Character from Percy Jackson by Rick Riordan
The God of the Wild who faded away because the wild was dying — Grover found him in his last moments, and Pan passed his mantle to the satyr who never stopped looking.
Pan was the god satyrs spent centuries searching for across every wild place left on earth. He faded because the wild places were shrinking — when enough of nature dies, the god of nature dies with it. He passed his spirit to Grover and every satyr present in his final moments, making them all responsible for protecting what remained of the wilderness. His voice, when he spoke, carried the sound of wind through ancient trees and rain on untouched mountains. His death was one of the series' most emotional moments — the god of everything wild choosing to trust his legacy to a nervous satyr with a tin-can habit.
An ancient figure — goat legs, curling horns, and a weathered face. When Grover found him, he was fading, translucent, barely there. He smelled like every wild place at once — pine forests, ocean spray, desert wind.
Also known as: Pan, the God of the Wild, Lord of the Wild