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BLOOD OF OLYMPUS

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cabinets – Chico, Harpo and Groucho – took up most of the room. Dozens of power tools hung on the<br />

walls. The worktable was piled with photocopied blueprints from On Spheres, the forgotten<br />

Archimedes text Leo had liberated from an underground workshop in Rome.<br />

Even if he wanted to sleep in his cabin, it would’ve been too cramped and dangerous. He preferred<br />

to bed down in the engine room, where the constant hum of machinery helped him fall asleep.<br />

Besides, ever since his time on the island of Ogygia, he had become fond of camping out. A bedroll<br />

on the floor was all he needed.<br />

His cabin was only for storage … and for working on his most difficult projects.<br />

He pulled his keys from his tool belt. He didn’t really have time, but he unlocked Groucho’s<br />

middle drawer and stared at the two precious objects inside: a bronze astrolabe he’d picked up in<br />

Bologna, and a fist-sized chunk of crystal from Ogygia. Leo hadn’t figured out how to put the two<br />

things together yet, and it was driving him crazy.<br />

He’d been hoping to get some answers when they visited Ithaca. After all, it was the home of<br />

Odysseus, the dude who had constructed the astrolabe. But, judging from what Jason had said, those<br />

ruins hadn’t held any answers for him – just a bunch of ill-tempered ghouls and ghosts.<br />

Anyway, Odysseus never got the astrolabe to work. He hadn’t had a crystal to use as a homing<br />

beacon. Leo did. He would have to succeed where the cleverest demigod of all time had failed.<br />

Just Leo’s luck. A super-hot immortal girl was waiting for him on Ogygia, but he couldn’t figure<br />

out how to wire a stupid chunk of rock into the three-thousand-year-old navigation device. Some<br />

problems even duct tape couldn’t solve.<br />

Leo closed the drawer and locked it.<br />

His eyes drifted to the bulletin board above his worktable, where two pictures hung side by side.<br />

The first was the old crayon drawing he’d made when he was seven years old – a diagram of a flying<br />

ship he’d seen in his dreams. The second was a charcoal sketch Hazel had recently made for him.<br />

Hazel Levesque … that girl was something. As soon as Leo rejoined the crew in Malta, she’d<br />

known right away that Leo was hurting inside. The first chance she got, after all that mess in the<br />

House of Hades, she’d marched into Leo’s cabin and said, ‘Spill.’<br />

Hazel was a good listener. Leo told her the whole story. Later that evening, Hazel came back with<br />

her sketch pad and her charcoal pencils. ‘Describe her,’ she insisted. ‘Every detail.’<br />

It felt a little weird helping Hazel make a portrait of Calypso – as if he were talking to a police<br />

artist: Yes, officer, that’s the girl who stole my heart! Sounded like a freaking country song.<br />

But describing Calypso had been easy. Leo couldn’t close his eyes without seeing her.<br />

Now her likeness gazed back at him from the bulletin board – her almond-shaped eyes, her pouty<br />

lips, her long straight hair swept over one shoulder of her sleeveless dress. He could almost smell<br />

her cinnamon fragrance. Her knitted brow and the downward turn of her mouth seemed to say, Leo<br />

Valdez, you are so full of it.<br />

Dang, he loved that woman!<br />

Leo had pinned her portrait next to the drawing of the Argo II to remind himself that sometimes<br />

visions do come true. As a little kid, he’d dreamed about a flying ship. Eventually he built it. Now he<br />

would build a way to get back to Calypso.

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