Some Things You Might Have Forgotten About Percy Jackson

pftones3482:

– In the beginning of the series, Grover is 28 years old (making him about 33 by the Blood of Olympus)

– Someone in New York City has a statue of Smelly Gabe on their property

– Annabeth is really good at playing Hacky Sack

– Grover’s Uncle Ferdinand is still a statue at Aunty Em’s Garden Emporium (and is missing an arm).

– Annabeth’s father is a Harvard graduate.

– If Percy had aged with the books release dates, he would have been 21 in The Blood of Olympus.

– Travis and Connor Stoll aren’t twins.

– Blackjack was originally written as a female Pegasus.

– Blackbeard is now running around the modern day world thanks to Hermes’ vitamins

– Camp Half-Bloods address is the first four digits of pi.

– Chiron wears his horse tail in curlers

– Nico and Bianca were never technically claimed.

– The dam snack bar

– Several dozen Target stores across the country have arrows stuck in their signs from when Zoë shot them

– Percy knows how to ride/drive a motorcycle

– Travis Stoll got cursed by the Aphrodite cabin and was stuck wearing clown makeup for a month.

– Tyson and Grover were trapped in the Labyrinth together for over two weeks.

– Kampê is still buried in a mound of boulders in Camp Half Blood.

– Pollux is now Dionysus’s only child.

– May Castellan is still waiting for Luke to come home.

Questions I Have About Those Seven Years on the Satellite:

nothingtoseehere-move-along:

  • What happened when the satellite required repairs? No matter how high tech the hardware was, it had to have breakdowns occasionally. 
    • Did Cress just have to MacGyver it until someone could be sent up to repair it? Did she just have to wait and hope someone got there before the problem became too serious? 
    • Were heavily glamoured workers brought up to fix things?
    • Sidenote: Don’t imagine Cress seeing another real live person (albeit in a space suit) on the other side of her viewports while they fix a faulty exterior seal, or standing aside while a mechanic patches up the damaged water recycler, only to be entirely ignored in both cases because Sybil has made sure they cannot interact with her. It will only make you sad.
  • What happened when Cress got sick? No matter how sterile the environment, Sybil would no doubt carry in the occasional cold or flu. 
    • Did she get a sanctioned break from her work to recover? Or did she have to muscle her way through?
    • Did Sybil bring medications or did Cress just have to suffer through without them?
    • Sidenote: Don’t imagine a much younger Cress with her blankets wrapped tight around her shoulders, her teeth chattering and her face flushed with fever as she tries to keep working because that’s what Mistress Sybil said to do. It will only make you sad.
  • Was the satellite ever affected by space weather? Solar storms can wreak havoc with electrical systems, and it’s likely that there were a number of solar storms within that seven year period.
    • Were there ever any storms severe enough to cause the loss of power, ruined circuitry, and burned out systems that modern satellites face?
    • How often did Cress have to reboot all her computer systems and restart all her research and essentially start everything over from scratch after losing it all to a particularly nasty storm? 
    • Sidenote: Don’t imagine a frightened Cress watching the power flicker off, then back on while she weathers a storm, hoping that the back-up systems will maintain life support after the main ones collapse. It will only make you sad.
  • Conclusion: Don’t think about the satellite. It will only make you sad.

mx-delta-juliette:

moghedien:

moghedien:

ok so Leia was heading to Obi-wan before the Battle of Scarif, and before she ever knew she or anyone would have the plans. It wasn’t just a last resort, “vader’s bout to get us we gotta go somewhere” decision. the fact that she was going to Obi-wan is probably the reason she was with the rebels and not on Alderaan.

so think in the context that a) Bail was knowingly sending his daughter, who has the genes of one of the most powerful force users ever, to go get a Jedi, b) Bail knew that he was sending the biological child of Anakin to Anakin’s former master and friend, c) Obi-wan definitely would knows who Leia is, d) Bail knows that Obi-wan is keeping an eye on Luke.

I’m not saying Bail Organa knowingly sent his force sensitive daughter to the only fully trained Jedi he knew how to get in touch with and also her force sensitive brother, but Bail Organa knowingly sent his force sensitive daughter to the only fully trained Jedi he knew how to get in touch with and also her force sensitive brother. Because he and Mon Mothma decided things had gotten to this point.

Someone in the tags said “Bail didn’t send the plans to Obi-wan. Bail sent Leia.”

YES. The Death Star plans were a last minute bonus. Bail’s actual plans for dealing with the Empire and the Death Star was LEIA

Could you imagine being Bail and making that decision, though?

There he is, sitting on basically the last hope of the galaxy. Or rather, she’s sitting on him, because she’s two-and-a-half years old and her adopted father’s shoulders are the very best place in the world. They’re listening from Alderaan as Palpatine announces that the senate will be stripped of even more power, that the never-ending series of emergencies across the galaxy will continue.

Time feels broken, somehow. The planet rotates, the sun rises and sets, but the galaxy is frozen in a slow slide into oblivion.

Not yet, is all he can think. He’s working with the young Senator from Chandrila, spinning the wheels, trying to buy more time. Years and years more time.

~

There he is, introducing his family to a man with a black uniform and absolute control of the sector. Leia is six, and looks up at him suddenly serious, a far cry from her normal mischievous self.

“And my daughter, Leia,” he says, while his thoughts race between please don’t question her adoption and please get off my planet and the Jedi were insane to start training so young, she isn’t ready.

Bail has trouble sleeping. He’s waiting for a signal from Obi-Wan, that the time has come for him to give up his daughter. It doesn’t appear.

~

There he is, watching as his dark-eyed daughter hurls a datapad across the room in a sudden fit of rage. He’s tried to teach her peace and calm, she’s learned the watchful patience and silent stalk of a hunter.

She’s nine. He hasn’t beaten her at Dejarik in a year.

He takes her for walks, out into the parts of Alderaan where the downtrodden live and the refugees gather. He shows her what suffering is, what the Empire means. He tries to avoid thinking about her father. He tries to give her the education he thinks Jedi needed more of.

~

There he is, lying to Tarkin’s face as they walk through the halls of the palace. Leia, thirteen, is following them. Bail knows it. Tarkin does not.

See who he really is, Bail is wishing, even as he says words that toe the line of compliance with Tarkin’s demands.

The Rebellion is starting to rise. He keeps telling Mon Mothma he needs more time, that they’re moving too fast. He doesn’t tell her why.

~

There he is, welcoming his daughter back from Coruscant. She’s a rising star, already accumulating power as a junior legislator. She’s fifteen – one more year before she can run for Senate, and he knows she’s already planning it.

She has staff now, and her pretty smiles and polite manners almost perfectly hide the casuality with which she issues orders.

He’s not sure if she reminds him more of her mother or father.

Obi-Wan remains silent. Bail’s agents tell him that Tatooine is quiet, a backwater, no Imperial activity. He doesn’t find it reassuring. He waits.

~

There he is, talking to Mon Mothma. She’s laughing, charmed by his daughter, the Senator, the rebel. It’s a rare moment of levity – the Senate’s days are numbered, even as the token body it has become. The Empire’s stranglehold on the galaxy is unquestionable now.

And his daughter is nineteen. Her father had been a Jedi by now, roaming the galaxy and falling, falling towards the darkness.

The galaxy is full of darkness now, and Bail makes up his mind. Maybe it’s too late. Maybe it’s too early. He’s not Jedi, he doesn’t know, but it feels right.

“Go to Tatooine,” he tells his daughter. “Find Obi-Wan Kenobi. He can save us all.”

He thinks, but does not say, you can save us all.