Greystone Secrets #1

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Greystone Secrets #1 Page 1

by Margaret Peterson Haddix




  Dedication

  For Meg

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  One: Finn

  Two: Emma

  Three: Chess

  Four: Finn

  Five: Emma

  Six: Chess

  Seven: Finn

  Eight: Emma

  Nine: Chess

  Ten: Finn

  Eleven: Emma

  Twelve: Chess

  Thirteen: Finn

  Fourteen: Emma

  Fifteen: Chess

  Sixteen: Finn

  Seventeen: Emma

  Eighteen: Chess

  Nineteen: Finn

  Twenty: Emma

  Twenty-One: Chess

  Twenty-Two: Finn

  Twenty-Three: Emma

  Twenty-Four: Chess

  Twenty-Five: Finn

  Twenty-Six: Emma

  Twenty-Seven: Chess

  Twenty-Eight: Finn

  Twenty-Nine: Emma

  Thirty: Chess

  Thirty-One: Finn

  Thirty-Two: Emma

  Thirty-Three: Chess

  Thirty-Four: Finn

  Thirty-Five: Emma

  Thirty-Six: Chess

  Thirty-Seven: Finn

  Thirty-Eight: Emma

  Thirty-Nine: Chess

  Forty: Finn

  Forty-One: Emma

  Forty-Two: Chess

  Forty-Three: Finn

  Forty-Four: Emma

  Forty-Five: Chess

  Forty-Six: Finn

  Forty-Seven: Emma

  Forty-Eight: Chess

  Forty-Nine: Finn

  Fifty: Emma

  Fifty-One: Chess

  Fifty-Two: Finn

  Fifty-Three: Emma

  Fifty-Four: Chess

  Fifty-Five: Finn

  Fifty-Six: Emma

  Fifty-Seven: Chess

  Fifty-Eight: Finn

  Fifty-Nine: Emma

  Sixty: Chess

  Sixty-One: Finn

  Epilogue: Chess, Emma, Finn, and Natalie

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  One

  Finn

  The three Greystone kids always raced each other home when they got off the school bus, and Finn always won.

  It wasn’t because he was the fastest.

  Even he knew that his older brother and sister, Chess and Emma, let him win so he could make a grand entrance.

  Today he burst into the house calling out, “Mom! We’re home! It’s time to come and adore us!”

  “Adore” had been on his second-grade spelling list two weeks ago, and it had been a great discovery for him. So that was what it was called, the way he had felt his entire life.

  Emma, who was in fourth grade, dropped her backpack on the rug beside him and kicked off her red sneakers. They flipped up and landed on top of the backpack—someday, Finn vowed, he would get Emma to teach him that trick.

  “Twenty-three,” Emma said. There was no telling what she might have been counting. Finn hoped it was a prediction of how many chocolate chips would be in every cookie Mom was probably baking for them right now, for their after-school snack.

  Finn sniffed. The house did not smell like cookies.

  Oh well. Mom worked from home, designing websites, and sometimes she lost track of time. If today was more of a Goldfish-crackers-and-apple-slices kind of day, that was okay with Finn. He liked those, too.

  “Mom!” he called again. “Your afternoon-break entertainment has arrived!”

  “She’s in the kitchen,” Chess said, hanging his own backpack on the hook where it belonged. “Can’t you hear?”

  “That would mean Finn had to listen for once, instead of talking,” Emma said, rubbing Finn’s head fondly and making his messy brown hair even messier. Finn knew she didn’t mean it as an insult. He was pretty sure Emma liked talking as much as he did.

  Chess was the one everyone called “the quiet Greystone.” He was in sixth grade and had grown four inches in the past year. Now Finn had to tilt his head way back just to see his brother’s face. He also cupped his hand over his ear and pretended to be listening really, really hard. There was a low mumble coming from the kitchen—maybe a man’s voice?

  “Is Mom watching TV?” Chess asked. “She never does that during the day.”

  The kids all knew their mother’s routine. She never listened to anything but classical music while she worked, because she said songs with words were too distracting. And when she really didn’t want to be disturbed, she worked in a windowless room in the basement. The computer down there didn’t even connect to the internet.

  The three Greystone kids called that “the Boring Room.”

  Now Finn laughed at his older brother.

  “Are you going to stand around asking stupid questions when you could get your answer just by walking into the kitchen?” Finn asked. “Let’s go eat!”

  He dashed toward the kitchen, dodging both Emma’s backpack and the family’s cat, Rocket, lying in the middle of the floor. He yelled, “Mom, can I cut up apples? It’s my turn, isn’t it?”

  Mom was standing at the kitchen counter with her back to Finn, but she didn’t turn around. She had both hands clenched onto the edge of the counter, as if she needed to hold on. Her cell phone lay facedown on the floor by her feet. Her laptop sat on the counter in front of her, but it was tilted up, so Finn couldn’t see what was on the screen.

  “Mom?” Finn tried again.

  She still didn’t turn around. It was like she didn’t even hear him, like she was in a soundproof bubble.

  This was not like Mom. She had never acted like this before.

  Then she began to moan: “No, no, no, no, no. . . .”

  Two

  Emma

  Emma had had a substitute teacher that day. The sub had dressed all in gray and had gray hair and a gray face and even a gray voice—somehow, Emma decided, that was possible. And the sub made the entire day so dreary and dull that Emma had started looking for and counting weird things about the day just to keep herself awake.

  The thing was, if you started looking for weirdness, suddenly everything seemed that way. Wasn’t it weird that the pattern of coats hanging up on the classroom hooks went blue-green-red, blue-green-red twice in a row? Wasn’t it weird that the sub could have a gray voice? (Or was that just normal for her?)

  By the time Emma got off the school bus and began racing toward the house, she’d counted twenty-one things she considered indisputably weird. To her way of thinking, that actually made the day pretty interesting, and she was excited to tell Mom about the new trick she’d discovered for surviving school.

  Then she noticed that the porch light was still on, even though Mom usually turned it off when Emma and her brothers left for school.

  And then, stepping into the house, Emma noticed that the living room curtains were still drawn tight across the windows, and so were the blinds on the bay window at the back of the house. This turned the living room’s cheery yellow walls dim and shadowy; it made the whole house feel like a cave or a hideout.

  Twenty-three weird things in one day. What if that was a normal amount, and Emma had just never noticed before?

  She’d have to count again some other day—or, really, lots of other days—to know for sure.

  Finn and Chess started yammering on about Mom and the kitchen and TV. Emma joined in and then rubbed Finn’s head, because it felt good to do something normal again. Mussing Finn’s hair was like petting a dog—you had to do it. Finn had thick, unruly hair with odd cowlicks that sprang up no matter how much Mom smoothed them
down. Finn being Finn, he claimed this meant his hair had superpowers.

  And . . . now Finn was racing off to the kitchen, shouting about apples.

  Emma looked up at Chess, and they both shrugged and grinned and followed Finn.

  But when they got to the kitchen, Mom wasn’t hugging Finn and reaching out to hug Emma and Chess, too. Finn stood in the middle of the kitchen, staring at Mom. Mom stood at the counter with her back to the kids, all her attention focused on her laptop.

  And the voice coming out of the laptop was saying, “The kidnapped children are in second and fourth and sixth grade.”

  Three

  Chess

  “Mom?” Chess said quietly.

  His mother’s shoulders shook. And then, as if she was fighting for control, her whole body went still.

  Just like before, Chess thought.

  Of the three Greystone kids, only Chess remembered the awful day their father died. Chess had been four; Emma, two; and Finn, only a baby. But even Chess’s memories of that day were more like puzzle pieces he kept in a box in his mind, rather than one continuous video: Chess remembered the two sad-faced police officers at the door; he remembered the red Matchbox car he’d been holding in his hand when the door opened; he remembered the way Mom’s shoulders shook before her back went ramrod straight, and she turned around to face Chess and Emma and Finn.

  Now Mom was reaching for the top part of her laptop, as if she planned to shut it and hide whatever it said. Something made Chess stride quickly across the kitchen and grab her hand to stop her.

  “Someone was kidnapped,” he said. He caught a glimpse of a few words at the bottom of the computer screen. “Three kids in Arizona. Was it anyone you know?”

  “No . . . ,” Mom whispered.

  Her dark eyes were wide and dazed. The color had drained from her face.

  Shock, Chess thought. The school nurse had come in and taught a first-aid unit to the sixth graders earlier that year, and Chess was proud of himself for remembering the symptoms.

  It was just a shame he couldn’t remember any treatment.

  Maybe he was feeling a little shocked himself. It was scary that anyone would kidnap anyone. But Arizona was a thousand miles away. And it wasn’t like there would be some crime ring going around kidnapping kids from any family who had a second grader, a fourth grader, and a sixth grader.

  “Mom, maybe you should sit down,” Emma said.

  Hmm. Maybe that was one of the treatments for shock.

  Chess shot his sister a grateful look and took his mother’s arm, ready to help ease her toward the kitchen table.

  “Rocky, Emma, and Finn Gustano were last seen leaving their school, Los Perales Elementary, in Mesa,” the voice coming out of the laptop speakers said.

  Finn started cracking up.

  “Isn’t that funny?” he cried. “Two of those kids have the same first names as me and Emma! That’s the third Finn I’ve ever known. Well, not that I actually know this one, but . . .” He slugged Chess in the arm. “Don’t you feel bad that you don’t have the same name as some kid who’s famous now? And I bet when they find these kids, they’ll get all the ice cream they want, and all the toys they want, and their parents probably won’t make them do homework ever again!”

  But what if nobody ever finds these kids? Chess thought.

  He wasn’t about to say that to Finn.

  “Yeah, I’ve never met another kid named Rochester.” Chess forced himself to fake a smile at Finn. “Or with the nickname ‘Chess.’ Oh well.”

  “Maybe you should sue Mom for giving you such a different name,” Finn suggested.

  “Or maybe I should sue for getting such a boring, ordinary name,” Emma countered. “Did you know there are three other Emmas in fourth grade? And eight others in the rest of the school!”

  But Chess tuned out his brother and sister. Because Mom lifted one hand and pointed toward the laptop screen. The way she held her hand was like a nightmare, like a Halloween ghost, like someone under a witch’s spell in a fairy tale. It was like she could only point, not speak.

  “We’re repeating the information we have about the Gustano children,” the voice coming from the laptop said. A photo of a friendly-looking, dark-haired boy appeared on the screen. “The oldest of the three kidnapped siblings, Rochester Charles Gustano, who goes by Rocky, just turned twelve last Tuesday. . . .”

  Chess’s hearing blanked out temporarily. His middle name was Charles, too. And his twelfth birthday had been last Tuesday.

  How could there be another Rochester Charles, born the exact same day as him?

  And how could that other kid have been kidnapped?

  Four

  Finn

  Everybody was acting too serious. They’d all stopped talking. Even Emma. She’d taken the last two steps to join Mom and Chess at the counter, to stare silently at the laptop screen.

  “Hello?” Finn said. “It’s snack time—remember?”

  Nobody answered.

  “Remember how you’re always telling me I have to quit right away when I’m playing computer games and you think it’s time for me to do something else?” Finn tried again.

  He walked over and reached his hand for the power button on the laptop. He wasn’t really planning to switch it off—he’d heard too many lectures from Mom about not messing with her work. He just wanted to tease Mom a little, until she acted normal again.

  Emma surprised him by grabbing his hand. At first it seemed like she was just trying to stop him from doing something dumb. Then it started feeling like she needed to hold his hand.

  Finn stood on tiptoes and peered at the screen. He saw three pictures in a row, each with names and ages beneath. The kids in the pictures all had brown hair, just like Finn and Chess and Emma did, and they stared out at Finn with stiff school-picture-day smiles on their faces, as if they’d gotten the same warning Finn always got: “Remember, this is your official photo for the entire year, so no goofing off!” The youngest boy, the one Finn was already thinking of as Other-Finn, was perfectly snaggletoothed, with one adult front tooth partly grown in and one front tooth missing entirely.

  Finn felt a little jealous. He’d lost both his front teeth two weeks after picture day last fall, and for some reason Mom wouldn’t agree to let him have his picture retaken just because of that.

  “But Mom, this is what I look like in second grade,” he’d argued, sticking his tongue into the hole where his teeth used to be just for the sheer joy of it. “Don’t you want to remember me this way forever?”

  “Don’t worry,” Mom had said, laughing and pretending to try to catch his tongue before he yanked it back. “I’m not going to forget, regardless.”

  Finn dropped his gaze to see if Other-Finn was just a smidge older, and if that was the reason he’d been lucky enough to lose both his front teeth right before school picture day.

  Finn Michael Gustano, it said below the picture. Born 3/4/11.

  “He has the same middle name as me?” Finn said, stunned. “And wait—does three-four mean March fourth?”

  “He has the same name as you,” Chess said, sounding dazed. “And the same birthday.”

  “And that Emma is Emma Grace, just like me,” Emma added. She kept her gaze aimed at the screen, as if she was too surprised to look away. “And her birthday is April fourteenth, too.”

  “That’s crazy,” Finn said. “Weird, weird, weird. Did they just steal our names and birthdays? Or—I know.” He yanked his hand away from Emma, put his fists on his hips, and tried to look stern. “Mom, did you let that other family clone us?”

  He wanted everybody to laugh. He needed everybody to laugh. And then Mom would shut the laptop and forget those other kids; she would bring out snacks and ask Finn and Emma and Chess about school. Just like usual.

  But Mom did none of those things. Even when Finn went over and snuggled against her, she didn’t move.

  She just kept staring at the kids who’d been kidnapped.

&nb
sp; Five

  Emma

  “Finn, you’re being silly,” Emma said. “Clones would look like us, not have the same names and birthdays.”

  The girl on the computer screen had straight light brown hair while Emma’s was darker and wavy. It was hard to tell from a tiny picture, but the other girl may have even had bluish-purple eyes, while Emma’s were dark brown, almost black. Also: The other girl’s chin was rounder, her cheeks were fuller, her gaze was a little too . . . peaceful. In every picture anyone had ever taken of Emma, she looked like she was trying to solve complicated math problems in her head.

  Sometimes she was. Having your picture taken was boring.

  Seeing the picture of someone with your exact same birthday and almost your exact same name who’d been kidnapped wasn’t boring. It was the weirdest thing that had happened all day. But like all the other weirdness she’d catalogued that day, was it really all that stunning?

  Emma was glad Finn’s question had awakened her brain again.

  “Statistics,” Emma said. “Probability. There are billions of kids in the world. Probably millions of girls named Emma who have two brothers. Maybe thousands who have one brother named Finn, hundreds—or, well, at least dozens—who have a brother named Rochester. There’s probably some formula you could do to figure out the chances that parents who like the name ‘Emma’ would like the other two names, too. And for the birthdays—there are only three hundred and sixty-five possible birthdays anybody could have. Three hundred and sixty-six, if you count leap day. So you just need three hundred and sixty-seven people in a room together to be sure that at least one pair has the same birthday.”

  “How many do you need to have three pairs of birthdays all the same?” Chess asked.

  Emma was pretty sure there was a way to figure that out, but her mind was attacking the harder problem: How would you calculate the chances that two sets of siblings would have the same names, in the same order? You’d have to know the number of all possible names, wouldn’t you? Since people could just make up any name they wanted for their kids, was that even possible to put a number on?

 

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