Authors: Justin Richards
All of which meant, surely, that the text on the screen was itself a clue. There was a message hidden in it. Maybe several messages. âYou might need some help with it' told Matt he needed help from someone else. He wasn't sure about the mention of Latin. He learned Latin at school, though he wasn't any good at it. Dad had insisted he do the option and of course Dad knew Latin as well as the ancient Romans did. But he wouldn't expect Matt to decipher a clue in Latin, would he?
So, what else? What else in the message on the screen
was odd or strange, pointing to a hidden meaning? Matt's attention focused on the mention of his friends Ned and Tim. He didn't know anyone called Ned, and he didn't know a Tim that he'd call a friend. Dad knew some of Matt's friends â he'd met Nick Blows several times, and Alex Moon had been to stay ⦠So why make up names? Ned was an anagram of âend' â was that important? What about Tim though â short for âtime' perhaps?
He started again from the beginning. And stopped when he got to: âGreat, capital.' That didn't seem to fit. Neither was the sort of word Dad would use. âGreat,' well maybe. âCapital' certainly not. And why was âgo' in italics?
Actually, now he read it again, that whole paragraph was rather odd. Why was Dad calling it âThe Old house'? Why not capitalise âhouse' if he was using capitals on âThe' and âOld'? And then he got it.
Of course, that was why Ned and Tim were there â Dad needed two names that Matt would realise were made up, were there for some specific reason. And they had to be names that started with N and T. Capital â Capital letters. And âgo' was italicised because the first two capitals in that paragraph were G and O from âGreat' and âObviously.' Spelling âGO.'
He grabbed the Biro he'd found in the desk drawer and the nearest piece of paper to write down the
capitals from the whole message. The Biro scratched D but no ink came out. So he stuck it back in the drawer and took out a pencil â broken.
Third time lucky, and the gel pen he tried worked. It was green, but that didn't matter. Matt traced his finger along the lines on the screen and copied down the capital letters:
He stopped â it was just gibberish. Matt stared at the message on the screen. Perhaps the italicised âgo' was where he should start. Perhaps he just needed the capital letters from that paragraph. He tried again â and almost at once could see that he was right.
Matt stared at what he'd written. Well, he thought, that's clear enough. He read back through the last few lines on the screen in case there was more. I I T I. Didn't look like it. More gibberish. But the comment about âToo many negatives' made sense now. Take out a negative from the sentence and what Dad was telling him was: â
do
worry if you don't hear from me.'
âThanks,' Matt said out loud. âLike I couldn't have guessed that by now.' He was feeling queasy as he
wondered what had happened to Dad. This was more than a game â what had happened that made Dad feel he had to send Matt a coded message?
He printed out a copy of the web page, folded it up, and put it in his pocket. Then he shut down the computer and went up to his room. He hadn't bothered to unpack yet, which was a good thing because it looked like he was off again.
Taking the money from the broken teapot in the kitchen to pay for a taxi, Matt then went to phone. There was an address book beside it, and Matt found the number of a local taxi company and called for a lift to the station. Then he hunted through for Aunt Jane's number. She was Dad's older sister, so he looked under S â Jane Stribling wasn't listed. Matt sighed. What if Dad knew the number off by heart and hadn't bothered to write it down? He tried in the J section â and the first entry was âJane.'
He lifted the handset again, and was about to dial. âYou can't be too careful,' Dad's letter had said. He tapped the handset against his chin as he thought about that, the dial tone buzzing. Was the house being watched? The phones tapped? He remembered the figure he thought he had seen across the fields the night before. And he put down the phone. He scribbled Aunt Jane's number on the back of the printout of Dad's letter, and let himself out of the house.
⢠⢠â¢
Mrs Dorridge was wary, but finally allowed Matt to borrow her phone for a quick call. He managed to catch Aunt Jane just as she was leaving for work. She still lived in the same village where she and Matt's Dad had grown up.
âNothing about your father surprises me,' she said in response to Matt's hurried explanations. âHasn't done for years. It's typical. So don't worry â I'm sure he's just run off on some archaeological beanfeast and forgotten all about you. Of course you must come to stay with me here. I've plenty of room and I'll be glad of the company, though you'll have to fend for yourself during the day, or you can help out on the estate. I'm sure Mr Venture won't mind.'
He'd not been to Aunt Jane's for years. Usually she came to visit Dad. Matt could remember her little cottage, on the edge of a wooded area just off the main drive that led through the estate to the enormous manor house where Aunt Jane worked. Matt wasn't really sure what she did â she was some sort of personal assistant to a reclusive multimillionaire. Or something.
âI'll call you when I get to Cheltenham station. I've got a taxi coming.'
She laughed at that, sounding suddenly much younger. âIf you're getting a taxi as far as Branscombe station, you might as well come all the way here. It'll take you forever otherwise because you need to change at Gloucester. Don't worry, I'll pay.'
âThanks,' Matt said. He was aware of Mrs Dorridge watching him carefully from her living room door, and hurriedly said goodbye.
âI hope you get your phone fixed soon,' Mrs Dorridge said sternly as she saw him out.
âI hope so too. Thanks ever so much.'
âWorks all right to call taxis then,' she observed through narrowed eyes.
âEr, yeah,' Matt admitted. âIt's a bit weird. Intermittent fault they said.'
The old lady nodded, evidently far from convinced.
The trees in the fields were hardly moving, but the wind had whipped the leaves in the close into a whirlwind. Matt sat on his suitcase outside Dad's house waiting for the taxi. He watched the shapes the leaves made as they whirled and spun around him. It was odd the way the wind seemed to be trapped within this area. He hadn't noticed it before. It made him uneasy, and he had the strange feeling he was being watched. Had someone been watching the house â been in the house last night? Had they attacked him? Were they still watching? Would they come back? Matt's stomach felt empty and he shivered despite the morning sunlight.
He didn't have to wait long for the taxi â and was both relieved and irritated to see that it was the same driver as the previous evening.
This time the man did help Matt with his luggage.
âYou off again?' he said. âDon't blame you. Couldn't stick it here myself. Back to the station then?'
âNo,' Matt told him as he got in the back of the big car. âI decided there's no point bothering with the train. You might as well take me the whole way, if that's OK.'
The taxi man reversed the car onto the driveway and turned round. âSo, where to?'
Matt told him, and the driver nodded. âTake about an hour. That OK?'
He really meant, could Matt afford it? âThat's fine,' Matt assured him. âMy aunt's expecting me. She'll pay when we get there.'
The driver glanced round, grinning. âNo problem then. Quite an adventure, eh?'
The man spoke most of the way, but Matt hardly listened. There was something niggling at the back of his mind. Something the taxi driver had said or done. It echoed something Aunt Jane had said on the phone that had made him think again of Dad's message. Matt took the printed copy from his pocket and read it through once more. He couldn't read much in cars or he felt sick, so he skimmed through quickly, then looked out of the window while he tried to work out what had bothered him.
He replayed Aunt Jane's words in his head, trying to remember what she'd said which had made an impact. A word or phrase, no more. He'd half made a connection, just for a second. Then it was gone. It was when she'd been saying he could help out on the estate â¦
He glanced at the printed page again, and suddenly it seemed obvious.
There at the end of a sentence â a word broken across two lines and hyphenated. On the screen, it had seemed quite normal, but on the printout, with a different typeface, it seemed as if the word had been deliberately split:
I'm sorry I'm not at home now. Your mother did warn me you were coming, but I've had to go away. It was sudden, though not unexpected. I really don't know when I'll be back, and so I thought I'd better give you some clue what to do and where to go while I'm away. Like learning Latin, it could be quite an ad-Venture. And you might need some help with it.
The bigger space before the next line and the capital letter at the start clinched it for Matt. Venture â that was the name of the man that Aunt Jane worked for. Julius Venture â he remembered Aunt Jane and Dad talking about him. And as for learning Latin, Matt knew enough to understand that âad' was Latin for âto.' So, in Latin, âadventure' â or rather, âad Venture' â meant to go to Venture.
He watched the countryside speed past for the rest of the journey. Was Dad telling him again that he should
go to Aunt Jane's, he wondered? Or was there more to it than that? Was it really the reclusive Julius Venture that Dad was sending him to for help? And what sort of help did he need? Matt watched the world going past outside without really seeing it. He was pleased with himself for having worked out Dad's clues. But at the same time, he was anxious and worried â wondering what had happened to Dad, and what he could do about it â¦
The car sped along the narrow Cotswold lanes. A flurry of leaves and spattering of rain followed it on its way.
The taxi driver was impressed by the wide gateway into the estate. Huge wrought iron gates swung silently open as the car approached, and closed just as silently behind it.
âQuite a place,' the driver said as they caught sight of the manor house through the trees. It was an imposing seventeenth-century mansion built of Cotswold stone.
âYes,' Matt agreed. âBut that's not where we're going.'
The driver was less impressed with Aunt Jane's cottage as they drew up outside. âOh,' he said. âHow quaint.'
The cottage had been built at the same time as the main house, providing accommodation for the gardener or groundsman, Matt assumed. It was like the manor house in miniature â same grey stone, same style of windows and door, same slate tiles on the roof. It had its own little forecourt, paved with irregular slabs of stone, just off the driveway. Nestling as it did in the
shadow of a small wooded area of the grounds, it looked like a setting for a fairy tale. A rather bleak fairy tale, though, Matt decided â dull and grey and square and shadowy.
He stood with his luggage on the forecourt as Aunt Jane emerged and hurried to pay the taxi driver.
âOh, let me give you a hand with that,' she said, taking his suitcase from him. But she didn't take it inside, instead she set it down again, took a step back and inspected Matt.
âYou are
so
like your father,' she said. âGoodness, how you've grown, it's been too long since I last saw you. How old are you now?' She shook her head. âNo, don't tell me. I don't think I want to know.'
She was much as Matt remembered her, thin and willowy and serious. Only she seemed smaller. Which made Matt realise how long it must have been since he last saw her, and how much he must have grown. He'd changed far more than she had. She was noticeably older â older than Matt's mum, he knew. Her shoulder-length hair was streaked with grey where it had been uniformly dark brown, and her face was beginning to gain a texture like the stone of her house.
Matt smiled. âI'm fifteen. You sent me a card, remember?'
âOh, that just happens automatically. If your birthday is in my diary, you get a card. I don't keep count. Come on inside. I won't ask how your father is,' she said
as she led the way, carrying his case, âbecause I'm sure you won't know. But how's your mother?'
Matt almost said she'd run off too â both his parents had upped and left. If that was really what Dad had done. He tried to tell Aunt Jane he was worried, but her expression told him she was not at all concerned about her brother. He wondered about mentioning the intruder, the missing letters, Dad's weird website message. But now he was here and safe, Matt decided to wait until he had his own thoughts in order and Aunt Jane was more responsive.
Still muttering about her brother's selfish absent-mindedness, Aunt Jane showed Matt to the spare room. It was tiny and square with bare stone walls and a small window that faced the main house. He could just see it through the trees, the morning sunlight reflecting off the windows. The only furniture was the bed and a small chest of drawers beside it. There was a lamp on the top of the chest.
âI hope it will do,' Aunt Jane said. âJulius â Mr Venture â said that you can stay up at the manor house if you want, there's plenty of room there, of course. But I thought this was more cosy and I'd rather you were with me. If that's all right?'
Matt nodded. âI'll be fine. Thanks.'
âOf course, you're welcome to use Mr Venture's library and do your homework or whatever you have to do up there. I'll show you round this afternoon if I have
time. I'm sorry I'm going to be rather busy, but of course I didn't know you were coming until â¦'
âThat's OK,' Matt assured her. âI'll be all right. It's lovely here. And thank you for letting me stay.'