A distress call from Grover led them to Westover Hall, a military boarding school cloaked in a perpetual twilight of winter. There, amidst the mundane, they found two new half-bloods, Bianca and Nico di Angelo, children of unknown divine parentage, radiating a strange, ancient power. But the rescue was far from simple. The school's vice principal, a monstrous manticore named Dr. Thorn, revealed his true form, snatching Annabeth in a whirlwind of poison-tipped spines and vanishing into the night. Just when hope seemed lost, the goddess Artemis and her Hunters arrived, their silver arrows cutting through the darkness, though too late to save their friend.
Back at Camp Half-Blood, the air thrummed with unease. Bianca, drawn to the Hunters' promise of immortality and sisterhood, chose to join them, leaving a heartbroken Nico behind. Percy, haunted by dreams of Annabeth holding up a crumbling cave ceiling, knew he had to act. The Oracle, a shriveled mummy in the attic, delivered a cryptic prophecy to Zoe Nightshade, Artemis's lieutenant: "Five shall go west to the goddess in chains, one shall be lost in the land without rain, the bane of Olympus shows the trail, campers and Hunters combined prevail, the Titan's curse must one withstand, and one shall perish by a parent's hand." A quest was formed: Zoe, Thalia, Bianca, and Grover. Percy, defying strict orders, secretly followed, driven by a fierce loyalty to Annabeth.
Their perilous journey westward began, a desperate race against time and the chilling words of the prophecy. They battled mythical beasts, navigated treacherous landscapes, and dodged skeletal warriors sent by unknown enemies. In the "junkyard of the gods," a vast, perilous desert filled with discarded divine inventions, Bianca sacrificed herself to save her friends from a malfunctioning automaton, fulfilling the prophecy's grim promise of one lost in the land without rain. The weight of her death settled heavily on the remaining questers, especially Percy, who had promised Nico he would protect her.
Their path led them to the Hoover Dam, a marvel of mortal engineering, where they encountered the strange, fish-tailed creature known as the Ophiotaurus, the "bane of Olympus," whose sacrifice could grant immense power. Percy, sensing its innocence, vowed to protect it, sending Grover to take it to Camp Half-Blood. With the help of Annabeth's mortal father, they reached San Francisco, the true destination of their quest: Mount Othrys, the ancient stronghold of the Titans.
There, a horrifying sight awaited them. Artemis, the mighty goddess, was forced to hold up the sky, a crushing burden meant for the Titan Atlas. Annabeth was held captive nearby, a prisoner of Luke and the General. The General revealed himself to be Atlas, Zoe's father, who had been tricked into resuming his ancient punishment. Percy, without hesitation, took the sky's immense weight from Artemis, his muscles screaming under the celestial burden.
A fierce battle erupted. Thalia confronted Luke, her former friend now a pawn of Kronos. Artemis, newly freed, fought her father, Atlas, with furious grace. In the brutal struggle, Zoe, already poisoned by her dragon, Ladon, confronted Atlas. She fell by her father's hand, fulfilling the final, tragic line of the prophecy. With Atlas defeated and once again trapped beneath the sky, Luke vanished, and Artemis was saved.
The quest concluded, but not without profound changes. On Olympus, the gods debated the Ophiotaurus's fate and the growing threat of the Titans. Thalia, to avoid the Great Prophecy and her sixteenth birthday, chose to join the immortal Hunters of Artemis, becoming their new lieutenant. Back at camp, Percy delivered the devastating news of Bianca's death to Nico. In a fit of grief and rage, Nico inadvertently revealed his true heritage as a son of Hades, summoning skeletal warriors and banishing them to the Underworld before fleeing into the night. The prophecy had been fulfilled, but its revelations left a chilling uncertainty for the future, for the war with the Titans was only just beginning.