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Chapter no 74 – GRAYSON

The Brothers Hawthorne

Grayson turned the lock. There was an audible click.ย A release.ย He kept his grip on the faux USB and pulled. The entire panel came off the box, revealing a compartment underneath. With steady hands, Grayson turned the panel over. He wasnโ€™t surprised to see a collection of glass vials affixed to the underside.ย Break the box, break the vials. Break the vials, mix the liquids. Mix the liquids, destroy the contents of the box. Specificallyโ€ฆ

Grayson turned his attention to the compartment heโ€™d revealed. There were two and only two things inside: a Montblanc pen and a leather-bound journal.

โ€œHe kept records.โ€ To Grayson, that was obvious.

โ€œRecords of what?โ€ Nash zeroed in on the key questionโ€”the only one that mattered right now.

If there was record of Sheffield Graysonโ€™s last acts before he โ€œdisappeared,โ€ if this journal could tie the man to Avery or the Hawthorne familyโ€ฆ it had to be destroyed.

There was a comfort in certainty.

โ€œCan I see the pen?โ€ Xander asked. Grayson handed it to him, and the youngest Hawthorne brother immediately began his inspection, dismantling the pen.

Some parts of a riddle hold meaning, Grayson could hear the old man saying,ย and others are nothing but distraction.ย In a Hawthorne game, the pen would have been the clue, not the journal. But Sheffield Grayson was not Tobias Hawthorne, and this wasnโ€™t a game. There were noย clues, just the extreme steps a paranoid dead man had taken to secure his secrets.

Grayson opened the leather journal.ย This is what my fatherโ€™s handwriting looked like.ย That thought had no place in his mind, so Grayson shoved it to the side and focused not on the writing but on what had been written.

Numbers.

Grayson flipped through the pagesโ€”nothing but numbers, and the only ones with recognizable meanings appeared at the beginning of the various entries:ย dates.

Sheffield Grayson had dated his journal entries. Grayson pictured him doing it. Heย sawย his father sitting on the edge of that cheap twin bed in Colinโ€™s room and putting pen to the page. Grayson imagined โ€œShepโ€ dating a journal entry, and then beginning to write.

Grayson turned all the way to the last entry, just a few pages from the end of the book.ย Still nothing but numbers.ย Seemingly endless strings of them.

โ€œA code.โ€ Grayson reached the obvious conclusion.

Xander edged in beside him to get a peek at the pages. โ€œSubstitution cipher?โ€

โ€œMost likely,โ€ Grayson confirmed.

โ€œMonoalphabetic, polyalphabetic, or polygraphic?โ€ Xander rattled off. Nash leaned back against the wall. โ€œThat, little brother, is the question.โ€

 

 

None of the simple ciphers worked. Grayson had tried all twenty-six of them. Firstย Aย as 1,ย Bย as 2,ย Cย as 3 on toย Zย as 26. Thenย Aย as 2,ย Bย as 3, and so on, loopingย Zย back to 1. No matter what base Grayson used, the journalโ€™s translation was gibberish.

Evening turned to late night. Gigi texted when the FBI left. Grayson didnโ€™t text back. His eyes bleary, he refused to back down from the task at hand.

You didnโ€™t use a basic cipher.ย Grayson didnโ€™t want to be mentally addressing his father, but to solve a puzzle, sometimes you had to think about its maker.

โ€œLet me take a stab,โ€ Xander said, wriggling between Grayson and the

journal. โ€œIโ€™ll try to spot common two- and three-item combinations and go from there.โ€

Grayson didnโ€™t object. Instead, he stopped fighting the mental image that wanted to come: Sheffield Grayson sitting on that twin bed, a pen in his right hand, the journal on a nearby nightstand.ย Or on the bed? On his lap?ย The image in Graysonโ€™s mind wavered, changed, and then Grayson asked himself a simple question:ย Where was his cheat sheet?

Unless his father had memorized the codeโ€”whatever it wasโ€”he would have needed a reference as he was writing.

Grayson closed his eyes, picturing the entire scene: the man, the pen, the journal, a reference of some kindโ€ฆย The box.ย Graysonโ€™s eyes flew open. He knelt, running his hand over the now-empty compartment. And then he felt a seam.

And another. Another.

The workmanship was flawless. None of the seams were visible. But they were there, in the shape of a square roughly the size of Graysonโ€™s palm. That was the thing about puzzle boxes. You never really knew when the boxโ€™s last secret has been uncovered.

Grayson reached for the double-sided toolโ€”there was no saying a puzzle couldnโ€™t use the same trick twice. He ran the magnet end along the inside of the compartment, directly over the square heโ€™d felt.

It caught.

Grayson pulled, and the square popped out. Turning it over in his hands, he saw two wooden disks, concentric, with a metal brad through the middle.

โ€œA cipher wheel,โ€ Grayson he told his brothers.

Nash and Xander were on him in an instant. This wasnโ€™t the Hawthorne brothersโ€™ first time encountering a cipher wheelโ€”or even their twentiethโ€” so all three of them knew what to look for. The larger of the two wheels had letters carved around the edge,ย Aย throughย Z, plus a handful of common digraphsโ€”Sh,ย Ch,ย Th,ย Wh,ย Ck,ย Kn. The inner wheel contained numbers, 1 through 32, but not in order, which explained, along with the inclusion of digraphs, why Graysonโ€™s initial rudimentary attempts hadnโ€™t broken the code.

โ€œAll we need to know now,โ€ Xander said buoyantly, โ€œis where to set the inner wheel.โ€

Going through the options manually was a possibility, but the part of Grayson that had grown upย racingย to complete those Saturday morning games wouldnโ€™t let him.

Sheffield Grayson had a system. A routine. He retrieved the safe-deposit key and faux USB from his office, then retrieved his fake ID. He went to the bank. He withdrew money and left the slips in the safe-deposit box. He went to his sisterโ€™s house.

Grayson skirted thinking about what, besides the slips, had been in that box. Instead, he asked a simple question out loud. โ€œWhy save the slips?โ€

The answer came to him like a lightning strike. He went back to the pile. On each slip, there was a date.ย The same dates in the journal?ย That would be easily enough to verify. What he was more interested in right now was the withdrawal amounts.

Two hundred seventeen dollars. Five hundred six dollars. Three hundred twenty-one dollars.

But according to Sheffield Graysonโ€™s sister, heโ€™d only given her even amounts.

โ€œHe set the wheel to a different position for each entry.โ€ Grayson didnโ€™t phrase that as a possibility or a question. โ€œAnd kept the slips as a record to help him decode his own writing.โ€

17. 6. 21.ย Most likely, those were the numbers set to theย A. All he had to do was match the dates on the slip to the date on the journal entries, turn the wheel to the appropriate spot, andโ€ฆ

Grayson put the pen that Xander had dismantled back together and retrieved his own leather notebook. Ignoring how similar it looked to his fatherโ€™s, he turned to the first entry that Sheffield Grayson had written and began to decode.

At first, all he got was nonsense.ย Again.ย But this time, Grayson didnโ€™t stop. He kept going, and eventually, the numbers on the page turned to words.ย Fifty thousand dollars to shell five, Cayman Islands, via shell two, Switzerlandโ€ฆ

Eventually, the code settled back into gibberish. Noise. On the next page, Grayson found the same thing: meaningful content embedded in noise. The real message was in a different location on this page.

How was that determined?ย Grayson didnโ€™tย needย to know the answer to that question. He had no actual need to understand exactly how his fatherโ€™s

mind had worked. But on some level, he wanted to, so when he noticed two subtle tears at the top of the current page, when he turned to the next and saw two more tiny tears in the paperโ€”in a different positionโ€”he brought his finger to lightly touch them.

Not tears, Grayson thought, his gaze darting to the hotel desk, where the white index card heโ€™d removed from Sheffield Graysonโ€™s office still sat.ย Notches.

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