Authors: Jennifer Chambliss Bertman
“It can't be too difficult,” Emily said. “I do want someone to actually find it, since I'll get a point when they do, and it's no fun tracking a book that never moves.”
“How about this?” James pointed to a bookcase raised on knobby feet that made up the arts and crafts section. James took
Inkheart
from Emily and slid it
underneath the bookcase so the pages were visible instead of the spine. “Can I see your notebook and a pen?” he asked.
Emily pulled her pencil from her ponytail and her notebook from her backpack and handed both to James, curious to see what he'd come up with.
“The clue can be⦔
crafts
wrong side out
“I get it.” Emily grinned. “
Wrong side out under crafts.
That's perfect. We can take a photo of this puzzle and upload it for our clue when we get back to our building.”
Emily returned her notebook to her backpack and saw
The Gold-Bug
. She looked to the front where Hollister was. Maybe they wouldn't tell him about the game or ask about Griswold specifically, but he still might be able to point them in the direction of some helpful information.
“Let's ask Hollister if he has any books by or about Edgar Allan Poe,” Emily whispered to James.
Hollister led them to a round table decorated for Halloween with a giant paper spider, a witch's cauldron, and cotton-strewn webs.
“Most of my Poe is out here now. He's popular this time of year,” Hollister said.
Emily chewed on this as she looked over the book display. Maybe that was all Mr. Griswold's Poe choice came down to: a popular author for Halloween season. Maybe her treasure hunt suspicion was way offâbut then why not pick one of Poe's spookier stories if Halloween was the point?
There were various collections of Poe's work on the table, along with other mysteries and scary stories. A stack of books in a familiar maroon color stood out to Emily. Hastily, she pulled
The Gold-Bug
from her backpack and stepped closer to the pile. They weren't the same. She exhaled a breath she didn't realize she'd been holding. The cover color was almost an exact match, but hers had the sparkly gold-bug, whereas the one Hollister was selling had an oval portrait of Poe himself. She opened Hollister's and flipped through it. Her book had only one story and the one on the table had close to ten.
“That one of your schoolbooks, Emily-Who-Just-Moved-Here? Looks fancy.” Hollister's voice made her jump. She'd gotten lost in thought comparing the two books. Instinctively, she wanted to stuff
The Gold-Bug
into her backpack to hide it, but Hollister had already seen it.
“There's no way our schoolbooks would look half that nice,” James replied to Hollister. If it made him nervous to think Hollister might catch on to Mr. Griswold's game, James wasn't showing it. “Our schoolbooks are so old, my science textbook says there are still nine planets. They're so old, I found my mother's name written in one from when she was a kid.”
“Mm-hmm.” Hollister nodded. “So old they're written on stone tablets? In hieroglyphics?”
“This is just a story by Edgar Allan Poe about a gold-bug,” Emily said in her best casual, it's-no-big-deal voice. “I'm reading it for fun. I thought it might be the same copy you have here, but it's not.”
Hollister whistled. “Fun indeed. Now, Poe had a twisted sense of fun, didn't heâpeople being buried alive, going crazy. You say it's just that one story? Haven't come across one like that before. Mind if I take a look?”
“Sure,” Emily said, her voice squeaking ever so slightly.
“This is very nice.” Hollister turned the first few pages like they might tear if he flipped them too fast. Emily held her breath as he opened to the copyright page where the raven version of the Bayside Press symbol was. Seeing as he'd been in the middle of constructing a gigantic tribute to the original, she thought for sure he'd spot the similarity and make the Griswold connection, but Hollister didn't linger at all and kept turning pages. “You reading this? You like it?”
“I finished it last night,” Emily said, relaxing a little. “It's not the easiest story to read, the way it's written and all. Like that first line: âI contracted an intimacy with a Mr. William Legrand.' Why not say âI met'?”
“Seems highfalutin nowadays, doesn't it.” Hollister closed the book and handed it back. “It was written in a different time, that's for sure.”
“Don't you contract diseases, not people?” James asked.
Emily giggled. “Maybe
Mr. William Legrand
is code for âchicken pox.'”
“In that case, I met Mr. William Legrand when I was four.”
“I had a shot so I'll never have to meet him,” Emily said.
Hollister tsked. “Poor Mr. Legrand. People going out of their way to avoid his acquaintance.” Hollister offered Emily the collection of Poe stories from the Halloween table. “On the house. A âwelcome to San Francisco' gift for a budding Poe enthusiast.”
“Oh ⦠I couldn't,” Emily said, even though it killed her to turn down a book.
Hollister pressed the book on top of
The Gold-Bug
. “I insist. The more Poe you read, the more familiar his language will be.”
“Well, thank you.” Emily flipped through the book. The collection included “The Gold-Bug” as well as several other short stories, like “The Tell-Tale Heart” and another one called “The Black Cat.” There were poems in the collection, too, including one called “The Raven.” This poem was accompanied by an illustration of a black bird almost exactly like the one used in place of the seagull in the Bayside Press symbol. She hadn't stopped to consider why Mr. Griswold had chosen a black bird to replace the seagull, but now she realized it must be a nod to this poem.
“Raven.” Emily didn't intend to say that out loud, but she did.
“One of his most famous works,” Hollister said, before shuffling back to his window display.
“Raven?” James lowered his voice to Emily. “Like the Book Scavenger user who messaged us with all the gold-bug info?”
“That can't be a coincidence,” Emily whispered back.
James raised his eyebrows. “Someone else knows about the game.”
“Not just knows about it,” Emily said. She was remembering the odd way Raven had greeted themâasking if they needed anything in that really formal way that made James joke about her being a butler. And then the comment about not being able to reveal where the book was hidden, even though they'd already found it. “Raven was trying to help us.”
Emily and James left Hollister's store with hasty good-byes and hurried back to James's computer (as quickly as you can hurry when a hill with an incline as steep as a roller coaster separates where you are and where you have to go). The sky was overcast, but Emily was pink-faced and wiping sweat off her temples by the time they reached their building.
As they settled in front of James's computer, Emily fanned herself with her notebook. She logged into her Book Scavenger account and did a user search for Raven.
“Yes! She's online,” Emily said.
SURLY WOMBAT:
Can I ask you about THE GOLD-BUG?
It didn't take long before Raven's reply popped onto the screen.
RAVEN:
THE GOLD-BUG is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, originally published in 1843. Poe won a short story contest and the prize was publication in a local paper. It was a popular story in its day and brought attention to cryptograms and secret writing.
Emily groaned. “Hello? We know. You told us that last time.” To James she asked, “Do you think I should just be straight with her? Maybe then she won't be so weird.”
James shrugged. “It's worth a try.”
SURLY WOMBAT:
I know about the game.
Â
RAVEN:
I can't help you with that.
Â
SURLY WOMBAT:
What do you mean?
Â
RAVEN:
I do not have the information you seek.
Emily slapped a hand on James's desktop. “I don't understand this! She was so eager to help the other day.”
SURLY WOMBAT:
I thought you wanted to help us with THE GOLD-BUG?
Â
RAVEN:
THE GOLD-BUG is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, originally published in 1843. Poe won a short story contest and the prize was publication in a local paper. It was a popular story in its day and brought attention to cryptograms and secret writing.
Emily groaned, but James straightened in his seat.
“She's playing a game with us,” he said.
“No kidding.”
“No, seriously. There's a pattern to how she replies. See how every time you mention
The Gold-Bug
, she gives that exact same answer? Here, let me test this out.” James took over the keyboard.
SURLY WOMBAT:
Do you like soda?
Â
RAVEN:
I do not have the information you seek.
Â
SURLY WOMBAT:
Plaid pants look nice on you.
Â
RAVEN:
I can't help you with that.
Â
SURLY WOMBAT:
Who hid THE GOLD-BUG?
Â
RAVEN:
THE GOLD-BUG
is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, originally published in 1843. Poe won a short story contest and the prize was publication in a local paper. It was a popular story in its day and brought attention to cryptograms and secret writing.
Emily gasped. “You're right!”
James scrolled back through the conversation. “Look, when we ask a question she replies, âI don't have the information you seek,' like maybe if she
did
she would answer the question. But if we say something that's not a question, then she'll say, âI can't help you with that.' And asking a question with
The Gold-Bug
in it always gets the same reply.”
“Here, let me try something.”
Emily took over the keyboard and typed,
Do you know what
fort
,
wild
,
home
,
rat
,
open
, and
belief
mean?
RAVEN:
Your query is incomplete.
And before Emily and James could think of another question to ask, the chat feed updated again.
RAVEN:
That is all the assistance I can offer today.
“That's it?” James and Emily cried in unison.
“I guess there's a limit to how many questions she'll answer,” James said.
“Well, she did tell us something at least. She didn't say our query was wrong, just incomplete.”
“So maybe the words need to be in a different order?” James suggested.
“Or,” Emily said, “maybe there are more words left to find.”
Â
IT HAD BEEN
two days since they'd seen those kids take the book, and Barry and Clyde were still hanging around the plaza across from the Ferry Building. They'd been stalking the area since Saturday, hoping the kids would come back, but no luck. Barry sat on the steps next to what had to be the ugliest fountain in all of San Francisco. It looked like a gigantic knocked-over game of Jenga sitting in a pool of water.
“They're not coming back,” Clyde said. Over and over he flipped the card he'd found by the trash in the BART station, every so often palming it as if he were practicing a magic trick.
“Well, we don't have any other leads.” Barry stabbed a stick into a crack in the concrete step.