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To my parents for providing the foundation,
to my brother for being an inspiration,
to my husband for always believing,
to my little champion, for all the reasons
GREETINGS, SCAVENGERS!
Garrison Griswold here to welcome you to the wonderful world of Book Scavenger. We are a community of book lovers, puzzle lovers, and treasure hunters. Are you, too? Then come along and join us!
Here is how you play:
Hide a Book
1. Choose a book to send on an adventure.
2. Pick a public place to hide your book. For example: a local park, a coffee shop, the library, or bus stops.* (*Please be respectful of our environment as well as laws and regulations of the area in which you are hiding a book.) Visit our online store to purchase bookouflage and bookstumes to help conceal your book, or create your own. Or hide your book in its birthday suit—after all, sometimes no disguise is the best disguise of all.
3. Create and upload a clue. Provide other scavengers with a hint for how to find your book. Example: The lowest branch on the tallest tree. To increase the difficulty level (and fun!), many users conceal their clue with a cipher or code, or make their clue the solution for a puzzle. Use the “autogenerate” feature on our website to have a computer encrypt your clue, or get ideas from the Puzzlepedia page and create your own.
4. Register the book you would like to hide. Every registered book is issued a unique tracking code. Apply a tracking badge to the inside front cover of your book. Download your tracking badge from your profile and print it. (You can print onto a label or use paper and tape it to your book.)
5. Hide your book! Track its travels via the “Hidden Books” tab on your profile as other scavengers find, log, and rehide your book.
Find a Book
1. Select a book. Search for books hidden near you. Select which book to hunt by title, location, or random selection—it’s up to you! Alternatively, enter a specific title. If users have hidden that book, you will see a list of the locations.
2. Download the book clue. If you flag the book before you download the clue, you will earn double the points if you reach the book first. This is called declaring a book. See the “Points” section for more information.
3. Solve the clue.
4. Go Book Scavenging!
Points
You earn one point for every book you hide, find, or if someone finds one of your hidden books. As you earn points, you will move up through the ranks of the game. The higher your rank, the more special privileges you earn, like unlocking secret pages and online games and puzzles. You can also cash in your points at the Book Scavenger store for book-hunting supplies—or for more books, of course!
To earn more points and add an element of suspense to your hunt, a seeker can declare a book. To do this, you must select “Declare This Book” before you download its clue. You cannot declare a book you have hidden yourself or one that has been hidden by a Book Scavenger friend. Declaring a book will double the point value. But watch out! Declared books are flagged for all users to see, alerting every book sleuth to the hidden book that is now worth double points. This is where the suspense comes in! Will you capture the book first, or will a poacher? Poachers are book scavengers who target declared books in an attempt to get them before the original seeker.
Ranks
Encyclopedia Brown. (0–25) A bright and brainy young sleuth, Encyclopedia Brown was the go-to detective in his neighborhood who offered his services for the bargain rate of twenty-five cents per day, plus expenses. This is the entry level for all those playing Book Scavenger.
Nancy Drew. (26–50) Your curiosity and keen eye for clues are moving you up in the world! Nancy Drew is a smart and resourceful teenage sleuth who began solving mysteries in the 1930s and continues to solve them to this day.
Sam Spade. (51–100) You are an intrepid book scavenger now. This private detective is the creation of San Francisco’s own literary son, Dashiell Hammett, and appeared in his novel The Maltese Falcon, as well as three short stories.
Miss Marple. (101–150) Agatha Christie’s famous detective is more than meets the eye, and you are now a book scavenger who shouldn’t be underestimated.
Monsieur C. Auguste Dupin. (151–200) You’re an old pro at this game. Dupin is often considered the original detective. His creator, Edgar Allan Poe, is credited with starting the detective fiction genre in 1841.
Sherlock Holmes. (201+) The highest rank for a book scavenger. You are a master of puzzles, logic, and deduction.
The final, most important, and most fun step of all: READ the book! In addition to offering literary treasure hunts, Book Scavenger provides a wonderful online community for book lovers of all ages. Post reviews on your profile, join book conversations in the forums, and bask in the book-loving ambiance.
Those are the rules, fellow scavengers! And don’t forget our motto: “Life is a game, and books are the tokens.”
Yours in pages and play,
Garrison Griswold
Creator of Book Scavenger and CEO of Bayside Press
CHAPTER
1
GARRISON GRISWOLD whistled his way down Market Street, silver hair bobbing atop his head like a pigeon wing. He tapped his trademark walking stick, striped in Bayside Press colors, to the beat of his tune. A cabdriver slowed and honked his horn, leaning to his passenger-side window.
“Mr. Griswold! You want a ride? It’s on me, my friend.”
“Very kind of you, but I’m fine, thank you,” Mr. Griswold called back, and raised his cane in a salute. He preferred traveling by streetcar or BART. They were the veins of this city he loved, after all.
A woman clutching a cell phone hurried to Mr. Griswold’s side.
“My son is such a fan of Book Scavenger. Can I trouble you for a photograph?”
Mr. Griswold checked his wristwatch. Plenty of time to spare before he had to be at the main library for his big announcement. He balanced a hand on the woman’s shoulder as she held the phone at arm’s length to take the picture.
“So is it true?” she asked. “Do you have another game in the works?”
In response, Mr. Griswold pulled an imaginary zipper across his lips and gave her a wink. He continued on his way, through the stream of pedestrians, whistling and tapping his cane on the brick sidewalk, completely unaware of the two men who’d stepped into his wake.
One was tall and gangly with bushy black eyebrows peeking from the edge of his backward ball cap. His partner was a bulldog of a man who moved as if his chest propelled him down the street instead of his legs. His hands were jammed in his front sweatshirt pocket, and his stare didn’t waver from his target.
Mr. Griswold descended into the BART station. When he paused before the fare gate to remove his Fast Pass from his wallet, a voice from behind spoke his name. Mr. Griswold turned and faced the men. His smile
faltered. It was early afternoon, off-hours for commuting, and the trickle of people coming in and out of the station was slow. Nonexistent at the moment.
He adjusted his frameless glasses and looked the tall man in the eye. “I’m running late for an appointment, gentlemen.” Mr. Griswold wiggled his salt-and-pepper mustache—a nervous habit. The way that short man popped his knuckles and gave him a look that could only be described as scornful caused him to put up his guard.
“We have a friend in common,” the tall man said.
“Yeah, a friend.” The short man laughed hoarsely.
“Ah, I see.” Mr. Griswold turned to go through the fare gate, but the tall one stepped in front of him and blocked his way.
“I’m in quite a rush,” Mr. Griswold said. “If you wouldn’t mind calling my office, I’d be happy to speak with you at a later date.”
Mr. Griswold extended his walking stick between the two men, trying to force his way through, but the tall man grasped him firmly by the shoulder.
“We want the book,” he said.
Mr. Griswold resisted the urge to hug his leather satchel firmly to his side. Inside was a special edition of The Gold-Bug by Edgar Allan Poe that he had crafted himself using the Gutenberg 2004 EX-PRO Printing Press and Binding Machine he kept at his house. He planned to make forty-nine more, but only the one in his bag existed at that moment. He’d brought The Gold-Bug as a prop for the unveiling of his new, elaborate game. It would be just enough to give a hint, a small peek, to the public of what would be involved. But these men couldn’t be talking about that book. Nobody knew about it yet—nobody at Bayside Press, and nobody in his personal life.
Mr. Griswold used the cuff of his suit jacket to dab a bead of sweat from his temple. “I run a publishing company, gentlemen. We deal with hundreds of books. Thousands. You’ll have to be more specific than that.”
“You know the one we want,” the short, stocky man said. He leaned in close, stretching on tiptoe like he was looking up Mr. Griswold’s nose. He jerked his neck back to his partner. “He knows which one, right, Barry?”
The tall man stomped his foot. “We said fake names, remember?”
“Whatever,” the other responded. “This guy’s old. His hearing’s probably shot.”
Taking advantage of their brief moment of strife, Mr. Griswold swung his walking stick and whacked Barry on the cheek, then pushed past him toward the entrance to the lower level.
“Help!”
His cry echoed in the cavernous station. There was a low crack, like a distant boom of thunder. Mr. Griswold felt something like a punch to his back. He stumbled and fell to the ground, hitting his head on the stone floor. Had he been shot? He struggled to breathe. A numb dampness spread across his lower back, and his head throbbed where it had connected to the ground.
Barry cursed and rushed forward. He stooped beside Mr. Griswold and placed a palm on his forehead, as if he were checking for a fever. “What did you do, Clyde?”
“What happened to ‘we gotta use fake names’?” Clyde said.
“I can’t believe this!” Barry cried. “You have a gun? You shot him? That wasn’t part of the plan.”
Clyde shrugged. “I improvised.”
“What if he doesn’t have the book on him?”
“Of course he has it on him.” Clyde inspected the hole in his sweatshirt pocket where he’d concealed his gun. “He needs it for that press conference.”
An automated announcement drifted up from the level below where the trains and buses arrived. Barry slid his arms underneath Mr. Griswold’s and dragged him backward to an empty bench.
With a soft grunt, Mr. Griswold collapsed against the slick granite wall behind him. He crumpled from a seated position to a prone one, his back sliding against the wall, leaving a streak of blood to mark his trail. He tried to land on top of his bag in an effort to keep it from the men, but Clyde tugged it free.
Clyde pulled the book from Mr. Griswold’s bag. “The Gold-Bug by Edgar Allan Poe.” He tossed it to Barry. “That has to be it.”
Mr. Griswold’s vision blurred the two men together and apart. He wanted to say something, to stop them, but all that came out were moans.
Barry hardly looked at the book before hurling it to the corner, where it rebounded off the wall and slid behind a trash can. “That’s a brand-new book!” he shouted.
“It’s still a book,” Clyde said.
“He’s a publisher! He’s going to have books on him. We were told to look for an old book. A really old book.”
A BART train rumbled in one level below. The hum of people leaving the cars carried upstairs.
“We gotta get out of here,” Barry said. The two men raced to the exit.
A boisterous group wearing black-and-orange jerseys rode up the escalator. One of them noticed Mr. Griswold slumped on the bench and ran over. A man dialed 9-1-1 on his cell phone. A woman crouched next to him and repeated, “Hang on. Everything will be okay.”
As Garrison Griswold hovered on the brink of consciousness, he wasn’t worried about when help would arrive. It was the slim edition of The Gold-Bug wedged between the trash can and the wall that consumed his thoughts. All that work, all his plans. Everything was in place, but without The Gold-Bug, his game wouldn’t get launched. His nearly priceless treasure would never be discovered. He hoped desperately that the right person would find his book. Someone who would take the time to understand and appreciate the secrets it held.
CHAPTER
2
THE CLUE was a substitution cipher—Emily was sure. Figuring that out had been the easy part. The hard part was trying to crack it. She rearranged the letters in another attempt to solve it:
Throw ferzu borg the zoey.
That couldn’t be right. Who was Ferzu Borg and why would she have to throw him a zoey? And what was a zoey, anyway? This was no way to advance to the Auguste Dupin level of Book Scavenger.
With a huff, Emily ripped the page from her notebook, crumpled it, and dropped it with the other failed attempts littering the cab of the moving van. At the top of a fresh page, she carefully recopied the cipher she’d printed from the Book Scavenger website a few days ago.
“Hey, Sherlylocks,” her dad interrupted. “Take a break and enjoy the scenery. You know who once lived in San Francisco, don’t you?”
“Gee, let me guess.…” Emily continued writing in her notebook without looking up. Her dad had only mentioned they were moving to the home of his literary idol, oh, sixty million times.
“‘There was nowhere to go but everywhere.’ Jack Kerouac wrote that in—”
“On the Road, Dad. I know.”
Emily sighed, frustrated with the cipher and frustrated with her dad for breaking her concentration. She slid her pencil back through her ponytail for safekeeping. They were driving through a valley jam-packed with rows of houses wrapped around hillsides like serpentine belts. Emily guessed there were more houses in this one corner of California than in the entire state of New Mexico, where they had most recently moved from.
In the side-view mirror, she could see the family’s beat-up minivan trailing behind them. They had nicknamed the minivan Sal, another homage to the great and almighty Jack Kerouac. Their mother gripped Sal’s steering wheel and leaned forward the way she always did, like she was so excited to get where they were going, whether it was the grocery store or California. Matthew, Emily’s older brother, bobbed his lopsided Mohawk as he listened to music. Most likely Flush, his favorite band. Emily would bet a box of books on it.
“Nothing more exciting than a new beginning, don’t you think?” Emily’s dad asked.
Emily nodded, although she wasn’t sure she agreed. Her parents were so proud of this life they’d created, but she didn’t get their enthusiasm for new beginnings. It was like starting a bunch of books and never finishing any of them.
California would be the ninth state for Emily in her twelve and three-quarters years, all part of her parents’ quest to live o
nce in each of the fifty states. Yes, a quest to live in every state. That always went over well when Emily tried to explain their frequent moving to people.
“Are you in the military?”
“Are you in a witness-protection program?”
“Are you on the run from the feds?”
“You just move around for fun?”
Starting before she was born, her parents had bounced from state to state because, in their words, “that’s where our paychecks pulled us.” When Emily was five, they lived in New York and her dad was laid off from his job at a publishing company. He started to take on freelance copyediting jobs. That same year, her mother was given permission to do her programming job remotely, which meant anywhere she had a computer. Realizing their work wouldn’t be tying them to one spot, her parents decided to make their fantasy of living once in every state a reality. They started a blog called 50 Homes in 50 States and chronicled their moving adventures. The blog had been a hobby to begin with, a way to capture memories from the different places they lived, but it grew into a side business with companies paying to advertise on it, and travel sites and magazines asking them to write articles. The Crane family had been averaging a move almost once a year ever since.
For a while, Emily loved it. It was a big family adventure. Discovering new places, the suspense of where they would go next. And her parents always tried to make it fun. Like their reveal tradition—a surprise dinner they threw for Emily and her older brother, with clues indicating their next destination. Three weeks ago, Emily had walked into their rental after school, brainstorming ideas for a notable New Mexico landmark to feature in her diorama project, and found the kitchen table set with sourdough bread bowls filled with gold-foil-wrapped chocolate coins. Her whole body had tensed up, knowing she’d walked into a reveal dinner, which meant they were moving again. You’d think she would have gotten used to these surprises, but she hadn’t.
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