"Hey Percy," Annabeth called out one afternoon as she was working on an essay for school. "Why is there a red squiggly line in my Word document under 'bananas' "?
Percy took a break from making what could be the world's longest paper clip chain and flopped onto his bed where Annabeth was, making sure to not crinkle any of her various papers spread out everywhere.
"Let me see," Percy replied, swiping the laptop from Annabeth's lap and resting it on his lap. After skimming through 7 full paragraphs of text, he saw what Annabeth had mentioned. "Um, Annabeth?" He began. "You do know that 'bananas' only has two n's, not three, right?"
"Percy, 'bananas' has three n's." Annabeth said. "Isn't it B-A-N-N-A-N-A-S?'
"Wise GIrl, there areno double-n's in the word 'bananas'." He scooted towards Annabeth and motioned to the screen. Sure enough, the word 'bananas' spelt B-A-N-A-N-A-S was typed out with no red squiggly line underneath.
"B-But…" Annabeth sputtered. "That's too simple. Shouldn't it be at least a little more complex?"
"Annabeth" Percy stated in such a way that made her feel like a Seaweed Brain, "Not everything has to be complicated."
~The End~
~A/N~
I know, I know, this one-shot is probably the shortest one in existence but I got the idea stuck in my head and couldn't stop thinking about it. The same thing actually happened to me, I thought 'bananas' was spelt like 'bannanas' until 5th grade, XD.
Anyways, I hope you enjoyed this supppperrrrrr short one-shot regardless. I could have added more description to make it lengthier but the "message" of the story would be totally contradicting.
For those who have somehow read my other stories and actually want more, I apologize for not updating. I'm the type of person to go at something like crazy and then completely drop it for 2 months. But, be on the lookout for new chapters as I have them written just not typed.
If you've read through to the end of this AN, be on the lookout for another, longer, one-shot of Annabeth and the Hunters of Artemis coming up relatively soon.
