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標題: Rick Riordan-The Last Olympian[Percy Jackson and the Olympians 5] --END [打印本頁]

作者: koko    時間: 2010-3-20 02:07     標題: Rick Riordan-The Last Olympian[Percy Jackson and the Olympians 5] --END

本帖最後由 koko 於 2010-3-23 01:10 編輯

The Last Olympian, the fifth book in the Percy Jackson series, was released on May 5, 2009.[2]

Percy Jackson and his friends fight in a war resembling the original war between the Greek gods and the Titans and in a final battle with the powerful Titan, Lord Kronos. They ultimately defeat Kronos in the battle and Olympus is saved.

The gods grant Percy, Grover, Annabeth, and Tyson each a reward. Tyson becomes the General of the Cyclops army and the weapon they grant him of his own request is a "stick" (a.k.a. club). Grover receives a seat on the Council of Cloven Elders. Annabeth will be in charge of rebuilding Olympus. Percy is offered the granting of one wish as his reward, and he is told he can choose to become a god. Instead, seeing all the damage done, Percy makes the gods promise on the River Styx that they will recognize all of their children by the time the children turn 13. He also asks them to build cabins for Hades and the minor gods like Hecate and Morpheus, which is at the request of another demigod, Ethan Nakamura, who was killed during the battle, and whose mother is Nemesis, the goddess of revenge and balance.

Rachel becomes the Oracle of Delphi and makes the next Great Prophecy according to Apollo, and Percy and Annabeth share a kiss. Afterward, the other campers dunk them in the lake and Percy makes an air bubble, in which they share an underwater kiss. The story concludes when Annabeth and Percy race down the hill at Camp Half-Blood and for once, Percy does not look back, for he is no longer in the shadow of a great prophecy.
作者: koko    時間: 2010-3-20 02:08

Percy Jackson and the Olympians 05 - The Last Olympian

CHAPTOR ONE
I GO CRUISING WITH
THE EXPLOSIVES
The end of the world started when a pegasus landed on the hood of
my car.
Up until then, I was having a great afternoon. Technically I
wasn't suppose to be driving because I wouldn't be sixteen for
another week, but my mom and my stepdad,Paul, took my friend
Rachel and me to this private stretch of beach on the South Shore,
and Paul let us borrow his Prius for a short spin.
Now, I know you're thinking, Wow, that was really
irresponsible of him,blah,blah,blah, but Paul knows me pretty well.
He's seen me slice up demons and leap out of exploding school
buildings, so he probably figured taking a car a few hundred yards
wasn't exactly the most dangerous thing I'd ever done.
Anyway, Rachael and I were driving along. It was hot August
day. Rachel's red hair was pulled back in a ponytail and she wore a
white blouse over her swimsuit. I'd never seen before, and she
looked like a million golden drachmas.
“Oh, pull up right there!” she told me
We parked on a ridge overlooking the Atlantic. The sea is
always one of my favorite places, but today it was especially niceglittery
green smooth as glass, as though my dad was keeping it calm
just for us.

My dad,by the way, is Poseidon. He can do stuff like that.
“So.” Rachel smiled at me. “ About that invitation.”
“Oh . . . right.” I tried to sound excited. I mean, she'd asked me
to her family's vacation house on St. Thomas for three days. I didn't
get a lot of offers like that. My family's idea of a fancy vacation was
a weekend in a rundown cabin on Long Island with some movie
rental and a couple of frozen pizzas, and here Rachel's folks were
willing to let me tag along to the Caribbean.
Besides, I seriously needed a vacation. This summer had been
the hardest of my life. The idea of taking a break even for a few days
was really tempting.
Still, something big was suppose to go down any day now. I
was “on call” for a mission. Even worse, next week was my
birthday. There was this prophecy that said when I turned sixteen,
bad things would happen.
“Percy,” she said, “I know the timing is bad. But it's always bad
for you, right?”
She had a point.
“I really want to go,” I promised. “It's just-”
“The war.”
I nodded. I didn't like talking about it, but Rachel knew.
Unlike most mortals, she could see through the Mist- the magic veil
that distorts human vision. She'd seen monsters. She'd met some of
the other demigods who were fighting the Titans and their allies.
She'd even been there last summer when the chopped-up Lord
Kronos rose out of his coffin in a terrible new form, and she'd earn
my permanent respect by nailing him in the eye with a blue plastic
hairbrush.
She put her hand on my arm. “Just think about it, okay? We
don't leave for a couple of days. My dad . . .” Her voice faltered.
“Is he giving you a hard time?” I asked.

Rachel shook her head in disgust. “He's trying to be nice to me,
which is almost worse. He wants me to go to Clarion Ladies
Academy in the fall.”
“The school where your mom went?”
“It's a stupid finishing school for society girls, all the way in
New Hampshire. Can you see me in finishing school?”
I admitted the idea sounded pretty dumb. Rachel was into urban
art projects and feeding the homeless and going to protest ralllies to
“Save the Endangered Yellow-bellied Sapsucker” and stuff like that.
I'd never even seen her wear a dress. It was hard to imagine her
learning to be a socialite.
She sighed. “He thinks if he does a bunch of nice stuff for me,
I'll feel guilty and give in.”
“Which is why he agreed to let me come with you guys on
vacation?”
“Yes . . . but Percy, you'd be doing me a huge favor. It would be
so much better if you were with us. Besides, there's something I
want to talk-” She stopped abruptly.
“Something you want to talk about?” I asked. “You mean . . . so
serious we'd have to go to St. Thomas to talk about it?”
She pursed her lips. “Look just forget it for now. Let's pretend
we're a couple for normal people. We're out for a drive, and we're
watching the ocean, and it's nice to be together.”
I could tell something was bothering her, but she put on a brave
smile. The sunlight made her hair look like fire.
We'd spent a lot of time together this summer. I hadn't exactly
planned it that way, but the more serious things got at camp, the
more I found myself needing to call up Rachel and get away, just for
some breathing room. I needed to remind myself that the mortal
world was still out there, away from all the monsters using me as
their personal punching bags.

“Okay,” I said. “Just normal afternoon and two normal people.”
She nodded. “And so . . . hypothetically, if these two people
liked each other, what would it take to get the stupid guy to kiss the
girl, huh?”
“Oh . . .” I felt like one of Apollo's sacred cows- slow, dumb,
and bright red. “ Um . . .”
I can't pretend I hadn't thought about Rachel. She was so much
easier to be around than . . . well, than some other girls I knew. I
didn't have to work hard, or watch what I said, or rack my brain
trying to figure out what she was thinking. Rachel didn't hide much.
She let you know how she felt.
I'm not sure that I would have done next- but I was so
distracted, I didn't notice the huge black form swooping down from
the sky until four hooves landed on the hood of the Priuis with a
WUMP-WUMP-CRUNCH!
Hey,boss, a voice in my head said. Nice car!
Blackjack the pegasus was an old friend of mine, so I tried not
to get too annoyed by the craters he'd just put on the hood; but I
didn't think my stepdad would be a real stoked.
“Blackjack,” I sighed. “What are you-”
Then I saw who was riding on his back, and I knew my day was
about to get more complicated.
“'Sup, Percy.”
Charles Beckendorf, senior counselor for the Hephaestus cabin,
would make most monsters cry for their mommies. He was huge,
with ripped muscles from working on the forges every summer, two
years older than me, and one of the camp's best armorsmiths. He
made some seriously ingenious mechanical stuff. A month before,
he'd rigged a Greek firebomb in the bathroom of a tour bus that was
carrying a bunch of monsters across country. The explosion took out
a whole legion of Krono's evil meanies as soon as the first harpy

went flush.
Beckendorf was dressed for combat. He wore bronze
breastplate and war helm with black camo pants and a sword
strapped to his side. His explosives bag was slung over his shoulder.
“Time?” I asked
He nodded grimly.
A clump formed in my throat. I'd known this was coming. We'd
been planning it for weeks, but I'd half hoped it would never happen.
Rachel looked up at Beckendorf. “Hi.”
“Oh, hey. You must be Rachel. Percy's told me . . . uh, I mean
he mentioned you.”
Rachel raised an eyebrow. “Really? Good.” She glanced at
Blackjack, who was clopping his hooves against the hood of the
Prius. “So, I guess you guys have to go save the world now.”
“Pretty much,” Beckendorf agreed.
I looked at Rachel helplessly. “Would you tell my mom-”
“I'll tell her. I'm sure she's used to it. And I'll explain to Paul
about the hood.”
I nodded my thanks. I figured this might be the last time Paul
loaned me his car.
“Good luck.” Rachel kissed me before I could even react.
“Now, get going, half-blood. Go kill some monsters for me.”
My last view of her was sitting in the shotgun seat of the Prius,
her arms crossed, watching as Blackjack circled higher and higher,
carrying Beckendorf and me into the sky. I wondered what Rachel
wanted to talk to me about, and whether I'd live long enough to find
out.
“So,” Beckendorf said, “I'm guessing you don't want me to
mention that little scene to Annabeth.”
“Oh, gods,” I muttered. “Don't even think about it.”
Beckendorf chuckled, and together we soared out over the

Atlantic.
It was almost dark by the time we spotted our target. The Princess
Andromeda glowed on the horizon- a huge cruise ship lit up yellow
and white. From a distance, you'd think it was just a party ship, not
the headquarters for the Titan lord. Then as you got closer, you
might notice the giant figurehead- a dark-haired maiden in a Greek
chiton, wrapped in chains with a look of horror on her face, as if she
could smell the stench of all the monsters she was being forced to
carry.
Seeing the ship again twisted my gut into knots. I'd almost died
twice on the Princess Andromeda. Now it was heading straight for
New York.
“You know what to do?” Beckendorf yelled over the wind.
I nodded. We'd done dry runs at the dockyards in New Jersey,
using abandoned ships as our targets. I knew how little time we
would have. But I also knew this was our best chance to end Krono's
invasion before it ever started.
“Blackjack,” I said, “set us down on the lowest stern deck.”
Gotcha,boss, he said. Man, I hate seeing that boat.
Three years ago, Blackjack had been enslaved on the Princess
Andromeda until he finally escaped with a little help from my friends
and me. I figured he'd rather have his mane braided like My Little
Pony than be back here again.
“Don't wait for us,” I told him.
But, boss-
“Trust me,” I said. “We'll get out ourselves.”
Blackjack folded his wings and plummeted toward the boat like

a black comet. The wind whistled in my ears. I saw monsters
patrolling the upper decks of the ship- dracaenae snake-woman,
hellhounds, giants, and the humanoid seal-demons known as
telkhines- but we zipped by so fast, none of them raised the alarm.
We shot down the stern of the boat, and Blackjack spread his wings,
lightly coming to a landing on the lowest deck. I climbed off, feeling
queasy.
Good luck,boss, Blackjack said. Don't let 'em turn you into
horse meat!
With that, my old friend flew off into the night. I took my pen
out of my pocket and uncapped it, and Riptide sprang to full sizethree
feet of deadly celestial bronze glowing in the dusk.
Beckendorf pulled a piece of paper out of his pocket. I thought
it was a map or something. Then I realized it was a photograph. He
stared at it in the dim light- the smiling face of Silena Beauregard,
daughter of Aphrodite. They'd started going out last summer, after
years of the rest of us saying “Duh, you guys like each other!” Even
with all the dangerous missions, Beckendorf had been happier this
summer than I'd ever seen him.
“We'd make it back to camp,” I promised.
For a second I saw sorry in his eyes. Then he put on his old
confident smile.
“You bet,” he said. “Let's go blow Kronos back into a million of
pieces.”
Beckendorf led the way. We followed a narrow corridor to the
service stairwell, just like we'd practiced, but we froze when we
heard noises above us.
“I don't care what your noses says!” snarled a half-human, halfdog
voice- a telkhine. “The last time you smelled half-blood, it

turned out to be a meat loaf sandwich!”
“Meat loaf sandwiches are good!” a second voice snarled. “But
this is half-blood scent, I swear. They are on board!”
“Bah, your brain isn't on board!”
They continued to argue, and Beckendorf pointed downstairs.
We descended as quietly as we could. Two floors down, the voices
of the telkhines started to fade.
Finally, we came to a metal hatch. Beckendorf mouthed the
words “engine room.”
It was locked, but Beckendorf pulled some chain cutters out of
his bag and split the bolt like it was made of butter.
Inside, a row of yellow turbines the size of grain silos churned
and hummed. Pressure gauges and computer terminals lined the
opposite wall. A telkhine was hunched over a console, but he was so
involved with his work, he didn't notice us. He was about five feet
tall, with slick black seal fur and stubby little feet. He had the head
of a Doberman, but his clawed hands were almost human. He
growled and muttered as he tapped on his keyboard. Maybe he was
messaging his friends on uglyface.com.
I stepped forward, and he tensed, probably smelling something
wrong. He leaped sideways toward a big red alarm button, but I
blocked his path. He hissed and lunged at me, but one slice of
Riptide, and he exploded into dust.
“One down,” Beckendorf said. “ About five thousand to go.”
He tossed me a jar of thick green liquid- Greek fire, one of the most
dangerous magical substances in the world.
The he threw me another essential tool of the demigod heros
duct
tape.
“Slap that one on the console,” he said. “I'll get the turnbines.”
We went to work. The room was hot and humid, and in no time
we were drenched in sweat.

The boat kept chugging along. Being the son of Poseidon and
all, I have perfect bearings at sea. Don't ask me how, but I could tell
er were at 40.l9° North, 7I.90° West, making eighteen knots, which
meant the ship would arrive in New York Harbor by dawn. This
would be our only chance to stop it.
I had just attached a second jar of Greek fire to the control
panels when I heard the pounding of feet on metal steps- so many
creatures coming down the stairwell I could hear them over the
engines. Not a good sign.
I locked eyes with Beckendorf. “How much longer?”
“Too long.” He tapped his watch, which was our remote control
detonator. “I still have to wire the receiver and prime the charges.
Ten more minutes at least.”
Judging from the sound of the footsteps, we had about ten
seconds.
“I'll distract them,” I said. “Meet you at the rendezvous point.”
“Percy-”
“Wish me luck.”
He looked like he wanted to argue. The whole idea had been to
get in and out without being spotted. But we were going to have to
improvise.
“Good luck,” he said.
I charged out the door.
A half dozen telkhines were tromping down the stairs. I cut through
them with Riptide faster than they could yelp. I kept climbing- past
another telkhine, who was so started he dropped his Lil' Demons
lunch box. I left him alive- partly because his lunch box was cool,
partly so he could raise the alarm and hopefully get his friends to
follow me rather than head towards the engine room

I burst through a door onto deck six and kept running. I'm sure
the carpeted hall had once been very plush, but over the last three
years of monster occupation the wallpaper, carpet, and stateroom had
been clawed up and slimed so it looked like the inside of a dragon's
throat (and yes, unfortunately, I speak from experience.)
Back on my first visit to the Princess Andromeda,my old enemy
Luke had kept some dazed tourist on board for show, shrouded in
Mist so they didn't realize they were on a monster-infested ship.
Now that I didn't see any sign of tourists. I hated to think what had
happened to them, but I kind of doubted they'd been allowed to go
home with their bingo winnings.
I reached the promenade, a big shopping mall that took up the
whole middle of the ship, and I stopped cold. In the middle of the
courtyard stood a fountain. And in the fountain squatted a giant crab.
I'm not talking “giant” like $7.99 all-you-can-eat Alaskan king
crab. I'm talking giant like bigger than the fountain. The monster
rose ten feet out of the water. It's shell was mottled blue and green,
its pincers longer than my body.
If you've ever seen a crab's mouth, all foamy and gross with
whiskers and snapping bits, you can imagine this one didn't look any
better blown up to billboard size. Its beady black eyes glared at
me,and I could see intelligence in them- and hate. The fact that I was
the son of the sea god was not going to win me any points with Mr.
Crabby.
“FFFFfffffff,” it hissed, sea foam dripping from its mouth.
The smell coming off it was like garbage can full of fish sticks that
had been sitting in the sun all week.
Alarms blared. Soon I was going to have lots of company and I
had to keep moving.
“Hey, crabby.” I inched around the edge of the courtyard. “I'm
just gonna scoot around you so-”

The crab moved with amazing speed. It scuttled out of the
fountain and came straight at me, pincers snapping. I dove into a gift
shop, plowing through a rack if T-shirts. A crab pincer smashed the
glass walls to pieces and raked across the room. I dashed back
outside, breathing heavily, but Mr. Crabby turned and followed.
“There!” a voice said from a balcony about me.
“Intruder!”
If I'd wanted to create a distraction, I'd succeeded, but this was
not where I wanted to fight. If I got pinned down in the center of the
ship, I was crab chow.
The demonic crustacean lunged at me. I sliced with Riptide,
taking off the tip of its claw. It hissed and foamed, but didn't seem
very hurt.
I tried to remember anything from the old stories that might
help with this thing. Annabeth had told me about a monster crabsomething
about Hercules crushing it under his big food? That
wasn't going to work here. This crab was slightly bigger than my
Reeboks.
Then a weird thought occurred to me. Last Christmas, my mom
and I had brought Paule Blofis to our old cabin at Montauk, where
we'd been going forever. Paul had taken me crabbing, and when he'd
brought up a net full of the things, he'd shown me how crabs have a
chink in their armor, right in the middle of their ugly bellies.
The only problem was getting to the ugly belly.
I glanced at the fountain, then at the marble floor, already slick
from scuttling crab tracks. I held out my hand, concentrating on the
water, and the fountain exploded. Water sprayed everywhere, three
stories high,dousing the balconies and the elevators and the windows
of the shops. The crab didn't care. It loved water. It came at me
sideways, snapping and hissing, and I ran straight at it, screaming,
“AHHHHHHH!”

Just before we collided, I hit the ground baseball-style and slid
on the wet marble floor straight under the creature. It was like
sliding under a seven-ton armored vehicle. All the crab had to do
was sit and squash me, but before it realized what I was going on, I
jabbed Riptide into the chink in its armor, let go of the hilt, and
pushed myself out the backside.
The monster shuddered and hissed. Its eyes dissolved. Its shell
turned bright red as its insides evaporated. The empty shell clattered
to the floor in a massive heap.
I didn't have time to admire my handiwork. I ran for the nearest
stairs while all around me monsters and demigods shouted orders
and strapped on their weapons. I was empty-handed. Riptide, being
magic, would appear in my pocket sooner or later, but for now it was
stuck somewhere under the wreckage of the crab,and I had no time
to retrieve it.
In the elevator foyer on deck eight, a couple of dracaenae
slithered across my path. From the waist up, they were woman with
green scaly skin,yellow eyes, and forked tongues. From the waist
down, they had double snake trunks instead of legs. They held spears
and weighted nets, and I knew from experience they could use them.
“What is thisss?” one said. “A prize for Kronoss!”
I wasn't in the mood to play break-the-snake, but in front of me
was a stand with a model of the ship, like a YOU ARE HERE
display. I ripped the model off the pedestal and hurled it at the first
dracaena. The boat smacked her in the face and she went down with
the ship. I jumped over her, grabbed her friend's spear, and swung
her around. She slammed into the elevator, and I kept running
toward the front of the ship.
“Get him!” she screamed.
Hellhounds bayed. An arrow from somewhere whizzed past my
face and impaled itself in the mahogany-paneled wall of the

stairwell.
I didn't care- as long as I got the monsters away from the engine
room and gave Beckendorf more time.
As I was running up the stairwell, a kid charged down.
He looked like he'd just woken up from a nap. His armor was half
on. He drew his sword and yelled, “Kronos!” but he sounded more
scared than angry. He couldn't have been more than twelve- about
the same age I was when I'd first arrived at Camp Half-Blood.
That thought depressed me. This kid was getting brain-washed-
trained to hate the gods and lash out because he'd been born half
Olympian. Kronos was using him, and yet the kid thought I was his
enemy.
No way was I going to hurt him. I didn't need a weapon for this.
I stepped inside his strike and grabbed his wrist, slamming it against
the wall. His sword clattered out of his hand.
Then I did something I hadn't planned on. It was probably
stupid. It definitely jeopardized our mission, but I couldn't help it.
“If you want to live,” I told him, “get off this ship now. Tell the
other demigods.” Then I shoved him down the stairs and sent him
tumbling to the next door.
I kept climbing.
Bad memories: a hallway ran past the cafeteria. Annabeth, my
half brother Tyson, and I had sneaked through here three years ago
on my first visit.
I burst outside onto the main deck. Off the port bow, the sky
was darkening from purple to black. A swimming pool glowed
between two glass towers with more balconies and restaurant decks.
The whole upper ship seemed eerily deserted.
All I had to do was cross to the other side. Then I could take
the staircase down to the helipad- our emergency rendezvous point.
With any luck, Beckendorf would meet me there. We'd jump into the

sea. My water powers would protect us both, and we'd detonate the
charges from a quarter mile away.
I was halfway across the deck when the sound of a voice made
me freeze. “You're late, Percy.”
Luke stood on the balcony above me, a smile on his scarred
face. He wore jeans, a white T-shirt, and flip-flops, like he was just a
normal college guy, but his eyes told the truth. They were solid gold.
“We've been expecting you for days.” At first he sounded
normal, like Luke. But then his face twitched. A shudder passed
through his body as though he'd just drunk something really nasty.
His voice became heavier, ancient,and powerful- the voice of the
Titan lord Kronos. The words scraped down my spine like a knife
blade. “Come, bow before me.”
“Yeah, that'll happen,” I muttered.
Laistrygonian giants filed in on either side of the swimming
pool as if they'd been waiting for a cue. Each was eight feet tall with
tattooed arms, leather armor, and spiked clubs. Demigod archers
appeared on the roof above Luke. Two hellhounds leaped down from
the opposite balcony and snarled at me. Within seconds I was
surrounded. A trap: there's no way they could've gotten into position
so face unless they'd known I was coming.
I looked up at Luke, and anger boiled inside me. I didn't know
if Luke's consciousness was even still alive inside that body. Maybe,
the way his voice had changed . . . or maybe it was just Kronos
adapting to his new form. I told myself it didn't matter. Luke had
been twisted and evil long before Kronos possessed him.
A voice in my head said: I have to fight him eventually. Why not
now?
According to that big prophecy, I was suppose to make a choice
that saved or destroyed the world when I was sixteen. That was only
seven days away. Why not now? If I really had the power, what

difference would a week make? I could end this threat right here by
taking down Kronos. Hey, I'd fought monsters and gods before.
As if reading my thoughts, Luke smiled. No, he was Kronos. I
had to remember that.
“Come forward,” he said. “If you dare.”
The crowd of monsters parted. I moved up the stairs, my heart
pounding. I was sure somebody would stab me in the back, but they
let me pass. I felt my pocket and found my pen waiting. I uncapped
it, and Riptide grew into a sword.
Krono's weapon appeared in his hands- a six-foot-long scythe, a
half Celestial bronze, half mortal steel. Just looking at it made my
knees turn to Jell-O. But before I could change my mind, I charged.
Time slowed down. I mean literally slowed down, because
Kronos had that power. I felt like I was moving through syrup. My
arms were so heavy, I could barely raise my sword. Kronos smiled,
swirling his scythe at normal speed and waiting for me to creep
toward my death.
I tried to fight his magic. I concentrated on the sea around methe
source of my power. I'd gotten better at channeling it over the
year, but now nothing seemed to happen.
I took another slow step forward. Giants jeered Dracaenae
hissed with laughter.
Hey, ocean, I pleaded. Any day would be good.
Suddenly there was a wrenching pain in my gut. The entire boat
lurched sideways, throwing monsters off their feet. Four thousand
gallons of salt water surged out of the swimming pool, dousing me
and Kronos and everyone on the deck. The water revitalized me,
breaking the time spell, and I lunged forward.
I struck at Kronos, but I was still too slow. I made the mistake
of looking at his face-Luke's face-a guy who was once my friend. As
much as I hated him, it was hard to kill him.

Kronos had no such hesitation. He sliced downward with his
scythe. I leaped back, and the evil blade missed by an inch, cutting a
gash in the deck right between my feet.
I kicked Kronos in the chest. He stumbled backward, but he
was heavier than Luke should've been. It was like kicking a
refrigerator.
Kronos swung his scythe again. I intercepted with Riptide, but
his strike was so powerful, my blade could only deflect it. The edge
of the scythe shaved off my shirtsleeve and grazed my arm. It
shouldn't have been a serious cut, but the entire side of my body
exploded with pain. I remembered what a sea demon had once said
about Kronos's scythe: Careful, fool. One touch, and the blade will
sever your soul from your body. Now I understood what he meant. I
wasn't just losing blood. I could feel my strength, my will, my
identity draining away.
I stumbled backward, switched my sword to my left hand, and
lunged desperately. My blade should've run him through, but it
deflected off his stomach like I was hitting solid marble. There was
no way he should've survived that.
Kronos laughed. "A poor performance, Percy Jackson. Luke
tells me you were never his match at swordplay."
My vision started to blur. I knew I didn't have much time.
"Luke had a big head," I said. "But at least it was his head."
"A shame to kill you now," Kronos mused, "before the final
plan unfolds. I would love to see the terror in your eyes when you
realize how I will destroy Olympus."
"You'll never get this boat to Manhattan." My arm was
throbbing. Black spots danced in my vision.
"And why would that be?" Kronos's golden eyes glittered. His

face-Luke's face-seemed like a mask, unnatural and lit from behind
by some evil power. "Perhaps you are counting on your friend with
the explosives?"
He looked down at the pool and called, "Nakamura!"
A teenage guy in full Greek armor pushed through the crowd.
His left eye was covered with a black patch. I knew him, of course:
Ethan Nakamura, the son of Nemesis. I'd saved his life in the
Labyrinth last summer, and in return, the little punk had helped
Kronos come back to life.
"Success, my lord," Ethan called. "We found him just as we
were told."
He clapped his hands, and two giants lumbered forward,
dragging Charles Beckendorf between them. My heart almost
stopped. Beckendorf had a swollen eye and cuts all over his face and
arms. His armor was gone and his shirt was nearly torn off.
"No!" I yelled.
Beckendorf met my eyes. He glanced at his hand like he was
trying to tell me something. His watch. They hadn't taken it yet, and
that was the detonator. Was it possible the explosives were armed?
Surely the monsters would've dismantled them right away.
"We found him amidships," one of the giants said, "trying to
sneak to the engine room. Can we eat him now?"
"Soon." Kronos scowled at Ethan. "Are you sure he didn't set
the explosives?"
"He was going toward the engine room, my lord."
"How do you know that?"
"Er . . ." Ethan shifted uncomfortably. "He was heading in that
direction. And he told us. His bag is still full of explosives."

Slowly, I began to understand. Beckendorf had fooled them.
When he'd realized he was going to be captured, he turned to make it
look like he was going the other way. He'd convinced them he hadn't
made it to the engine room yet. The Greek fire might still be primed!
But that didn't do us any good unless we could get off the ship and
detonate it.
Kronos hesitated.
Buy the story, I prayed. The pain in my arm was so bad now I
could barely stand.
"Open his bag," Kronos ordered.
One of the giants ripped the explosives satchel from
Beckendorf's shoulders. He peered inside, grunted, and turned it
upside down. Panicked monsters surged backward. If the bag really
had been full of Greek fire jars, we would've all blown up. But what
fell out were a dozen cans of peaches.
I could hear Kronos breathing, trying to control his anger.
"Did you, perhaps," he said, "capture this demigod near the
galley?"
Ethan turned pale. "Um-"
"And did you, perhaps, send someone to actually CHECK THE
ENGINE ROOM?"
Ethan scrambled back in terror, then turned on his heels and
ran.
I cursed silently. Now we had only minutes before the bombs
were disarmed. I caught Beckendorf's eyes again and asked a silent
question, hoping he would understand: How long?
He cupped his fingers and thumb, making a circle. Zero. There
was no delay on the timer at all. If he managed to press the detonator

button, the ship would blow at once. We'd never be able to get far
enough away before using it. The monsters would kill us first, or
disarm the explosives, or both.
Kronos turned toward me with a crooked smile. "You'll have to
excuse my incompetent help, Percy Jackson. But it doesn't matter.
We have you now. We've known you were coming for weeks."
He held out his hand and dangled a little silver bracelet with a
scythe charm-the Titan lord's symbol.
The wound in my arm was sapping my ability to think, but I
muttered, "Communication device . . . spy at camp."
Kronos chuckled. "You can't count on friends. They will always
let you down. Luke learned that lesson the hard way. Now drop your
sword and surrender to me, or your friend dies."
I swallowed. One of the giants had his hand around
Beckendorf's neck. I was in no shape to rescue him, and even if I
tried, he would die before I got there. We both would.
Beckendorf mouthed one word: Go.
I shook my head. I couldn't just leave him.
The second giant was still rummaging through the peach cans,
which meant Beckendorf's left arm was free. He raised it slowlytoward
the watch on his right wrist.
I wanted to scream, NO!
Then down by the swimming pool, one of the dracaenae hissed,
"What isss he doing? What isss that on hisss wrissst?"
Beckendorf closed eyes tight and brought his hand up to his
watch.
I had no choice. I threw my sword like a javelin at Kronos. It

bounced harmlessly off his chest, but it did startle him. I pushed
through a crowd of monsters and jumped off the side of the shiptoward
the water a hundred feet below.
I heard rumbling deep in the ship. Monsters yelled at me from
above. A spear sailed past my ear. An arrow pierced my thigh, but I
barely had time to register the pain. I plunged into the sea and willed
the currents to take me far, far away-a hundred yards, two hundred
yards.
Even from that distance, the explosion shook the world. Heat
seared the back of my head. The Princess Andromeda blew up from
both sides, a massive fireball of green flame roiling into the dark sky,
consuming everything.
Beckendorf, I thought.
Then I blacked out and sank like an anchor toward the bottom
of the sea.
作者: koko    時間: 2010-3-20 02:09

CHAPTER TWO
I MEET SOME FISHY
RELATIVES
Demigod dreams suck.
The thing is, they're never just dreams. They've got to be
visions, omens, and all that other mystical stuff that makes my brain
hurt.
I dreamed I was in a dark palace at the top of a mountain.
Unfortunately, I recognized it: the palace of the Titans on top of
Mount Othrys, otherwise known as Mount Tamalpais, in California.
The main pavilion was open to the night, ringed with black Greek
columns and statues of the Titans. Torchlight glowed against the
black marble floor. In the center of the room, an armored giant
struggled under the weight of a swirling funnel cloud-Atlas, holding
up the sky.
Two other giant men stood nearby over a bronze brazier,
studying images in the flames.
"Quite an explosion," one said. He wore black armor studded
with silver dots like a starry night. His face was covered in a war
helm with a ram's horn curling on either side.
"It doesn't matter," the other said. This Titan was dressed in
gold robes, with golden eyes like Kronos. His entire body glowed.
He reminded me of Apollo, God of the Sun, except the Titan's light
was harsher, and his expression crueler. "The gods have answered
the challenge. Soon they will be destroyed."
The images in the fire were hard to make out: storms, buildings
crumbling, mortals screaming in terror.

"I will go east to marshal our forces," the golden Titan said.
"Krios, you shall remain and guard Mount Othrys."
The ram horn dude grunted. "I always get the stupid jobs. Lord
of the South. Lord of Constellations. Now I get to babysit Atlas
while you have all the fun."
Under the whirlwind of clouds, Atlas bellowed in agony, "Let
me out, curse you! I am your greatest warrior. Take my burden so I
may fight!"
"Quiet!" the golden Titan roared. "You had your chance, Atlas.
You failed. Kronos likes you just where you are. As for you, Krios,
do your duty."
"And if you need more warriors?" Krios asked. "Our
treacherous nephew in the tuxedo will not do you much good in a
fight."
The golden Titan laughed. "Don't worry about him. Besides, the
gods can barely handle our first little challenge. They have no idea
how many others we have in store. Mark my words, in a few days'
time, Olympus will be in ruins, and we will meet here again to
celebrate the dawn of the Sixth Age!"
The golden Titan erupted into flames and disappeared.
"Oh, sure," Krios grumbled. "He gets to erupt into flames. I get
to wear these stupid ram's horns."
The scene shifted. Now I was outside the pavilion, hiding in the
shadows of a Greek column. A boy stood next to me, eavesdropping
on the Titans. He had dark silky hair, pale skin, and dark clothes-my
friend Nico di Angelo, the son of Hades.
He looked straight at me, his expression grim. "You see,
Percy?" he whispered. "You're running out of time. Do you really

think you can beat them without my plan?"
His words washed over me as cold as the ocean floor, and my
dreams went black.
"Percy?" a deep voice said.
My head felt like it had been microwaved in aluminum foil. I
opened my eyes and saw a large shadowy figure looming over me.
"Beckendorf?" I asked hopefully.
"No, brother."
My eyes refocused. I was looking at a Cyclops-a misshapen
face, ratty brown hair, one big brown eye full of concern. "Tyson?"
My brother broke into a toothy grin. "Yay! Your brain works!"
I wasn't so sure. My body felt weightless and cold. My voice
sounded wrong. I could hear Tyson, but it was more like I was
hearing vibrations inside my skull, not the regular sounds.
I sat up, and a gossamer sheet floated away. I was on a bed
made of silky woven kelp, in a room paneled with abalone shell.
Glowing pearls the size of basketballs floated around the ceiling,
providing light. I was under water.
Now, being the son of Poseidon and all, I was okay with this. I
can breathe underwater just fine, and my clothes don't even get wet
unless I want them to. But it was still a bit of a shock when a
hammerhead shark drifted through the bedroom window, regarded
me, and then swam calmly out the opposite side of the room.
"Where-"
"Daddy's palace," Tyson said.

Under different circumstances, I would've been excited. I'd
never visited Poseidon's realm, and I'd been dreaming about it for
years. But my head hurt. My shirt was still speckled with burn marks
from the explosion. My arm and leg wounds had healed-just being in
the ocean can do that for me, given enough time-but I still felt like
I'd been trampled by a Laistrygonian soccer team in cleats.
"How long-"
"We found you last night," Tyson said, "sinking through the
water."
"The Princess Andromeda?"
"Went ka-boom," Tyson confirmed.
"Beckendorf was on board. Did you find . . ."
Tyson's face darkened. "No sign of him. I am sorry, brother."
I stared out the window into deep blue water. Beckendorf was
supposed to go to college in the fall. He had a girlfriend, lots of
friends, his whole life ahead of him. He couldn't be gone. Maybe
he'd made it off the ship like I had. Maybe he'd jumped over the
side . . . and what? He couldn't have survived a hundred-foot fall into
the water like I could. He couldn't have put enough distance between
himself and the explosion.
I knew in my gut he was dead. He'd sacrificed himself to take
out the Princess Andromeda, and I had abandoned him.
I thought about my dream: the Titans discussing the explosion
as if it didn't matter, Nico di Angelo warning me that I would never
beat Kronos without following his plan-a dangerous idea I'd been
avoiding for more than a year.
A distant blast shook the room. Green light blazed outside,
turning the whole sea as bright as noon.

"What was that?" I asked.
T yson looked worried. "Daddy will explain. Come, he is blowing
up monsters."
The palace might have been the most amazing place I'd ever seen if
it hadn't been in the process of getting destroyed. We swam to the
end of a long hallway and shot upward on a geyser. As we rose over
the rooftops I caught my breath-well, if you can catch your breath
underwater.
The palace was as big as the city on Mount Olympus, with wide
courtyards, gardens, and columned pavilions. The gardens were
sculpted with coral colonies and glowing sea plants. Twenty or thirty
buildings were made of abalone, white but gleaming with rainbow
colors. Fish and octopi darted in and out of the windows. The paths
were lined with glowing pearls like Christmas lights.
The main courtyard was filled with warriors-mermen with fish
tails from the waist down and human bodies from the waist up,
except their skin was blue, which I'd never known before. Some
were tending the wounded. Some were sharpening spears and
swords. One passed us, swimming in a hurry. His eyes were bright
green, like that stuff they put in glo-sticks, and his teeth were shark
teeth. They don't show you stuff like that in The Little Mermaid.
Outside the main courtyard stood large fortifications-towers,
walls, and antisiege weapons-but most of these had been smashed to
ruins. Others were blazing with a strange green light that I knew
well-Greek fire, which can burn even underwater.
Beyond this, the sea floor stretched into gloom. I could see
battles raging-flashes of energy, explosions, the glint of armies

clashing. A regular human would've found it too dark to see. Heck, a
regular human would've been crushed by the pressure and frozen by
the cold. Even my heat-sensitive eyes couldn't make out exactly
what was going on.
At the edge of the palace complex, a temple with a red coral
roof exploded, sending fire and debris streaming in slow motion
across the farthest gardens. Out of the darkness above, an enormous
form appeared-a squid larger than any skyscraper. It was surrounded
by a glittering cloud of dust-at least I thought it was dust, until I
realized it was a swarm of mermen trying to attack the monster. The
squid descended on the palace and swatted its tentacles, smashing a
whole column of warriors. Then a brilliant arc of blue light shot
from the rooftop of one of the tallest buildings. The light hit the giant
squid, and the monster dissolved like food coloring in water.
"Daddy," Tyson said, pointing to where the light had come
from.
"He did that?" I suddenly felt more hopeful. My dad had
unbelievable powers. He was the god of the sea. He could deal with
this attack, right? Maybe he'd let me help.
"Have you been in the fight?" I asked Tyson in awe. "Like
bashing heads with your awesome Cyclops strength and stuff?"
Tyson pouted, and immediately I knew I'd asked a bad question,
"I have been . . . fixing weapons," he mumbled. "Come. Let's go find
Daddy."
I know this might sound weird to people with, like, regular parents,
but I'd only seen my dad four or five times in my life, and never for
more than a few minutes. The Greek gods don't exactly show up for

their kids' basketball games. Still, I thought I would recognize
Poseidon on sight.
I was wrong.
The roof of the temple was a big open deck that had been set up
as a command center. A mosaic on the floor showed an exact map of
the palace grounds and the surrounding ocean, but the mosaic
moved. Colored stone tiles representing different armies and sea
monsters shifted around as the forces changed position. Buildings
that collapsed in real life also collapsed in the picture.
Standing around the mosaic, grimly studying the battle, was a
strange assortment of warriors, but none of them looked like my dad.
I was searching for a big guy with a good tan and a black beard,
wearing Bermuda shorts and a Hawaiian shirt.
There was nobody like that. One guy was a merman with two
fish tails instead of one. His skin was green, his armor studded with
pearls. His black hair was tied in a ponytail, and he looked youngthough
it's hard to tell with non-humans. They could be a thousand
years old or three. Standing next to him was an old man with a bushy
white beard and gray hair. His battle armor seemed to weigh him
down. He had green eyes and smile wrinkles around his eyes, but he
wasn't smiling now. He was studying the map and leaning on a large
metal staff. To his right stood a beautiful woman in green armor with
flowing black hair and strange little horns like crab claws. And there
was a dolphin-just a regular dolphin, but it was staring at the map
intently.
"Delphin," the old man said. "Send Palaemon and his legion of
sharks to the western front. We have to neutralize those leviathans."
The dolphin spoke in a chattering voice, but I could understand
it in my mind: Yes, lord! It sped away.

I looked in dismay at Tyson, then back at the old man.
It didn't seem possible, but . . . "Dad?" I asked.
The old man looked up. I recognized the twinkle in his eyes, but
his face . . . he looked like he'd aged forty years.
"Hello, Percy."
"What-what happened to you?"
Tyson nudged me. He was shaking his head so hard Iwas afraid
it would fall off, but Poseidon didn't look offended.
"It's all right, Tyson," he said. "Percy, excuse my appearance.
The war has been hard on me."
"But you're immortal," I said quietly. "You can look . . . any
way you want."
"I reflect the state of my realm," he said. "And right now that
state is quite grim. Percy, I should introduce you-I'm afraid you just
missed my lieutenant Delphin, God of the Dolphins. This is my, er,
wife, Amphitrite. My dear-"
The lady in green armor stared at me coldly, then crossed her
arms and said, "Excuse me, my lord. I am needed in the battle."
She swam away.
I felt pretty awkward, but I guess I couldn't blame her. I'd never
thought about it much, but my dad had an immortal wife. All his
romances with mortals, including with my mom . . . well, Amphitrite
probably didn't like that much.
Poseidon cleared his throat. "Yes, well . . . and this is my son
Triton. Er, my other son."
"Your son and heir," the green dude corrected. His double fish
tails swished back and forth. He smiled at me, but there was no

friendliness in his eyes. "Hello, Perseus Jackson. Come to help at
last?"
He acted like I was late or lazy. If you can blush underwater, I
probably did.
"Tell me what to do," I said.
Triton smiled like that was a cute suggestion-like I was a
slightly amusing dog that had barked for him or something. He
turned to Poseidon. "I will see to the front line, Father. Don't worry. I
will not fail."
He nodded politely to Tyson. How come I didn't get that much
respect? Then he shot off into the water.
Poseidon sighed. He raised his staff, and it changed into his
regular weapon-a huge three-pointed trident. The tip glowed with
blue light, and the water around it boiled with energy.
"I'm sorry about that," he told me.
A huge sea serpent appeared from above us and spiraled down
toward the roof. It was bright orange with a fanged mouth big
enough to swallow a gymnasium.
Hardly looking up, Poseidon pointed his trident at the beast and
zapped it with blue energy. Ka-boom! The monster burst into a
million goldfish, which all swam off in terror.
"My family is anxious," Poseidon continued as if nothing had
happened. "The battle against Oceanus is going poorly."
He pointed to the edge of the mosaic. With the butt of his
trident he tapped the image of a merman larger than the rest, with the
horns of a bull. He appeared to be riding a chariot pulled by
crawfish, and instead of a sword he wielded a live serpent.
"Oceanus," I said, trying to remember. "The Titan of the sea?"

Poseidon nodded. "He was neutral in the first war of gods and
Titans. But Kronos has convinced him to fight. This is . . . well, it's
not a good sign. Oceanus would not commit unless he was sure he
could pick the winning side."
"He looks stupid," I said, trying to sound upbeat. "I mean, who
fights with a snake?"
"Daddy will tie it in knots," Tyson said firmly.
Poseidon smiled, but he looked weary. "I appreciate your faith.
We have been at war almost a year now. My powers are taxed. And
still he finds new forces to throw at me-sea monsters so ancient I had
forgotten about them."
I heard an explosion in the distance. About half a mile away, a
mountain of coral disintegrated under the weight of two giant
creatures. I could dimly make out their shapes. One was a lobster.
The other was a giant humanoid like a Cyclops, but he was
surrounded by a flurry of limbs. At first I thought he wearing a
bunch of giant octopi. Then I realized they were his own arms-a
hundred flailing, fighting arms.
"Briares!" I said.
I was happy to see him, but he looked like he was fighting for
his life. He was the last of his kind-a Hundred-Handed One, cousin
of the Cyclopes. We'd saved him from Kronos's prison last summer,
and I knew he'd come to help Poseidon, but I hadn't heard of him
since.
"He fights well," Poseidon said. "I wish we had a whole army
like him, but he is the only one."
I watched as Briares bellowed in rage and picked up the lobster,
which thrashed and snapped its pincers. He threw it off the coral
mountain, and the lobster disappeared into the darkness. Briares

swam after it, his hundred arms spinning like the blades of a
motorboat.
"Percy, we may not have much time," my dad said. "Tell me of
your mission. Did you see Kronos?"
I told him everything, though my voice choked up when I explained
about Beckendorf. I looked down at the courtyards below and saw
hundreds of wounded mermen lying on makeshift cots. I saw rows
of coral mounds that must've been hastily made graves. I realized
Beckendorf wasn't the first death. He was only one of hundreds,
maybe thousands. I'd never felt so angry and helpless.
Poseidon stroked his beard. "Percy, Beckendorf chose a heroic
death. You bear no blame for that. Kronos's army will be m disarray.
Many were destroyed."
"But we didn't kill him, did we?"
As I said it, I knew it was a naive hope. We might blow up his
ship and disintegrate his monsters, but a Titan lord wouldn't be so
easy to kill.
"No," Poseidon admitted. "But you've bought our side some
time."
"There were demigods on that ship," I said, thinking of the kid
I'd seen in the stairwell. Somehow I'd allowed myself to concentrate
on the monsters and Kronos. I'd convinced myself that destroying
their ship was all right because they were evil, they were sailing to
attack my city, and besides, they couldn't really be permanently
killed. Monsters just vaporized and re-formed eventually. But
demigods . . .
Poseidon put his hand on my shoulder. "Percy, there were only
a few demigod warriors aboard that ship, and they all chose to battle
for Kronos. Perhaps some heeded your warning and escaped. If they

did not . . . they chose their path."
"They were brainwashed!" I said. "Now they're dead and
Kronos is still alive. That's supposed to make me feel better?"
I glared at the mosaic-little tile explosions destroying tile
monsters. It seemed so easy when it was just a picture.
Tyson put his arm around me. If anybody else had tried that, I
would've pushed him away, but Tyson was too big and stubborn. He
hugged me whether I wanted it or not. "Not your fault, brother.
Kronos does not explode good. Next time we will use a big stick."
"Percy," my father said. "Beckendorf's sacrifice wasn't in vain.
You have scattered the invasion force. New York will be safe for a
time, which frees the other Olympians to deal with the bigger
threat."
"The bigger threat?" I thought about what the golden Titan had
said in my dream: The gods have answered the challenge. Soon they
will be destroyed.
A shadow passed over my father's face. "You've had enough
sorrow for one day. Ask Chiron when you return to camp."
"Return to camp? But you're in trouble here. I want to help!"
"You can't, Percy. Your job is elsewhere."
I couldn't believe I was hearing this. I looked at Tyson for
backup.
My brother chewed his lip. "Daddy . . . Percy can fight with a
sword. He is good."
"I know that," Poseidon said gently.
"Dad, I can help," I said. "I know I can. You're not going to hold
out here much longer."

A fireball launched into the sky from behind the enemy lines. I
thought Poseidon would deflect it or something, but it landed on the
outer corner of the yard and exploded, sending mermen tumbling
through the water. Poseidon winced as if he'd just been stabbed.
"Return to camp," he insisted. "And tell Chiron it is time."
"For what?"
"You must hear the prophecy. The entire prophecy."
I didn't need to ask him which prophecy. I'd been hearing about
the "Great Prophecy" for years, but nobody would ever tell me the
whole thing. All I knew was that I was supposed to make a decision
that would decide the fate of the world-but no pressure.
"What if this is the decision?" I said. "Staying here to light, or
leaving? What if I leave and you . . ."
I couldn't say die. Gods weren't supposed to die, but I'd seen it
happen. Even if they didn't die, they could be reduced to nearly
nothing, exiled, imprisoned in the depths of Tartarus like Kronos had
been.
"Percy, you must go," Poseidon insisted. "I don't know what
your final decision will be, but your fight lies in the world above. If
nothing else, you must warn your friends at camp. Kronos knew
your plans. You have a spy. We will hold here. We have no choice."
Tyson gripped my hand desperately. "I will miss you, brother!"
Watching us, our father seemed to age another ten years.
"Tyson, you have work to do as well, my son. They need you in the
armory."
Tyson pouted some more.
"I will go," he sniffled. He hugged me so hard he almost
cracked my ribs. "Percy, be careful! Do not let monsters kill you

dead!"
I tried to nod confidently, but it was too much for the big guy.
He sobbed and swam away toward the armory, where his cousins
were fixing spears and swords.
"You should let him fight," I told my father. "He hates being stuck in
the armory. Can't you tell?"
Poseidon shook his head. "It is bad enough I must send you into
danger. Tyson is too young. I must protect him."
"You should trust him," I said. "Not try to protect him."
Poseidon's eyes flared. I thought I'd gone too far, but then he looked
down at the mosaic and his shoulders sagged. On the tiles, the
mermaid guy in the crawfish chariot was coming closer to the
palace.
"Oceanus approaches," my father said. "I must meet him in battle."
I'd never been scared for a god before, but I didn't see how my dad
could face this Titan and win.
"I will hold," Poseidon promised. "I will not give up my domain.
Just tell me, Percy, do you still have the birthday gift I gave you last
summer?"
I nodded and pulled out my camp necklace. It had a bead for every
summer I'd been at Camp Half-Blood, but since last year I'd also
kept a sand dollar on the cord. My father had given it to me for my
fifteenth birthday. He'd told me I would know when to "spend it,"
but so far I hadn't figured out what he meant. All I knew was that it
didn't fit the vending machines in the school cafeteria.
"The time is coming," he promised. "With luck, I will see you for
your birthday next week, and we will have a proper celebration."
He smiled, and for a moment I saw the old light in his eyes.

Then the entire sea grew dark in front of us, like an inky storm was
rolling in. Thunder crackled, which should've been impossible
underwater. A huge icy presence was approaching. I sensed a wave
of fear roll through the armies below us.
"I must assume my true godly form," Poseidon said. "Go-and good
luck, my son."
I wanted to encourage him, to hug him or something, but knew
better than to stick around. When a god assumes his true form, the
power is so great that any mortal looking on him will disintegrate.
"Good-bye, Father," I managed.
Then I turned away. I willed the ocean currents to aid me. Water
swirled around me, and I shot toward the surface at speeds that
would've caused any normal human to pop like a balloon.
When I looked back, all I could see were flashes of green and blue as
my father fought the Titan, and the sea itself was torn apart by the
two armies.
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作者: koko    時間: 2010-3-23 01:07

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作者: koko    時間: 2010-3-23 01:07

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作者: koko    時間: 2010-3-23 01:08

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作者: koko    時間: 2010-3-23 01:09

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作者: koko    時間: 2010-3-23 01:09

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