ATHENA THE BRAIN

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ATHENA THE BRAIN Page 1

by Joan Holub; Suzanne Williams




  READ THE OTHER BOOKS IN THE

  GODDESS GIRLS SERIES

  Persephone the Phony

  If you purchased this book without a cover,

  you should be aware that this book is stolen property.

  It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher,

  and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment

  for this “stripped book.”

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events,

  real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the authors’ imagination,

  and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons,

  living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  ALADDIN

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  First Aladdin paperback edition April 2010

  Text copyright © 2010 by Joan Holub & Suzanne Williams

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction

  in whole or in part in any form.

  ALADDIN is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc., and related logo

  is a registered trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  For information about special discounts for bulk purchases,

  please contact Simon & Schuster Special Sales at 1-866-506-1949

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  Designed by Karin Paprocki

  The text of this book was set in Baskerville Handcut Regular.

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  0210OFF

  2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

  Library of Congress Control Number 2009019170

  ISBN 978-1-4169-8271-5

  ISBN 978-1-4169-9912-6 (eBook)

  For Paula McMillin, Sherylee Vermaak,

  and goddessgirls everywhere

  –J. H. and S. W.

  CONTENTS

  1 THE LETTER

  2 FIRST DAY

  3 HERO-OLOGY

  4 DEAR OL’ DAD

  5 YAMBROSIA

  6 ROOMIE

  7 DROWNING

  8 THREE CHEERS

  9 MISSING

  10 DOOHICKEYS

  A STRANGE, GLITTERY BREEZE WHOOSHED into Athena’s bedroom window one morning, bringing a rolled-up piece of papyrus with it. She jumped up from her desk and watched in amazement as it swirled above her.

  “A message for Athena from Mount Olympus!” the wind howled. “Art thou present?”

  “Yes, I’m thou. I’m present. I mean–I’m Athena,” she replied in a rush.

  Abruptly the breeze stilled, and the scroll dropped right in the middle of her science homework. A thrill swept over her. She’d never gotten a message from the gods before! No human she knew ever had. The gods and goddesses on Mount Olympus ruled Earth, but only made their powers known for important matters. What could they want? Was she being given an urgent mission to save the world?

  She unrolled the scroll as fast as she could and began to read.

  DEAR ATHENA,

  THIS MAY COME AS A SHOCK TO YOU,

  BUT I, ZEUS–KING OF THE GODS

  AND RULER OF THE HEAVENS–AM

  YOUR FATHER. AND THAT, OF COURSE,

  MAKES YOU A GODDESS.

  “Huh?” Athena’s knees wobbled so hard that she plopped back into her chair. She read on:

  YOU MUST BE, WHAT . . . NINE YEARS

  OLD NOW?

  “Try twelve,” she mumbled under her breath. And for most of those years, she had yearned to know who her parents were. She’d spun endless stories in her head, imagining how they looked and what they were like.

  At last a piece of the puzzle had dropped into her lap. Or onto her desk, anyway. Her eyes raced across the rest of the letter as she continued:

  AT ANY RATE, YOU’RE PLENTY OLD

  ENOUGH NOW TO CONTINUE YOUR

  SCHOOLING AT MOUNT OLYMPUS

  ACADEMY, WHERE I–YOUR DEAR

  OL— DAD–AM THE PRINCIPAL. I HEREBY

  COMMAND YOU TO PREPARE AT

  ONCE FOR THE JOURNEY TO MOUNT

  OLYMPUS. HERMES DELIVERY SERVICE

  WILL PICK YOU UP TOMORROW MORNING.

  YOURS IN THUNDER,

  ZEUS

  * * *

  Was this for real? She could hardly believe it! Beneath his signature was the worst drawing she—d ever seen. It looked sort of like a caterpillar, but Athena had a feeling it was supposed to be a muscled arm. She grinned. One thing was for sure, Zeus was no artist.

  A blazing gold Z shaped like a thunderbolt–Zeus—s official seal–was embossed alongside the drawing. She traced her finger over it.

  “Ow!” A burst of electricity buzzed her fingertip, and she dropped the scroll. As the sizzle zinged through her, the scroll shut with a snap and rolled across the carpet. No question about it, this letter was from the King of Mount Olympus!

  Feeling dazed–and not from the electricity–she gulped. She was his daughter. A goddess!

  Athena jumped to her feet, unsure if she should be happy or upset, but feeling a little of both. Rushing over to the mirror, she gazed at her reflection. Her determined gray eyes stared back at her, looking no different from before she’d read the letter. And her long, wavy brown hair was the same too. With a poke of one finger, she squished the end of her too-long nose up, then frowned at the piggy nose she’d made.

  She wasn’t sure what she’d expected to see in the glass. To suddenly look beautiful, wise, and powerful? In other words–more like a goddess?

  She turned as she heard her best friend Pallas come into their bedroom.

  Crunch! Crunch!

  Pallas eyed her, munching an apple. “What’s that?” she asked, gesturing toward the letter on the floor.

  “Umm.” Athena quickly scooped it up and tucked it behind her back.

  Looking suspicious, Pallas came closer, trying to see what it was. “Come on. Give. I’ve known you forever. Why are you suddenly keeping secrets?”

  Athena thumped one end of the scroll gently against her back. On one hand, she wanted to twirl around and shout the news that she was a goddess! At the same time she wanted to hide the letter in the back of her closet and pretend it hadn’t come.

  Zeus’s summons was going to change everything.

  “It’s a letter,” she finally admitted. “From my dad. Turns out he’s . . . Zeus.”

  Pallas stopped in mid-munch, her mouth full of apple. “Wha? Zeu?” Quickly she finished chewing and swallowed. “Your dad is the King of the Gods?”

  Athena nodded, holding out the papyrus scroll.

  Pallas pounced on it. By the time she finished reading, her eyes were huge. “You’re a goddess?” Her voice rose to a squeak on the last word.

  “I don’t want this to change things,” Athena said quickly. “We’ll still be best friends, right?”

  Pallas examined the scroll closely, seeming not to hear. “Who brought it?”

  “The wind.”

  “It’s got the official seal and everything. It’s the real thing, then–an invitation to Mount Olympus.” Pallas stared at Athena in wonderment. “My best friend is a goddess!”

  “So you think I should go?” Even as Athena asked, she knew that the idea of going to Mount Olympus Academy was growing on her. But how could she tell Pallas that? She’d be devastated at
the thought of Athena moving away.

  Pallas tossed the scroll on her bed. It rolled itself tight and snapped shut again. “Are you crazy? Of course you have to go!” she exclaimed. “This is your chance to really be somebody! I mean, who wouldn’t want to be a goddess?”

  Athena hugged herself and glanced out the window toward the Triton River, feeling a little hurt. It almost sounded like Pallas was trying to get rid of her. She’d lived with Pallas’s family since she was a baby. The two of them had shared this room and been as close as sisters all their lives.

  “But I’ll miss you, Pal,” Athena said softly.

  Pallas came to the window and looped her arm through one of Athena’s. Her voice was softer now, as if she’d just realized she’d be losing her best friend. “Yeah. I’ll miss you, too.” She took a deep breath. “But you’ve always wondered about your parents. This is your chance to find out about them. Besides, it doesn’t sound like Zeus is giving you much choice.”

  Athena nodded. “His letter is kind of bossy.” She stuck her nose in the air haughtily as she quoted him in a deep, authoritative voice. “I hereby command you to prepare at once for the journey to Mount Olympus.”

  Pallas giggled. “Yours in thunder . . . ,” she mimicked in a loud, bass tone.

  “Zeus!” they finished together. They fell on their beds in a fit of laughter.

  “I guess going against a god’s wishes–even if he is my dad–might be a bad idea,” said Athena once she’d calmed down. “If he got mad, he might just bean me on the head with one of his thunderbolts.”

  Pallas’s face went pale, and she rose on one elbow to gaze over at her. “You don’t suppose he’s violent?”

  “Don’t worry,” Athena said quickly, turning on her side toward Pallas. “I’m sure we’ll get along just fine.” But she couldn’t help remembering that thunderbolt and feeling a little nervous about meeting her powerful dad.

  She reached out to a toy on her bedside table–a wooden horse named Woody. “I wonder what the academy will be like,” she mused as she idly finger-combed the rope mane on the back of her favorite childhood toy.

  “I bet the godboys and goddessgirls who go there are all brainy like you.” Pallas propped her head up on one fist. “In fact, I can hardly believe we didn’t guess you might be a goddess. I mean, you learned to knit and do math when you were only three years old! You’re way smarter than the rest of us.”

  Athena shrugged, knowing it was true. Her studies here on Earth were so easy they were boring.

  “And there’s the other stuff too,” Pallas hinted softly.

  Athena winced, looking away. Weird stuff, Pallas meant, though she was too nice to say it. Like the day Athena had invented the very first flute and trumpet ever seen on Earth, and then played an impromptu concert, even though she knew nothing about music.

  And then there was the time she’d been reading about owls and thinking how fun it would be to fly. Suddenly her feet had left the ground and her hair had turned into bristly brown feathers. Right in the middle of gym class, too! Luckily, she had changed back almost immediately, and everyone had assumed she’d been affected by some random bit of magic in the air, which might have floated down from Mount Olympus that day.

  From then on, she’d been more careful about who was around when she did things like that. But some of the kids still nicknamed her “birdbrain” as a result of the episode.

  “I’m tired of trying to hide that I’m different. It would be nice to fit in for a change,” Athena admitted. “I only wish you could come too.”

  Pallas shook her head. “I don’t belong where you’re going. But hey! Maybe I can visit you. If it’s not against the rules, I mean.”

  Athena brightened. “Yeah! I’ll ask Zeus when I get there.”

  Pallas sat up. “So you’re definitely going?”

  A slow smile spread across Athena’s face, and she nodded, sitting up on her knees. “Like you said, who wouldn’t want to be a goddess?”

  Pallas hopped up from her bed and grinned at her friend. “C’mon, let’s go tell my parents and then I’ll help you pack.”

  While Pallas’s mom and dad checked out that Zeus’s letter was for real, Athena began packing. The two girls spent the rest of the day scurrying around, as Athena prepared to leave the only home she’d ever known.

  “An entire suitcase full of scrolls?” Pallas teased at one point. “Don’t you think they’ll have a library at the academy?”

  “I’m not taking any chances,” said Athena. Carefully she stuffed the suitcase full of textscrolls written by her favorite Greek authors, including Plato, Aristotle, and Aesop. Then she added her own notescrolls, which contained her invention and knitting ideas, and ideas for science and math projects.

  By that evening, she’d packed her entire life into two suitcases and one bag. She was exhausted–mentally and physically–but she and Pallas stayed up half the night anyway, talking and giggling about what Zeus and the other gods might be like.

  “I wonder which godboys and goddessgirls go to the academy?” Athena mused excitedly. “I wonder if I’ll meet any Amazons. I wonder if I’ll get to ride Pegasus.”

  “Promise me you’ll let me know if you get to meet any cool godboys like Poseidon,” said Pallas. “I’m dying to know if he’s as cute as the sculpture of him we saw in Crete last summer.”

  “It’ll be my first priority,” Athena teased.

  “I hope he’s not stuck-up.”

  “Me too,” said Athena. “I hope none of the godboys and goddessgirls are.”

  Pallas grinned dreamily. “I can hardly wait to tell everyone at school tomorrow that you’re a goddess!” She yawned. “Well, night-night, Athena. Let’s get up early, and I’ll make owl-face pancakes for breakfast before you go. The kind with ears and blueberry eyes that you liked when we were little.” Her voice drifted away.

  After Pallas dozed off, Athena tossed and turned until sunrise, dreaming of Mount Olympus. In some of her dreams, she was the star of the academy, getting the highest academic honors. In other dreams–nightmares, really–Zeus hurled thunderbolts at her for embarrassing him with failing grades.

  Before she knew it, morning arrived and she was hugging Pallas’s parents good-bye as they left for work. Just as she and Pallas were finishing the pancakes they’d made for breakfast, there was a knock on the door. Hermes had come, wearing winged sandals, a winged cap, and a knee-length toga. Beyond him on the lawn sat a beautiful silver chariot that was already piled high with packages.

  “Where are you supposed to sit?” Pallas whispered from behind her.

  “Good question,” Athena whispered back. And it was curious that there weren’t any horses attached to the chariot.

  “Hup! Hup! We’re behind schedule.” Hermes pushed some packages around to make room for her. Then he rushed Athena, her bag, and her two suitcases aboard as if she were just another package he needed to deliver. And in a way, she guessed she was.

  The minute she settled in, mighty white wings sprouted from the chariot’s sides. “Strap yourself in!” ordered Hermes, as the wings began to flap. Athena fastened the strap and twisted around as the chariot lifted off.

  “Bye! I’ll miss you, Pal!” she called over her shoulder.

  “I’ll miss you, too!” Pallas shouted, waving. “Don’t forget to ask Zeus about a visit!”

  “Okay!” Athena called back.

  Two girls from their mathematics class joined Pallas just then, on their way to Triton Junior High. Pallas pointed at the chariot, talking excitedly, probably telling them the whole story of Zeus’s letter, Athena guessed.

  “Promise you won’t forget me!” Athena shouted.

  “What?” Pallas shouted back, cupping her ear as she tried to hear. As Hermes flew higher into the sky, the chariot’s shadow fell across a sea of glistening white clouds.

  “I said, don’t forget me!” Athena tried again. But Pallas only shook her head, looking confused. Still, Athena kept waving until the
three girls were only specks walking to school together alongside the Triton River below.

  Of course Pallas would make new friends once she was gone, Athena knew. But that thought didn’t comfort her a bit. She didn’t want Pallas to find a new best friend! Sadness washed over her at the thought, and a tear trickled down her cheek. She wiped it away. She couldn’t show up at her new school with puffy eyes.

  Suddenly the chariot lurched. Then it began to wobble and bounce. The wings at its sides flapped wildly as it seemed to lose its balance.

  Athena jerked around in her seat, her eyes wide. “What’s going on?”

  The muscles in Hermes’ arms bulged as he struggled with the stick shift to steady the wings. Grumbling, he thumped the dials on the instrument panel with the side of his fist.

  The corners of jostling packages poked Athena’s arms and legs as she held on for dear life. “What’s wrong?” she demanded.

  “We’re overweight. Got to offload some ballast.” Hermes eyed her, and for a second she worried he was going to toss her out. Instead he lobbed both of her suitcases over the side of the chariot.

  “Wait! My notescrolls!” she protested. Heartbroken, she could only watch them fall. Her invention ideas! Her journals! All her thoughts and ideas from the past twelve years had been written on those scrolls. Now they were gone, along with most of her textscrolls. All she was left with was a single bag, which contained some of her clothes, a bundle of knitting, and a biography about Pythagoras she’d been reading.

  “You could have at least asked which bag I wanted to keep!” she protested. Hermes didn’t answer. By now the wind was whooshing past so loudly she wasn’t even sure he’d heard.

 

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