Page 29 of Glorious Rivals
Iamsorry about this.
“Which part?”Gigi asked, her voice coming out a little rough.
“The part,” Slate replied, “where I’m going to have to have to tie you up.”
Chapter 23
LYRA
EVERY STORY HASITS BEGINNING… TAKE ONLY YOUR OWN KEY.
Energy surged through Lyra’s body as she stared at the writing on her key.Solving a puzzle, getting the next clue—it felt like flying, like walking through fire without getting burned.
V, Lyra thought, her brain and body buzzing.I, I, I, L.She looked to Grayson.“These letters don’t spell anything.Not enough consonants, too manyI’s.”
“Three of them.”Grayson considered that.“The letterIis a homophone, which would give us threeeyes.”His gaze flicked up to hers.“Alternatively, letters aren’t always letters.”
V,I,I,I,L.
Something clicked in Lyra’s brain.“Roman numerals.Vis five.Iis one.Lis fifty.It could be a combination.”Lyra’s mind went to the second floor of the mansion, to a marble door with a multi-tiered dial.“The letters could be grouped in different ways to producedifferent digits, but if we need three total, the most obvious grouping isV,I-I-I,L.Five, three, fifty.”
“Five and three,” Grayson said beside her.
Like the dice, Lyra thought.“Grouped a different way, it’s six and two,” she replied, and then she thought about the dominoes on the floor of the Great Room.“Echoes.”
Grayson strode back to the bull’s-eye.Lyra watched as he latched his hand around the hilt of their sword.He turned it, locking away the ledger they’d both signed.When that deed was done, he withdrew the sword like Excalibur from the stone without even blinking.
“I would suggest we take a moment,” he told Lyra.“A person can lose hours in a game like this one, chasing a possibility that seems promising, but nine times out of ten, when you’ve hit on the right answer—”
“You know it,” Lyra finished.There had already been two names on the ledger when they arrived.Savannah and Rohan had the lead, which meant that Lyra and Grayson didn’t have hours to lose.
Giving herself themomentGrayson had suggested, Lyra began pacing the outside edge of the helipad, her strides deliberate and long.
“You think better in motion,” Grayson noted, longsword still in hand.
He was right, and that made Lyra remember something else he’d said to her.You never stopped dancing.Every time you move, you dance.She paused on the helipad’s ocean side.With wind in her face and Grayson Hawthorne at her back, Lyra closed her eyes andfeltthe letters engraved on the bronze key with the pad of her thumb.She willed herself to think about only the ones in the clue.
V,I,I,I,L.
Her left hand moved of its own volition, sketching those letters at her side—and then suddenly, Lyra felt an eerie, familiar sensation,physicallyfelt it like ghostly fingers on her face and neck.
Someone’s watching.
Lyra’s eyes flew open.The helipad was lit, but the moon had disappeared behind a cloud, and the world beyond the edges of the helipad’s light was dark—the island, the ocean, all of it.Lyra tried to glance back over her shoulder at Grayson, but she couldn’t move.Her head and body stayed oriented toward the ocean and the expanse of night.
The feeling lingered—morethan lingered.Persisted.
“Where are you going?”
Until Grayson’s words hit her ears, Lyra hadn’t even realized that she’d just leapt down from the helipad.Grayson followed, landing beside her.Without so much as glancing at him, Lyra walked to the very edge of the light cast by the helipad, stopping before she hit darkness.
“Lyra?”
She kept her gaze focused ahead—on the water.There’s something out there.Someone.“You’re going to think I’m ridiculous.”Frustrated with herself, Lyra pushed a hand back through her hair.
“Try me.”
“Just now… I felt something.”Lyra turned her head to look at him and realized that he’d positioned himself just a little bit ahead of her—half in darkness, half in light.
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