot in the bushes towards the three, a look of horror on his pale face.

“It’s comin’ back!! It’s comin’ back, run!!!”  

They heard the crashing footsteps quickly nearing them once again. Adam grabbed Bertie’s arm and pulled him while Connor swooped up his little brother into his arms.

Then they became like all things hunted, running breathlessly and numbly; deer leaping over logs, hares bounding amongst the ferns, mice scurrying through the grass. But the thing was fast. 

Tears in their eyes, hearts pounding vigorously, legs aching, the boys ran, Adam still pulling Bertie along and Conner carrying Sean. Their clothes tore as the branches and bushes snatched at them like gnarled hands and fingers; the rocks tripped them, making them stumble into muddy puddles that filled their boots; even the wind seemed to be fighting against them as it pelted raindrops in their faces at a slant; nevertheless, they sprinted as fast as they could. Over the fallen tree. Around the pond. Past the boulder. The footsteps subsided, but their fear had not and so they mindlessly continued to flee in panic.

The rain fell like arrows shot from heaven, the inky stain of death from the fallen sun had bled through all remaining daylight, making it difficult to see, but still they stumbled on.

The four finally reached the town. Though lamps were lit the streets were bare. They struggled toward the first house, and pounded on its vivid red door. Exhausted, panting, Adam released Bertie and Connor set Sean on the sheltered porch. The door opened and an elderly man, back bent with age, looked down upon the ragged boys. “You hunted it, didn’t you? Come in you fools! You should have heeded the warnings. You could have lost more than an eye!”

The End

Stories

The Midgard Serpent – Percy Jackson Fanfiction ~ Ch. 10

by Emery Pugh

SPOILER ALERT: The following content may reveal parts of the plot of the Percy Jackson book series. There may also be spoilers about the Heroes of Olympus book series, which is a five-book sequel to the Percy Jackson series. The Trials of Apollo series, the sequel to Heroes of Olympus, will be mentioned. It is highly recommended that you read at least the Percy Jackson series AND the first book of the Heroes of Olympus series. If you don’t mind the spoilers, then read on. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

Chapter 10

Godric

         It could not have been me! There must have been another son of Zeus in the room! Right? This must be the one time I get lucky.

         Unfortunately, no. Everyone in the room was staring at me.

         “You have a few days to prepare before the Roman campers arrive,” Chiron said. “The quest will be announced to the rest of the camp tomorrow. Meeting adjourned.”

         Everyone else filed out of the room. I stood there in silence, staring at the surface of the Ping-Pong table.

Chiron wheeled over to me. We were alone.

He put a hand on my shoulder. “I’ve seen many heroes go through the same challenges as you, but fate chose you – for a reason.”

“What reason?” I asked, still staring at the Ping-Pong table.

“Because you can do it.” Chiron smiled and started to wheel himself out the door. “Oh,and one more thing, Godric.”

I looked at him. “Yeah?”

“Trust the one who seems most unlikely.”

“Okay,” I said slowly. “But… who is the one who seems most unlikely?”

“It’s what they always ask,” sighed Chiron. “That’s for you to figure out. Now go get some sleep. You’ll need it.”

I didn’t sleep. I didn’t even go to my cabin. For the next few hours, I stood there, staring at the Ping-Pong table. Once that got boring, I roamed around camp, hardly knowing (or caring, for that matter) where I was going.

The sun finally rose from the east. I stopped walking and snapped to attention. I found myself at the edge of the camp woods.

A howl came from the trees. It was surprisingly close by. I reached for my sword, but it wasn’t there. I cursed and remembered that I had left it in my cabin before the camp counselor meeting. So naturally, I ran.

I caught a glimpse of a wolf flashing between the trees. I was pretty sure it was one of the same pack of wolves in the Labyrinth during capture the flag.

The conch horn sounded. It was time for breakfast.

Before going to the dining pavilion, I rushed to my cabin and grabbed my sword and set off on a run. I almost knocked over Sanderson on the way out.

“Ow!” Sanderson gasped. “My ribs!”

“Sorry,” I said sheepishly.

“Where were you last night?” demanded Sanderson. “I came to your cabin to tell you something.”

I thought for a moment. “Honestly, I didn’t even know where I was going for most of the night. So… what were you trying to tell me?”

“I wanted to tell you that I’m in on the quest.”

That comment made my day. He actually volunteered to sign his death warrant by going on this quest with me.

“Thanks, man. Now we can both die together.”

Sanderson grinned. “Yup. C’mon, let’s go to breakfast.”

I sat down to breakfast with absolutely no appetite. Time seemed to whizz by like a flash. I had just sat down and stared at my food for a little bit when Chiron pounded his hoof on the marble floor.

“Announcements!” he called, as the diving pavilion quieted down. “A quest has been made. The Romans have discovered what has been causing these monster attacks. A team of seven will be organized, of both Romans and Greeks, led by Godric. He is yet to choose his quest partners.”

Murmuring rippled across the room. I could tell I was receiving many glances and stares.

Chiron opened his mouth to say something, but froze and slowly sat down. The muttering came to an abrupt halt. I looked around wildly, thinking that I suddenly went deaf. Then I realized what actually happened. They were all staring at the new camper, Hector, who was sitting at the Hermes table, as is custom for unclaimed demigods.

Shadows were swirling around Hector. A dark skull flashed for a moment over his head. Some of the other campers screamed.

Hector looked confused. “What? Why are you all staring at me like that?”

Chiron stood up. “Welcome to Camp Half-Blood, Hector, son of Hades.”

I abruptly stood up and pointed at Hector. There was a reason why Hades chose to claim his son at this moment. It was a sign.

“You’re going with me on this quest,” I said.