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Chapter no 11 – GIGI

The Grandest Game

Two hours later, Gigiโ€™s left hand and arm were getting crowded, and she was starting to think that maybe she should have done some cardio in the lead-up to the game. But who was she kidding? Gigi didnโ€™t do cardio.

Wherever her twin was,ย Savannahย definitely wasnโ€™t out of breath.

โ€œIโ€™m not wheezing.โ€ Gigi gave herself a little pep talk. โ€œIโ€™m breathing in an almost musical manner.โ€

Regardless, she kept going.ย More cliffs. Ruins. The forestโ€”half-burned, half-alive.ย She came out of the forest on the south side of the island to find a staircase carved in stone that stretched all the way down to the rocky shore below.

Standing at the top of that staircase made Gigi feel small. Not in a bad wayโ€”in a Stonehenge, Grand Canyon, Wonder of the World kind of way.

She managed to squeeze a staircase symbol onto her arm, and then she descended the stone steps. The last three were covered with moss. The back of Gigiโ€™s neck tingled.ย There wasnโ€™t moss on any of the others.

Gigi knelt to swipe at the step beneath her feet. Sheโ€™d cleared an inch of moss off the stone when she saw the edge of the first letter.ย Chalk.ย It was smeared, but only a little.

Two minutes and one carefully cleared step later, she had a word.

MANGA.

There was nothing under the moss on the next step. But on the final step, there was another word:ย RA.

โ€œManga,โ€ Gigi said. โ€œAs in, a Japanese graphic novel. Ra, the ancient Egyptian god of the sun.โ€ She paused. โ€œThe sun.โ€ Gigi looked to its position in the sky, a reminder that she was racing the clock.ย Iโ€™ve only got until sunset.

Not willing to waste precious time puzzling over a clue she could work to decode later, Gigi lifted her shirt, grabbed her pen, and scrawled the clues across her midriff.ย MANGA. RA.

She looked back down at the chalk writing on the steps and hesitated. Thisย wasย a competition. Catching her bottom lip between her teeth, Gigi scuffed the chalk off with the heel of her hand.

 

 

Down the shoreline, around the bend, on the southeast side of the island, Gigi found a building rising out of the water. It looked like the kind of thing she would have expected to see in medieval Europe, possibly on a canal, all archways and heavy stone. It wasnโ€™t until Gigi got closer that she realized that underneath all that stone, out on the water, was another dock.

โ€œBoathouse,โ€ she concluded. โ€œCreepy, somewhat gothic boathouse.โ€ Out of canvas on her left arm, she switched her pen to the other hand and began sketching a trio of arches on the back of her right.

Further exploration revealed that the dock beneath the archways contained two smaller boat slips perpendicular to a very large one, with a sizable platform in between. Gigi sketched a series of rectangles beneath the arches. โ€œWhoโ€™s feeling triumphantly ambidextrous?ย This girl.โ€

That was when she saw the ladder built into the boathouse wall.

โ€œWhen in doubt, go up.โ€ Gigi went upโ€”and immediately discovered she wasnโ€™t alone.

Standing on top of the archway was an old woman. She had gray hair that had been dyed black at the ends and held herself like a person used to walking through hurricanes. In her hand, she heldโ€ฆย something.

Gigi took a cautious step forward. The old woman didnโ€™t so much as turn. Instead, she lifted the object in her hand to her eyes.

Binoculars?ย As Gigi got closer, she realized:ย Not binoculars. Opera glasses.ย They were ornate, encrusted with jewels, and aimed at something

โ€”orย someoneโ€”on the island below.

Gigi turned her head. From the top of the boathouse, you could see the entire eastern coast of the island, a long stretch of unmarked shore broken only by the helipad in the distance. A ways down, Gigi saw a familiar figure.ย Brady.ย He wasnโ€™t alone.

Another player?ย Gigi couldnโ€™t make out the other guyโ€™s features, but something about the way he was standing reminded her of a honey badger or possibly a wolverine.

โ€œThey know each other,โ€ the old woman said. โ€œQuite well, I would wager.โ€

Gigi wondered just how good the magnification on those opera glasses wasโ€”and where the old woman had found them. Theyย hadย to be an Object, capital O, a part of the game.

โ€œHow can you tell?โ€ Gigi said.

โ€œHow can I tell that they know each other?โ€ The woman continued peering through the opera glasses. โ€œBody language, mostly.โ€

In the silence that followed, Gigi clocked the slightest move of the womanโ€™s lips.ย Mostly, Gigi thought.ย Body language, mostly.

โ€œYouโ€™re reading their lips,โ€ she realized. โ€œWhat are they saying?โ€

โ€œThe one on the left likes ponies. The one on the right likes to eat ponies.โ€ The old womanโ€™s voice was dry. โ€œTimeless tale, really.โ€

The one on the left was Brady. โ€œPonies?โ€ Gigi repeated. โ€œYou donโ€™t actually expect me to believe that?โ€

โ€œOh, let an old lady have her fun.โ€ The woman lowered her opera glasses and turned to look at Gigi head-on. โ€œIโ€™m Odette, and you, darling young thing, are observant.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m Gigi,โ€ Gigi said. โ€œAnd I try.โ€

โ€œYou do, donโ€™t you?โ€ Odette replied. โ€œTry. The world just loves women who try.โ€ Odette caught Gigiโ€™s gaze and held it. โ€œUnless and until we try too hard.โ€

With that, the old woman began to make her way slowly back to the ladder. Right before she descended, she spoke again. โ€œIโ€™ll tell you this much, from one woman who tries too hard to another: They were talking about a girl, and, from what I gather, sheโ€™s dead.โ€

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