Gigi turned in a circle, the words of the poem echoing through her mind as the walls of the sci-fi-worthy chamberย whoosh-whooshedย around them.ย When youโre ready, make the call.ย An old-fashioned red phone booth that looked like it had been lifted straight from the streets of London took up a significant portion of the room, making the remainder of the metal chamber nice and cozyโmaybeย tooย cozy, given the rhinoceros-sized tension between Brady and Knox.
Theย whooshingย of walls stopped, and the effect was as if an invisible hand had peeled back one layer of metal for another. On the surface of the new section of wall, there were words.
I COME BEFORE FALL AFTER THE CENTER
AND NOT BAD AT ALL
IN FRONT OF A HORSE NAMED LILY OR ROSE
OR COOLNESS IN SHADOW IโM ALL OF THOSE
WHAT AM I?
โA riddle.โ Knoxโs voice was terseโterserย than usual, even. โObviously, weโre supposed to solve it.โ
โAnd then make the call,โ Gigi added cheerfully, โper our rhyming instructions and also that giant phone booth.โ
Brady considered the sword heโd claimed in the prior room, then looked up to the mirrored ceiling overhead. โSmall space,โ he commented, his voice echoing off the metal walls, his gaze flicking toward Knox.
A muscle in Knoxโs jaw ticked. โSummer comes before fall.โ
โSo does pride,โ Brady replied. โGive or take an article adjective.โ
Gigi read between the lines of that loaded exchange.ย In the riddle, fall could refer to the season or a descent. And Knox really doesnโt like small spaces.
He also still didnโt particularly like her. Yet.
โOkay, so summer and pride come before the fall,โ Gigi summarized. She looked to the next line of the riddle. โAnd after the center, you have what? The edge? The end? A lily and a rose are both flowers.โ She paused. โSummer flowers?โ
โA rose is,โ Knox said, his voice tight. โLilies bloom in spring.โ
Brady shifted his gaze from the curved wall to Knox. โSo you do remember.โ
It took Gigi a moment of extremely tense silence to realize: aย callaย was a kind of lily.
โShadowย suggests the blocking of sun.โ Knox kept his focus pointedly on the riddle. Every muscle in his neck looked tight. โAn eclipse? Andย centerโฆ the equator?โ
Brady said nothing. Gigi was a babbler by nature, not at all prone to shutting up, but some moments called for giving people spaceโ metaphorically, in this case. She stayed silent as she looped back to the beginning of the riddle.ย I come before fallโฆ
Falling.ย Gigiโs mind generated scattershot possibilities.ย Gravity. Humpty Dumpty. All the kingโs horses.ย Her gaze jumped to the fourth line of the poem:ย In front of a horseโฆ
โPutting the cart before the horse?โ Gigi hadnโt meant to say that out loud. โSorry.โ
Brady shifted his weight slightly. โDonโt be.โ
Gigi thought back to the way heโd touched her stomachโand then she thought about something that Brady had said to Knox:ย The difference is that I loved her.
Heโd used the past tense, but the feelings audible in his voice had clearly been anything but. Bradyย stillย loved Calla, whoever she was. And as soft a spot as Gigi had forย tragicย and as much as she didnโt shy away from even the worst ideas, she also wanted to win the Grandest Game. She wanted to prove herself. She wanted toย flyย again.
So she closed her eyes, banished the memory of Bradyโs touch to the ether, and took a deep breath.ย I am one with this metal chamber and its mirrored ceiling and whoosh-whooshing wall.ย She forced herself to forget about Brady. And Knox. And Brady-and-Knox. And Calla, who was missing or dead or missing-and-dead.
I come before fall.ย Gigi took another steadying breath.ย After the center and not bad at all. In front of a horse named Lily or Rose. Or coolness in shadow. Iโm all of thoseโฆ