Read The 39 Clues: Cahills vs. Vespers Book 2: A King's Ransom Online
Authors: Jude Watson
Nobody spoke as they walked down a narrow alley that opened into a small, empty square. Atticus clutched the picture against his chest.
“Why do you have this?” he asked again.
Instead of answering, Amy posed a question. “What do you know about your great-grandmother?”
“Not much,” Atticus said. “She lived in Maine. She was Jewish, but she married an African American soldier, back when you just didn’t do stuff like that.”
“Why do you have the photo?” Jake demanded. “We should be the ones asking questions, not you.”
“Before the war, Jane Sperling was a student in Germany,” Amy said.
Atticus nodded. “She was a medieval scholar.”
“She spent the war years in London. She was an American spy.”
Jake let out a surprised bark of a laugh. “Now I know you’re crazy. A spy?”
But Atticus looked interested. Amy saw the flash of curiosity in his eyes. “Why do you think that?”
“Never mind why. Her code name was Sparrow.”
“Sparrow!” Atticus gave a start. He looked down at the picture again. “Follow the sparrow to the Mad King …” he murmured.
“The Mad King?” Amy asked insistently. “Why did you say that?”
“It’s something my mother said … the night she died. She was trying to tell me something. She’d been unconscious for days, and then she came to and talked to me.”
“You never told us that.” Jake looked at his brother in surprise.
“She said that I had to follow the sparrow to the Mad King’s castle. I mean, what would you think?”
“I’d think she was delirious.”
Amy gripped the notebook deep in her pocket. “Did she say anything else?”
“Oh, crazy stuff,” Atticus said. “She kept talking about vespers and grace. She said she needed grace. Which is funny, because she wasn’t religious at all.”
“Grace?” Amy questioned sharply. “What if it was the
name
Grace? Like she was talking about a person?”
“She didn’t know anyone named Grace,” Jake broke in. “Atticus, why didn’t you tell me this, or tell Dad?”
“Because it didn’t make sense. And because …” Atticus hesitated. “Because I couldn’t talk about it somehow. It was like a dream. She talked about this story she told me when I was really little. A bedtime story. I can barely remember it. There was this brave family in it who protected a ring… . I don’t remember the name. Something to do with music. Or a poem.”
“Madrigal,” Amy said.
“Yes! That’s it! There was a ring, and the Madrigals had to protect it. There was a dragon named …” Atticus looked up as knowledge lit his face. “Vesper! The dragon was named Vesper. That’s all I can remember. She just kept saying ‘the ring, the ring.’”
Amy had to stop herself from touching her watch. She had trained herself not to keep checking it was there. The ring wasn’t a fantasy story. It was real, and resting against her skin.
“Would somebody please explain to me what’s going on?” Jake cried in frustration. “Because I feel like I’m in some sort of cracked fairy tale.”
Amy took out the notebook. “We found this in Neuschwanstein Castle, hidden in a drain. It belonged to Jane Sperling.” She handed the book to Atticus.
“In the castle? So maybe I was meant to find it!” He opened the flap reverently.
To G: dV528.112K
Stolen by Hummel
repatriated w V. Kepler
resting w/ teacher & victim
together with the spellbound wanderer will point the way
Atticus looked up at them. “What does it mean?”
“We think ‘dV’ refers to the de Virga world map,” Amy said. “We know for sure that Jane was interested in it.”
Jake frowned. “I don’t know what that is.”
“It’s a medieval world map that went missing in 1932. Your great-grandmother was at the auction when it was stolen.” Amy quickly related their theory about what happened to the map. “Hummel stole it, and Jane got it back. Then she led us here.”
“I see!” Atticus exclaimed. “So the numbers are a library collection number. And of course ‘spellbound wanderer’ is a no-brainer.”
“Maybe to you,” Dan said. “I’m clueless.”
“Marco Polo,” Atticus explained. “It’s a quote from
Il Milione.
It’s how Marco Polo refers to himself.”
Amy groaned. “We should have guessed that!”
“But why do
you
want the map?” Jake asked. His eyebrows came down and he squinted at Amy suspiciously. She felt a flare of annoyance.
Atticus jumped in before she could answer. “But what’s this about teacher and victim?”
“We don’t know,” Dan said. “Something that happened in the war, maybe?”
“Not the war,” Jake said slowly, still looking at the notebook. “Hundred of years before that. Kepler worked for Tycho Brahe, the Danish astronomer. Brahe worked and died in Prague. There are theories that he was poisoned. His body was even exhumed recently — he died of mercury poisoning. Some people say that Kepler did it. So is there a Kepler manuscript here?”
Dan nodded. “We think Jane left a lead with it — or, we’re hoping, the map itself.”
“But why?” Jake asked, dark eyes on Amy’s. It was annoying that he kept asking the right questions.
He was still suspicious, but he was curious now. He was learning things about his extended family he’d never dreamed of. Welcome to the club.
“Maybe we’ll find out today,” Amy said. “If we find the map.”
“Okay, this all makes a weird kind of sense,” Jake said. “If you’re a totally illogical kind of person.” He looked at Amy when he said it.
“Or it doesn’t make any sense if you’re a total resistant blockhead,” Amy shot back.
He glowered at her. “You still aren’t answering my question. What does this have to do with you two?”
“We can’t tell you that,” Amy said. “It’s not just our secret. But we can tell you that lives are at stake. You just have to trust us.” She raised her chin and looked him in the eye. “You know, sometimes the right thing isn’t the thing you
think
is right. It’s the wrong thing you’re afraid to think of.”
“When I figure out what that means, I’ll let you know.”
“Don’t you want to know if Atticus’s great- grandmother was a spy who had her hands on a medieval mappa mundi?” Amy asked.
“C’mon, Jake,” Atticus urged. “We have to get inside!”
She saw in a flash that despite all Jake’s doubts, he couldn’t walk away. His curiosity would lead him forward. Without another word, she turned and headed toward the library. She knew he’d follow.
In just a few moments, she heard footsteps and his voice behind her. “Just don’t steal it,” he said.
Amy decided it was better not to answer.
With the sons of Mark Rosenbloom with them, Amy and Dan had no problem getting into the library. They were ushered into the restricted section. Katja Mavel personally led them to the Renaissance collection. It was kept in a humidity-controlled room.
“You will have to leave your backpacks out here,” she said, pointing to a rack outside the room. “No packs, purses, pens, or pencils are allowed. There is a computer inside for your use in taking notes. You may send the notes to the printer.”
Dan, Amy, and Atticus put their backpacks on the rack. They walked into the collection room. The door shut behind them with a sharp click.
“This looks state-of-the-art,” Jake remarked.
“Absolutely,” the librarian replied. “Temperature and humidity controlled, halon gas fire protection system, all documents stored in archival boxes that are kept in fire-resistant metals. Oh, you know the halon system? It depletes the oxygen in the air in case of fire, to protect the materials. So if the alarm goes off, you must exit immediately. The door will automatically lock within two minutes. And of course you must wear the gloves if you touch the materials.”
“Of course,” Dan said. He pulled on a pair of white cotton gloves and splayed his fingers. “And they’re also so helpful for jazz hands.”
Katja Mavel opened a case and withdrew a long, flat box with the call letters Jane had jotted in the notebook. It looked faded and a bit battered. “Ah, this is one of the old boxes. Not much call for these materials. We are updating all the boxes, but it takes time.” She put down the box but lingered. “So. You are studying the works of Tycho Brahe and Kepler?”
“Such a fascinating story,” Amy said.
“Yes, you know, Brahe is quite a hero in Prague. His death … for so many years, scholars thought his bladder burst.”
“Excuse me?” Amy asked.
“You know, he was at this great banquet, and it was said he didn’t want to be rude and get up for the bathroom, so …”
Amy could feel Dan and Atticus trying not to giggle.
“We have a saying when we leave the table for the bathroom. We say ‘I don’t want to pull a Brahe.’”
Dan coughed. It was a strangled sound, as if he was smothering a laugh. Amy felt laughter bubble up inside her just at the sight of Dan’s red face. This always surprised Amy, how hilarity could suddenly sweep over them just when things were at their most tense.
“So what exactly are you studying about Brahe?” Katja Mavel asked.
Amy knew the question wasn’t a trap. But they had to get rid of Mavel if they were going to steal the map.
Jake cleared his throat. “You know, my father still remembers his visit here so fondly,” he said.
Katja Mavel blushed. “I remember him fondly as well — as a colleague.” She tucked a dark strand behind her ear. “I admire his work. His scholarship. We all do. Is your father working on another book?”
Jake smiled. “I’d love to tell you a bit about it. I had a long train ride from Rome. I was wondering if there was any tea or coffee available … ?”
“Yes, of course. Why don’t you come to my office… . Would anyone else care for refreshments?”
“No, thank you,” Atticus said.
Jake took the woman’s arm. “My father would be glad to know that the library is still doing such important work.” As they walked away he looked over his shoulder at them. The look plainly said
work fast.
Amy felt a twinge of annoyance. Jake could sure work the charm when he had to. He must know how gorgeous he was. And that made him insufferable.
“Ready?” Atticus asked them. His hands hovered over the box.
Biting her lip, Amy nodded.
Atticus lifted the lid. A musty smell invaded the room. Inside was the leather-bound edition of
Mysterium Cosmographicum
.
With the reverence of a scholar, he carefully turned the pages. “It’s in Latin,” he said. “My Latin is pretty good, but I can’t translate the entire book.”
“I don’t think Jane wanted us to,” Amy said. “She hid the map somewhere inside the pages. I’m sure of it.”
“Just shake the book,” Dan advised. “Something will fall out.”
Atticus looked horrified. “Shake a sixteenth- century book? I couldn’t do that.”
“I could.”
Atticus emitted a squeak as Dan grabbed the book and turned it upside down. Nothing fell out. Atticus snatched the book back and hugged it.
“Dude, it’s a book, not a puppy,” Dan said.
“Let’s examine the endpapers,” Amy said.
Carefully, Atticus opened the book again. “Nothing in the front.” He turned the book over. “Wait a second … there’s something here. It’s like the book has been repaired. I mean, that makes sense … it’s more than four hundred years old… .” He peeled back a small section of endpaper. “There’s something under here,” he said excitedly. “I think we found the map!”