AFTER DROPPING their school stuff off at their apartments, grabbing snacks, and getting permission to go downtown, Emily and James found themselves riding the bus to the financial district. They walked from the bus stop to the Bayside Press building. The rattle of streetcars, honking horns, and the bustle of people made this part of San Francisco much noisier than where Emily and James lived. When they turned into the narrow courtyard outside the main entrance of Bayside Press, all the city noise seemed to hush. Emily held up a hand to stop James from walking farther.
“This is, like, sacred Book Scavenger territory,” Emily said. “Let me absorb this for a minute.” She took in the gleaming tower of an office building, the blue sky reflected off its sides. The surrounding buildings were dull and serious in comparison. “Okay, I’m good,” she said, and they pulled open the glass doors to enter Bayside Press.
The ground-level lobby was an open space with gray walls, stone floors, and a uniformed security guard standing behind a desk.
“Hi,” Emily said when they approached the security guard. “We’d like to speak with someone at Bayside Press.”
“All right,” the man said. “Who are you here to see?”
“Um…” Emily and James looked at each other.
“We’re here to see Joe?” James said hopefully.
The man looked over his glasses at them. “Joe,” he said.
James nodded confidently. Emily wasn’t sure about “Joe,” but she marveled at how quickly James committed to his story.
The man flipped open a binder and scanned a list of names. “Joe Beatson, Joe Field, Joe Fu, Joe Kothari, Joe Mason, Joe Shah, Joe Vigil, Joe Vince, Joe Young … Any of those your Joe?”
James swallowed. “The last one? Joe Young?”
The man closed his binder. “I made him up. As I suspect you made up your Joe. Sorry, kids, but this is a business. We can’t let just anyone go gallivanting through our hallways.”
Emily gripped her backpack straps. They’d come all this way and were so close to seeing the inside of Bayside Press, she didn’t want to turn around and leave. Even if they didn’t find an answer to Mr. Griswold’s Gold-Bug puzzle, now that she was here, she craved just a peek behind the scenes where Book Scavenger was created.
She slid her backpack off her shoulders, unzipped it, and pulled out The Gold-Bug. “What if I told you we’ve found Mr. Griswold’s next game? Could we talk to someone then?”
James stared at her, eyes wide. They hadn’t talked about sharing their discovery of the book with anyone. It might have been her imagination, but Steve seemed a little extra splayed himself.
The security guard barely looked at the book. “I don’t doubt you found the next game,” he said in a voice that suggested he actually did doubt it, quite a bit in fact. “But I still can’t let you upstairs without an appointment.”
“Excuse me,” someone said from behind Emily and James. They turned to see a man about Emily’s parents’ age wearing a burgundy-and-blue-argyle sweater-vest. “I couldn’t help overhearing.”
“Hey, Jack,” the security guard greeted him. “I told them they need an appointment. They say they’ve found Griswold’s next game, but you know. We’ve heard that one before.”
They’d heard that before? It hadn’t occurred to Emily that there might be other Gold-Bugs out there waiting to be found.
“I’ve got this,” Jack said to the guard. To Emily and James he said, “So, I take it you’re fans of Mr. Griswold?”
“And Book Scavenger,” Emily said.
“She’s really good at it,” James chimed in. “She’s almost reached Auguste Dupin level.”
Jack whistled low and nodded. “Dedicated,” he said.
Emily looked down but smiled. She was still fourteen points away from Auguste Dupin, so she wouldn’t say she’d almost reached it. Still, the compliment and praise were flattering.
“And what’s this?” Jack pointed to the Gold-Bug book in Emily’s hand.
Even though he was a grown-up, Jack had a round, boyish face that made him look kind and trustworthy. But she didn’t know who he was, other than someone who worked at Bayside Press. What if the book was some sort of valuable Bayside Press item and he took it away? Maybe it hadn’t been such a good idea to pull The Gold-Bug out of her bag.
“It’s … it’s a book we found while playing Book Scavenger.”
“And you thought it might have something to do with Griswold’s next game?” Jack didn’t say this in a mocking or condescending tone. Just more like that was a logical thing for them to assume. “Let me show you guys something. Come on.”
He led them to the elevator. As they stepped inside, he said, “I didn’t actually introduce myself, did I? I’m Jack. I’m Mr. Griswold’s assistant.”
“For real? You actually work with Mr. Griswold?” James asked.
“Like, every day?” Emily added. “How’s he doing?”
“Ah.” Jack looked down for a minute. “Not very well, I’m afraid.” He looked up again, his eyes bright. “But all the well wishes and positive thoughts you can muster for him will help.”
Not very well, I’m afraid rang in Emily’s ears. She thought of the forum messages she’d read last weekend, when Mr. Griswold was first mugged, and that Book Scavenger user who had said they should enjoy Book Scavenger while they could. She hugged The Gold-Bug to her chest.
An instrumental version of “Monster Mash” filled the elevator for an awkward moment until they reached the seventh floor. The doors opened to reveal a lobby drenched in Bayside Press colors.
“Whoa,” Emily breathed out. “This is cooler than I’d imagined it would be.”
She turned slowly, taking in the silver-blue carpet butted up against burgundy-and-silver-blue-striped walls. A gigantic metal Bayside Press emblem hung behind the stark wall of a receptionist’s desk.
Jack raised a hand to the receptionist and waved Emily and James through a doorway and down a hall.
“I’m afraid this tour may not be as exciting as you might hope, if you’re fans of Mr. Griswold,” Jack said as they walked. They passed doorway after doorway revealing grown-ups hunched in front of computers or talking on the phone, messy stacks of paper piled around them. “With his Willy Wonka reputation, a lot of people might imagine our offices to be like an amusement park. But no chocolate river or Oompa Loompas here. There are signs of his whimsy, of course.” Jack gestured to the hallway lined with painted portraits of famous San Francisco writers wearing somber expressions and silly costumes. Daniel Handler in a bunny costume, Amy Tan as a farmer, and Allen Ginsberg as a clown.
Jack stopped in front of a glass-walled conference room with a table piled high with a collection of stuffed animals, flowers, balloons, and books—not unlike what Emily, James, and her brother had come across outside the BART station last Saturday.
“What’s all that?” Emily asked.
“Well, in the giant pile are the things people left outside our building for Mr. Griswold. We’ll be donating them to the children’s floor of the hospital where he’s located. But that second pile is what I wanted to show you.”
They stepped into the room and walked up to a smaller pile. Mostly it looked like a collection of notes or letters, some folded like the one she and James got caught passing in Mr. Quisling’s class. Some of the pages were typed, some torn out of a notebook. There were also odds and ends of books, and then unusual things, like tangrams glued onto poster board and a laminated map of San Francisco that had sticky notes attached to it with letters and numbers scrawled on them.
“These are all the ‘games’ other people have found and sent to us. We’ve been inundated with them, as you can see.”
“Are these”—James held up a bag with eight bouncy balls inside, each with a letter written on it—“really Mr. Griswold’s games?” James manipulated the balls in the bag so they spelled out the word anteater.
“I doubt it,” Jack said. “I can’t say definitively, of course. Only Mr. Griswold could and he’s—well, he can’t do that right now. But I do know a couple of absolutes about Mr. Griswold. One: His games are rarely simple. That World’s Largest Bingo Game he staged at the Giants’ stadium? A logistical nightmare to pull off. Night. Mare.” Jack tugged at the wavy hair that flopped on his forehead, like even the memory was stressful. “And two: he is highly secretive about his games. He’ll keep his plans to himself until he can’t go any further on his own. And even then, he often enlists help without people realizing what they’re helping with. As for this rumored latest game, nobody knew what he was planning. I work with him closer than anyone, and I don’t have the slightest clue.”
They studied all the papers and odds and ends. James picked up a worn paperback that had been frontside down.
“‘The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett,’” he read aloud.
“Oh, my parents gave me that!” Emily said.
Jack nodded. “One of San Francisco’s most notable writers.”
“Why are people sending these things?” Emily asked.
Jack took a moment before he replied. “Books and games are how people feel close to Mr. Griswold. That’s what connects them to him. They want his game to exist, and so they find it in the unlikeliest of places. All of these”—Jack waved a hand over the odds and ends—“are examples of what Mr. Griswold has instilled in people: the ability to see something in nothing, to find a puzzle in what someone else would call trash.” He held up a matchbook.
“Of course, some of these are from people who maybe have an unhealthy fascination with Mr. Griswold, or who are trying to trick us into awarding them a prize. But others are from people who genuinely believe they’ve found something. Like that Maltese Falcon.” Jack pointed to the book James had placed back on the table. “The person who sent us that didn’t want anything in return. They found it hidden through Book Scavenger and were convinced it was part of Griswold’s new game. They just thought we should know about it. They couldn’t bear the thought of an unfulfilled promise, a game that never gets launched.”
Still holding The Gold-Bug, Emily studied the pile and considered which category of fan she fell into until she realized she was different. She really had found Mr. Griswold’s game. She wasn’t just hoping it to be true. And similar to that person Jack had described, she also couldn’t imagine ignoring The Gold-Bug puzzle now that she’d found it. It had to be solved.
“So you don’t believe the person who turned in The Maltese Falcon? You don’t think it’s part of the game?” Emily asked.
Jack smiled sadly. “No. But it doesn’t matter even if I did. Whatever Mr. Griswold was planning just isn’t a priority for us at this point, I’m sad to say. Things were hectic before everything happened, and now…”
These game submissions piled on the table were a physical representation to Emily of how many people would wish to be in her shoes. She was glad Jack didn’t believe her about The Gold-Bug.
“You know, it’s been a nice break talking with you two.” Jack looked through the glass walls of the conference room. “I’m glad I happened through the lobby when I did. You two are the epitome of the types of readers Mr. Griswold was most hopeful about reaching—young, enthusiastic, dedicated. In fact …
“Oh, what the hey,” he said as if he’d settled an internal debate. “I’ve got something else to show you. If Mr. Griswold were here, he’d show you this himself.”