by Gavin, Rohan
For my wife & son
Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Prologue
The Code
He opened the cover and found the first page. The book felt substantial and had a good weight to it, despite being slim enough for the casual reader. The cover had a striking symbol and a catchy title: The Code. It felt both old and new. He rarely read outside of the classroom, but this book was strangely inviting. Besides, he’d heard it was good from all the buzz on the Internet.
He traced his finger over the first sentence. It was clear and concise:
Intrigued, he continued reading.
Lee clamped his knees tightly around the school bag at his feet and shuffled into a private corner between two book displays. He didn’t want to be interrupted. He looked around, making a brief survey of the other customers. What if one of his classmates saw him? It was a self-help book, after all. He could always blame it on his mom—and Christmas wasn’t far away. She might want to read it too. He loosened the tie of his school uniform, twanged his dental braces, and kept reading.
Inner voice? His mom would have a fit if she found this on his bedside table. But it felt good. And as the book said, if it feels good, it must be right.
His eyes scanned over the sentences, faster and faster, flicking from left to right and back again. He could almost feel it working on him, sending tiny electrical charges around his head, unlocking his potential, and delivering a pleasant shiver of excitement at the same time. He suddenly saw it all clearly: success, fame, and his wildest dreams come true. This was the moment he would remember when he was lying on a beach somewhere, with perfect teeth. He kept reading voraciously, covering the first few pages in less than a minute, consuming every last piece of wisdom the text had to offer. Then he stopped.
“Ouch!”
He felt a sting as he turned the page. A paper cut? But there wasn’t any blood.
Then he noticed it, crawling away from the spine toward the corner of the page: a scorpion. Just like the one from biology class. He blinked. It couldn’t be. But the black creature continued scuttling across the margin, making a clicking sound, and dropped over the edge.
He stared at the book, transfixed, as another bug emerged from behind the cover; then a centipede calmly headed in the opposite direction. A spider followed it: a big one, draped in brittle hair. And another insect he didn’t even recognize. And another.
“Wha—?”
Lee dropped the book as a swarm of insects fell out of the pages, turning it into a black, moving mass. It hummed with activity, the chorus of a hundred tiny clicks, as all manner of creatures came spilling out of it.
“Someone . . . help!”
He backed away from the display stand, tripping over his school bag and splaying his arms to regain his balance.
He looked down at his hands and saw more insects appearing from his shirtsleeves, running up the arms of his school uniform.
“Help me!”
He half fell through another display, sending rows of new releases collapsing to the floor. His yells escalated to full-blown screams as the insects covered his whole body, racing up his tie, inside his collar, secreting themselves on his person, burrowing into every corner.
Other customers spun around, confused, awoken from their browsing.
A store assistant quickly moved away from the cash register to locate the source of the disturbance.
Lee was writhing on the floor, surrounded by books, clawing at his clothes and kicking his legs in all directions, fighting off an unseen enemy. The store assistant broke through the circle of onlookers, quickly assessed the situation, then knelt down and tried to place a book between the boy’s teeth.
“G-get them off me!” Lee cried out, desperately pointing all around himself.
The onlookers stared down at him, baffled, then exchanged concerned glances—because he was pointing into thin air. There was no enemy attacking him. There was nothing there.
Away from the gathering crowd and the overturned displays, a copy of The Code sat forgotten on the floor, clean and inviting, its glossy cover and symbol reflecting in the fluorescent lighting.
Chapter 1
The Knightleys
In a private room in a quiet suburb outside London, Alan Knightley slept a dreamless sleep. This condition was not unusual for a patient who had been asleep for over four years. Experts said he was somewhere between a coma and a trance. Some such patients dreamed and some did not—at least, that was according to the ones fortunate enough to wake up.
Although he was forty-eight years old, Knightley still had a freshness and youth about his face, with no gray hair to speak of. The doctors assumed this was due to the sheer amount of uninterrupted rest he’d enjoyed during his interminable stay at Shrubwoods Hospice. Despite an occasional flutter of the eyelids or an even more occasional grunt, he showed no sign of waking up any time soon.
Several tubes and wires protruded from the sleeves of his gown, running along the side of the bed and connecting to an intravenous drip and an ECG machine, which displayed a pulsing green line resembling a distant mountain range. At the end of the bed, a clipboard read: Knightley, Alan.
His hair was neatly combed back to reveal sharp, if not conventionally handsome, features. He had a wide, knowledgeable brow; an angular nose interrupted by two slight bumps that indicated he had, on occasion, encountered opponents who could not be reasoned with; and a jaw that was proud and composed even while unconscious.
His room had an old TV angled the wrong way, and beyond that a window looked out over neatly manicured lawns, hedges, and a dense outcropping of trees. There was only one picture on the wall: a child’s painting of a father and son, which made up for its lack of formal skill with its bold use of color and unusual attention to detail. Both figures wore a suit and tie; the father’s suit was red and the son’s green.
Darkus Knightley, the smaller figure from the picture, sat patiently by his father’s bedside. He was older now, but he wasn’t embarrassed by the painting that hung over him. It reminded him of how far he’d come in the past four years, leading up to his thirteenth birthday—a hollow affair that had taken place a month earlier. His father, on the other hand, was still lying in the exact same position he always did, impervious to the passage of time, hardly moving a muscle: the cause of his condition as yet unknown.
As chance would have it, Darkus was wearing green, just like in the picture; to be precise, it was a forest-green tweed vest and jacket ensemble that was somewhat ahead of his years. His shoes were highly polished brogues. His sharp blue eyes, neatly parted hair, and angular nose and ears also made him seem older than his years—certainly different from your average thirteen-year-old.
Without warning, he began to speak aloud, apparently from memory, for there was no printed matter in evidence.
“Last week I examined the Curious Case of the Amber Necklace,” Darkus began. “I found t
he line of reasoning clear and well laid out, but its conclusions were lacking.” He paused and watched his father’s closed eyelids for any kind of response. Seeing none, he continued. “If there was a larger organization responsible for its disappearance, I see no hard evidence to prove it . . .” He paused again, watching his father the way a fisherman watches the still surface of a lake, waiting for a ripple that means the bait has been taken. He received no such ripple.
What he did receive, however, was an audible signal from outside the door: a minute squeak from the linoleum, as if someone had been standing outside, possibly even eavesdropping on him. Darkus turned his head to the door and saw a small circle of mist on the porthole window. Someone had most certainly been watching him, but he told himself that in all likelihood it was only a concerned member of the nursing staff. He checked his simple Timex watch, which confirmed his time was up. Besides, he had an event to attend that evening.
“That concludes my report for today,” he announced. Then he added gently, “Sleep tight, Dad.”
On cue, a female nurse opened the door, making no attempt to be quiet. She had stopped bothering with details like that a few years ago.
“Same time next week, then?” she asked Darkus.
“Yes-yes,” he answered softly, then collected his herringbone coat and Donegal tweed walking hat and quietly left the room.
Chapter 2
Wordplay
By that evening, a thick fog had rolled across the South-east, moving through the dense woodland and over the substantial grounds of Cranston School. The classrooms were empty, the rows of desks faintly lit by lampposts standing along the perimeter. The fog gathered around the facade of the main building, creeping over the railings toward a modern structure set back from the rest.
The assembly hall stood out like a beacon, its windows giving off a good-natured glow. A murmur of activity came from inside as some two hundred pupils and parents sat facing a wide, raised stage. The pupils were all in off-duty clothes, including a small group in designer hoodies skulking near the back of the room.
A male teacher in a patterned sweater stood at the side of the stage holding a microphone. Behind the lectern, three teenage pupils sat waiting their turn: a boy in jeans and a T-shirt, a girl in leggings and a black leather jacket, and a familiar figure in a green tweed vest and jacket ensemble.
“Darkus Knightley, prepare to spell,” the teacher announced.
Darkus stood up and approached the lectern. He looked upward and to the right, unconsciously holding the mic stand for moral support.
The teacher held his own microphone close. “Your word is . . .” He paused enigmatically, then said, “Zarzuela.”
The audience whispered the word to each other, exchanging glances.
The teacher repeated it once more for dramatic effect: “Zarzuela.”
The audience went quiet.
Darkus focused his gaze on the upper right of the auditorium, briefly closed his eyes, then responded: “Z-a-r-z-u-e-l-a. Zarzuela. A Spanish opera noted for its spoken dialogue and comic subject matter.”
The teacher nodded. “Correct.”
The audience applauded, except for the hoodies who remained indifferent near the back of the room.
The teacher added, “The definition is not strictly necessary, Darkus, but I won’t object. Thank you.”
Darkus nodded and returned to his seat, unmoved by the applause. He made brief eye contact with his mom and stepdad, who were seated in the middle of the audience, dressed in neat casual clothes. Darkus returned his attention to his vest as the teacher announced the next name.
“Gary Evans, prepare to spell.” The boy in the jeans and T-shirt approached the microphone. “Your word is . . . yosenabe,” said the teacher, then repeated the word for effect.
The boy gripped the mic stand and stared dead ahead into the crowd. “Y-o-s . . . ,” he stammered, “e-n-a-b-y? Yosenaby?”
The teacher paused, then shook his head. “I’m afraid that is incorrect. The correct spelling is: y-o-s-e-n-a-b-e. A soup consisting of seafood and vegetables cooked in a broth. You may leave the stage, Gary.”
The audience clapped respectfully. Gary hung his head and exited the stage, avoiding the gaze of his parents, who were huddled together applauding in the front row.
“Tilly Palmer, prepare to spell.”
The thirteen-year-old girl in the black leather jacket approached the microphone, and a murmur rippled through the crowd, as if her reputation preceded her. Her hair was jet black with blue lowlights—although it had a tendency to change color dramatically and without warning, for no reason that Darkus could deduce, and much to the consternation of the school authorities.
Darkus’s relationship with Tilly was complicated, for several reasons. First, she was the daughter of his father’s former assistant, Carol. Second, Carol had died in a tragic car accident six years ago—a year before Darkus’s own parents split up. Third—and most unexpectedly—the world had conspired to bring together Darkus’s divorced mom and Tilly’s widowed father.
As a result, Tilly had become his stepsister.
“Tilly, your word is . . . logorrhea,” the teacher announced. “If you answer correctly, you have a chance to win the championship.”
Tilly narrowed her eyes in concentration.
Darkus watched from his seat, feeling no sense of competition—quite the opposite, in fact. Tilly had performed admirably throughout the qualifying rounds; she had a broad, often incisive knowledge of a variety of subjects, drawn from many long hours spent browsing the Internet. This was partly due to the fact that her father had temporarily confined her to Cranston as a boarder after she ran away from home once too often. More than anyone, including Darkus himself, she deserved to win. Darkus interlaced his fingers and waited for her to answer.
“L-o-g-o-r . . . r-h-e-a. Logorrhea,” she recited. “Pathologically incoherent and repetitious speech.”
The teacher nodded. “Correct.”
The crowd rippled with applause, which was quickly overtaken by the customary murmuring that followed Tilly like a shadow. She returned to her seat without expression, imperceptibly glancing at Darkus as she went.
“Darkus, prepare to spell. Your word is . . . abalone.”
Darkus arrived at the microphone, staring up and to the right again. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Tilly behind him, shifting in her seat.
The teacher repeated, “Abalone.”
Darkus responded, “A-b-a-l-o-n. Abalon.” He turned to the teacher.
The teacher looked up, surprised. “I’m afraid that is incorrect, Darkus. Abalone is A-b . . .”
As the teacher correctly spelled the word, Darkus noticed Tilly react, bemused, from behind him. The teacher read the definition, and Darkus unconsciously whispered the words along with him, for he was well aware of both the meaning and spelling of “abalone.”
“A mollusk of the genus Haliotis with a bowl-like shell and a row of respiratory holes,” the teacher advised him.
Darkus nodded and returned to his seat, closely examined by Tilly.
“Tilly, prepare to spell for the championship. Your word is . . . vivisepulture.”
As Tilly approached the mic, Darkus’s mind drifted off a bit. He knew she would get this one. Vivisepulture: the act of being buried alive. Hardly the most uplifting end to the competition, but a common occurrence in the annals of crime, at least according to his research. In fact, he had only just read about the heinous custom in his father’s account of the Incident of the Missing Headstone.
“V-i-v-i . . . ,” Tilly began, then glanced off at Darkus with some suspicion, then continued, “. . . s-e-p-u-l-t-u-r-e. Vivisepulture.”
Before the teacher could confirm the result, Darkus had already started clapping.
“That is correct,” the teacher announced.
The audience reluctantly broke into applause, temporarily drowning out the murmuring. Darkus quietly made his way offstage, away from the commotion.<
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Tilly squinted behind the lectern as flashbulbs captured the moment. A second teacher arrived carrying a trophy.
Audience members began filing out of the auditorium. Darkus made his way up the aisle toward the back of the room.
“Hey, Dorkus,” said one of the hoodies, leering at him. “Better luck next time.”
“Thanks,” he answered politely.
Unfortunately his name was perfectly suited to a number of less-than-flattering alterations and abbreviations. If it wasn’t for this moniker, he could have faded even further into the dull backdrop of school life, which was his preferred position: out of sight, out of mind. The name was by all accounts his father’s idea, not his mother’s—as she reminded him on a regular basis. Perhaps by way of apology, his father had abbreviated it to “Doc,” which was marginally less of a problem, although Darkus preferred to reserve that name as a term of endearment between him and his dad rather than share it with the school.
For that reason, he hadn’t heard the name “Doc” in almost four years.
“See you around,” the hoodie threatened.
“Not if I see you first,” Darkus whispered to himself, until a hand grabbed his shoulder.
“Hey—” A voice accompanied it.
He turned to find Tilly facing him.
“You let me win,” she said.
Darkus paused for a moment, then shook his head. “There’s no empirical proof of that.”
“I don’t need proof. I know you did.”
“You were an excellent competitor, Tilly. You won on your own merit.” He bowed his head a little. “I, for one, am looking forward to half-term break,” he embellished. “How about you?”
She examined him with her overpoweringly dark eyes, unconvinced by his story.
“Kids . . . ?” A booming male voice broke the moment.
Darkus turned to see his stepdad, Clive, emerge from the crowd. The waist of Clive’s jeans appeared to be even higher than usual, leaving a gap of several inches between the hem of his trouser leg and the tongue of his loafers. This being an occasion of sorts, the sock was an argyle. The outfit was completed by a silver nylon jacket that resembled something an astronaut might have worn during the early days of lunar exploration. Meeting Tilly’s stare, Clive modified his tone a bit and unconsciously ran a hand through his nest of curly salt-and-pepper hair.