The Key in the Attic

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Authors: DeAnna Julie Dodson
Tags: Fiction, Mystery
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themselves comfortable on the couch. “Any luck on any of the other clues?”
    “Well, thanks to the Internet, I found out that an old English measurement that happens to be 45 inches is called an ell. I’m thinking ‘Roadside Refuge’ is an inn.”
    Annie dug out her copy of Geoffrey’s clues. “OK, I guess we can pencil those in. Anything else?” She cleared her throat and read the paper aloud:
    “ England’s 45 inches
    Twice indebted
    Katherine at home
    Blue and twinkling
    Roadside refuge
    Turn to the right
    Twice beholden
    Scotland’s river
    Busy sweets maker
    Twice obliged
    Katherine to her friends”
    Alice wrinkled her forehead in thought. “‘Blue and twinkling’ I was thinking could be eyes or maybe just eye, but it doesn’t make sense. Eye Inn? Do you suppose that was a tavern or something back then? Maybe that’s where he hid the next letter Angeline was supposed to find.”
    Annie swatted herself on the forehead. “I can’t believe I’m so stupid. The letters she was supposed to find aren’t the kind you write to someone. They’re the kind you write with . They’re all right there. Not the words ‘eye inn’ but the letters ‘IN.’ That spells ‘in’! Ell, the 45-inch unit of length in England, is for the letter L. ‘Katherine to her friends’ must be Kay, the letter K.”
    “Wait, wait! I’m trying to write these down. Then a ‘busy sweets maker’ has got to be a bee—the letter B.” Alice giggled. “It’s pretty easy when you know how.”
    Annie frowned at the piece of paper she held. “I don’t know. What word starts with L and ends with K and has only three letters? The middle has to be a vowel, but none of them make this a real word. The same with the last three lines. B something K. It doesn’t make sense.”
    “Sure it does. Think about it. ‘Indebted,’ ‘beholden,’ ‘obliged’ all mean the same thing, or the same letter. And the ‘twice’ just means that letter is used two times.”
    Annie went through the vowels in her head and suddenly laughed. “Of course. Owe . I can’t believe I didn’t get that right off. That just leaves us with ‘turn to the right’ and ‘Scotland’s river.’”
    Alice went to her computer and clicked a few keys. “Well the only river I see that is also a letter would be the river Dee.”
    “Perfect.” Annie penciled in the letter D. “Now, what do we have? ‘LOOK IN _OOD BOOK.’ There are only a few letters that would fit there and make a word: F, G, H, M, and W, and I don’t think he would have had a ‘hood book’ or a ‘mood book.’”
    Alice snickered.
    Annie tapped her pencil on the table, thinking. “So that leaves F, G, and W.”
    “A wood book?” Alice asked.
    “Maybe, but F and W aren’t words by themselves.”
    “And G is? I don’t know. And what does it have to do with turning?”
    Annie caught her breath. “No, no, that’s it! Didn’t you ever read the Little House on the Prairie books?”
    “No, but I watched the TV show. Does that count?” Alice asked dubiously.
    Annie laughed. “Maybe. What we keep forgetting to do is keep in mind when this clue was written: 1861 or so. They used to shout ‘gee’ and ‘haw’ as a voice command to oxen or horses to get them to pull right or left. I never could remember which was which, but going by this, ‘gee’ must have been right.”
    “‘LOOK IN GOOD BOOK.’ Umm. And what was his idea of a good book?”
    “Alice! Not a good book, the Good Book—the Bible!”
    “Oh, duh! That must be where the numbers come in. Let’s see, there are four in each line. Umm … book, chapter, verse and word?”
    “We won’t know till we try. Do you have one handy?”
    “Yeah,” Alice said, “hang on.”
    Alice disappeared into her bedroom and came back with her Bible.
    “OK, the fiftieth book is … Philippians.”
    “Right,” Annie said. “Listen to make sure we’re doing it right, let’s both look these up and compare answers. Do you have

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