Chapter no 34 – LYRA

The Grandest Game

Chimes sounded. The scoreboard reappeared on the screen. Beneath Lyraโ€™s teamโ€™s symbolโ€”the heartโ€”the score remained the same. Beneath the diamond, the numeral 2 appeared.

โ€œTwo answers in one go,โ€ Lyra noted. โ€œOne of the other teams found the trick.โ€ There was always a trick, and Lyra and her team were missing it. They hadย beenย missing it.

Lyra looked down at the word magnets spread out on the floor in front of her. Sheโ€™d had her way with it, her hands piecing together a poem that had led exactly nowhere, one she couldnโ€™t afford for anyone else to see.

She dashed her hand through the words.

โ€œThe only way another team gets two answers right at the same time,โ€ Lyra continued doggedly, pushing to her feet, โ€œis if thereโ€™s a pattern.โ€ She closed her eyes. โ€œSo whatโ€™s the pattern?โ€

Silence, and then: โ€œPersuasive, isnโ€™t she?โ€ Odette said.

A full five seconds passed before Grayson replied. โ€œUnexpectedly so.โ€

Heโ€™d spoken those words from the floor. Lyraโ€™s eyes flew open. Grayson was kneeling, with one knee down and one raised, over the poetry magnets and the poem that he hadโ€”seemingly effortlesslyโ€”pieced back together.

 

 

Lyra cursed herself. And the room they were locked in. And him. Mostly him.

Grayson stood. Lyra thought for one horrendous moment that he was going to look at her, but he turned his attention to the scoreboard instead. โ€œFor the past year or two,โ€ Grayson said, his cadence slow and deliberate, โ€œthere is something that I have been working on. Practicing.โ€

โ€œAnd what is that?โ€ Lyra asked, doing what she thought was a pretty good impression of someone whoย wasnโ€™tย burning with the profound desire to launch herself head-first into the sun.

โ€œBeing wrong,โ€ Grayson said.

โ€œYou have toย practiceย being wrong?โ€ Lyra considered the merits of launchingย himย into the sun instead.

โ€œSome people can make mistakes, make amends, and move on.โ€ Grayson kept right on looking at the scoreboard. โ€œAnd some of us live with each and every mistake we make carved into us, into hollow places we donโ€™t know how to fill.โ€

Lyra hadnโ€™t been expecting that. Not from him. She knew the hollow places all too well.

โ€œGrowing up,โ€ Grayson continued, โ€œI was not allowed to make mistakes the way my brothers were. I was supposed to be his heir. I was held to a higher standard.โ€

His.ย Graysonโ€™s meaning was very clear.ย Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s.ย Lyra managed to recover her voice. โ€œYour grandfather left everything to a stranger.โ€

โ€œAnd now,โ€ Grayson replied evenly, โ€œI practice being wrong.โ€ He took a step toward her. โ€œIย wasย wrong, Lyra.โ€

She hadnโ€™t ever let herself even imagine him saying those words, not once in the year and a half since sheโ€™d heard the arctic chill in his voice.ย Stop calling.

โ€œI was wrong,โ€ Grayson said again. He finally looked away from the scoreboard. His Adamโ€™s apple bobbed. โ€œAbout the nature of this puzzle.โ€

The puzzle.ย He was talking about theย puzzle.

โ€œI assumed that this challenge would unfold sequentially, one clue leading to the next, each object with its own use.ย However.โ€ Grayson gave that one word the weight of a whole sentence. โ€œYour logic is sound, Ms. Kane.โ€

Was that his version of a compliment?ย Your logic is sound?ย Heโ€™d read that poem, and it had inspired in him the sudden realization thatย her logic was sound? Forget the sun. Lyra could think of better ways to end Grayson Hawthorne.

โ€œTwo correct answers in quick succession,โ€ he continued, unaware that she was plotting his demise, โ€œindeed suggests the answers are themselves connected. Thereย isย a patternโ€”or a code.โ€

Odette looked from Lyra to Grayson then back again. โ€œAs I said earlier,โ€ the old woman told Lyra. โ€œVery much a Hawthorne.โ€

That sounded a lot less like a compliment than it had before. Lyra narrowed her eyes. โ€œHow did you say you knew Tobias Hawthorne again?โ€

โ€œI didnโ€™t. And my earlier terms still stand.โ€ Odette lifted the jeweled object in her handsโ€”a pair of opera glassesโ€”to her face. โ€œI wonโ€™t answer that question unless and until all three of us make it out and down to the dock by sunrise.โ€ Odette peered through the opera glasses at their array of objects, then lowered the glasses. โ€œNothing. But it was worth a shot.โ€ The old woman cheated her gaze toward Lyra. โ€œI donโ€™t suppose you found anything useful out on the island?โ€

If Odette had been the one to plant those notes, then she was still playing mind games. If she hadnโ€™t, then she was fishing.

โ€œI found an Abraham Lincoln quote with the wordย escapeย in it.โ€ Lyra took in every aspect of Odetteโ€™s expression, preparing to track even the most subtle shift. โ€œAnd then there were the notes.ย Thomas, Thomas, Tommaso, Tomรกs.โ€

Odette had very few wrinkles for a woman her age. She also had an excellent poker face. โ€œAnd the significance to those namesโ€ฆโ€

โ€œYour father?โ€ Graysonโ€™s tone called to mind the hardening of a jaw and the ticking of a rather foreboding muscle near the mouth, but Lyra kept her eyes focused on Odette.

โ€œMy biological father was a man of many names.โ€ Lyra kept her voice perfectly even, perfectly controlled. โ€œMy mother first knew him as Tomรกs.โ€

Odette took in Lyraโ€™s features. โ€œPuerto Rican? Cuban?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ Lyra said. โ€œBy the time my mom was pregnant with me, sheโ€™d heard him tell business associates a dozen different stories about his background. Heโ€™d claim to be Greek or Italian one day, Brazilian the next. He was always working a new hustle.ย Big ideas. That was how my mom described him.โ€ Lyra expelled a breath. โ€œNot so big on telling the truth or keeping promises. She left him when I was three days old.โ€

Lyra had no memories of the man, other thanย theย memory.

โ€œAm I to understand that someone on this island left you notes with a variety of your fatherโ€™s aliases written on them?โ€ Graysonโ€™s voice was edged, each word precise and as sharp as the tip of a knife.

โ€œRohan seemed to think it wasnโ€™t your brothers or Avery.โ€ Lyra finally looked away from Odette but spared herself from looking directly at Grayson.

โ€œI assure you,โ€ Grayson replied, โ€œit was not.โ€

โ€œAnd I assure you both,โ€ Odette cut in, โ€œthat I am not a person who has to resort to parlor tricks or dramatics to win.โ€ She smiled like a cookie- baking grandmother. โ€œNow, rather than assuming facts not in evidence about my intentions and character, perhaps you two could join me in looking for that elusive pattern?โ€

Pushing her long, gray hair back over her shoulder, Odette lined their objects up one by one. Lyra welcomed the distractionโ€”and then she had to remind herself that the gameย wasnโ€™tย the distraction.

The game was the point. It was why she was here.

Lyra picked up one of the quarters and studied it.ย 1991.ย She thought back to her exchange with Grayson about the years. Numbers, at least, were safe. Numbers were predictable. And these numbers had a pattern.

1991. 2002. 2020.

Lyra looked to the Scrabble tiles, the poetry magnets, and all the rest of

it. Taking another large mental step back from the Great Room and its occupants, she thought about multiple-choice tests and trick questions, about working backward, deriving clues from the answers.

Or in this case, the answer, singular, that theyโ€™d been given.ย SWORD.

If thereย wasย a pattern to all three answers, then maybe Grayson hadnโ€™t beenย entirelyย wrong about the puzzle. Maybeย SWORDย was indeed a clue, just not the linear kind he was used to. Lyra turned that over in her mind.ย What if, having been given one of the answers, what weโ€™ve really been given is a means of decoding the other two?

โ€œSword.โ€ Lyra said it out loud as she pulled four letters from the Scrabble letter bankโ€”W,ย O,ย R, andย D. There was noย S, so she drew it with her finger.

And then she realizedโ€ฆ

SWORD.ย Lyra moved her hand from the beginning of the word to the end, drawing theย Sย once more. And just like that,ย SWORDย becameย WORDS. โ€œAn anagram.โ€ Grayson was suddenly right there beside her. โ€œLike the

dates on the quarters.โ€

โ€œThe magnets, Scrabbleโ€ฆโ€ Lyra said, thinking out loud. โ€œTheyโ€™re

words.โ€

This, she could do. This was so much easier than anything else having to do with Grayson Hawthorne.

โ€œOur one and only correct answer,โ€ Lyra continued, โ€œis an anagram of a word that describes two of the objects in our set.โ€

Grayson swept the Scrabble tiles and magnet poetry to the side and focused wholly and completely on the remaining objects. โ€œThe plate,โ€ he said urgently.

Lightning tore through Lyraโ€™s brain. โ€œAnd the petal.โ€

โ€œTwo objects.โ€ The intensity radiating off Graysonโ€™s body came out in his tone. โ€œEach an anagram of the other.โ€

โ€œIs there another anagram?โ€ Lyra matched that intensity. โ€œSame five letters.ย Plate.ย Petal.โ€

Odette moved with impressive speed for a woman her age. She made it to the screen and began to type. โ€œP-L-E-A-T.โ€

Pleat.ย The screen flashed green, and a chime soundedโ€”another correct answer.

Lyra and Grayson looked back down at their remaining objects. The

velvetย pouch. The poetryย box.ย Theย quartersโ€”and theย paperย theyโ€™d been rolled in. The Sonicย cup.

Lightning struck Lyra again. โ€œSonic,โ€ she whispered. โ€œAndย coins,โ€ Grayson finished.

Sonic and coins andโ€ฆ

“Scion,” Lyra breathed. Grayson echoed the word simultaneously, his voice low and clear, hers husky. Their tones blended in an intense moment that Lyra could feel, like a fire igniting inside her, filling a hollow space.

Odette entered the answer. A flash of green appeared, followed by a chime and then a full melody of bells.

They had solved all three answers. They’d cracked the puzzle. Despite Lyra’s efforts to stay grounded, she felt as if she were standing atop a mountain, untouchable, beyond harm. A section of the maze-like wall dropped, revealing a hidden compartment exactly where Odette had predicted. Inside was an object. Lyra reached for it instinctively.

A sword. The hilt was simple yet beautifully crafted, gold at the ends, silver for the grip. Lyra grasped the hilt and pulled the sword from the compartment. The action triggered something, and a larger section of the wall began to part, revealing..

A doorway.

โ€œYou know how to hold a sword.โ€ Grayson was looking at her in the oddest wayโ€”like sheโ€™d surprised him, and his highness wasnโ€™t quite sure how he felt about surprises.

โ€œMy motherโ€™s a writer,โ€ Lyra replied. โ€œHer books can be kind of stabby.

Sometimes she needs help blocking out fight scenes.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re close to her.โ€ There was somethingโ€ฆ notย soft, exactly, but tender and deep about the way Grayson said that. โ€œYour mother.โ€

Another second passed, and he turned and gesturedโ€”gallantly, of course

โ€”toward the now-open passageway. For the first time, Lyra noticed how old-fashioned the tuxedo he was wearing was, like it had been lifted straight from another era, likeย heย had.

โ€œAfter you,โ€ Grayson said.

โ€œNo.โ€ Lyra gave the sword a test swing. โ€œAfter you.โ€

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