Breaking the Da Vinci Code
#33 of The Moonrise Chronicles
It wasn't until the next day that
everyone was fairly satisfied that they had everything straight. Billy was
working to make sense of all he had been told. "So ya'll are saying that this
Maggie girl started this whole mess rolling?"
She turned red. "I guess so."
"High five little sister!"
She slapped his hand. "What's that
for?"
"Hell's bells little one. I've been
riding around for years trying to find hide or hair of the kind. You found our
little ole Eddy here and set the ball a rollin! Albert Fish! Who knew that old
bastard was still creeping around the Earth? Ya sure he's dead this time?"
Edward nodded. "Pretty sure."
"And you found my pretty little
cousin here. Verona you look good enough to eat!"
Edward choked back a smart responcse.. "Uh, what do you
eat?"
"Anything I want! I ain't all
caught up in the humans-for-food philosophy. Don't get me wrong, I understand
it. But since I can eat regular food I do. It's gotta suck for them that can't.
What about you?"
"I don't know. Up until a week ago
I could eat what I wanted. Now, I'm not sure. So far, regular food seems to
agree with me. Does that make me weird?"
"Hell no! It makes you lucky. My ma
and pa would kill to eat a normal diet. They say it was a curse laid down years
ago. I don't believe in curses, though I do believe in luck."
"Speaking of luck, how did you know
we were here?"
He pulled out his cell phone.
"There's an app for that."
"What?"
He chuckled. "I programmed it
myself. Yep. Braun, beauty and brains.
Who knew?"
"An app? For your phone?" Maggie
was incredulous.
"Sure. It skims news reports for
weird animal sightings. I've chased Bigfoot sightings, Grassman, Mothman,
anything that was unexplained. They all were dead ends. But then this thing in
New York City. Now that had all the makings of being a good lead to follow.
Then I heard about this incident down at the diner. That brought me back into
home territory. I didn't want to assume none, but when I got close to the old
homestead, I had a feeling something was up. When I heard the commotion, I
bypassed the house and found you. Damn you can make some noise!"
Edward was suddenly embarrassed. He
liked it better when people were assuming he and Maggie were behaving, even if
they knew batter. His display in the woods would be hard to live down.
"Yeah. Being able to change is hard
to get used to. I just had my first transformation in New York City. The thing at the diner was an accident."
"Accident?" Billy roared with
laughter. "You clobbered the entire gang of Spyders! They'll never live it
down. Bikers Beat By Ballsy Bear; my
favorite headline by far." Then he
stopped laughing. "Why so late in life."
"I guess we forgot to mention the
coin." So for the next half an hour Edward told him about his bike accident and
such. That then brought them up to speed with the recently uncovered box.
Marcus set in on the table. "Cool! So this was buried just down the road and no
one knew it?"
"We knew it existed son, which just
never looked for it. We assumed it was removed when the house was destroyed, or
else, it was in the hands of Edward's parents."
"Yeah! Hey, where are your
parents?"
"I can't say for sure. Probably
dead."
"Probably?"
"The house was burned down and no
evidence remained of them."
"Oh. Sorry dude. If they were hit
with the silver, then their bodies would have vanished. What a bummer!"
Edward mentally slapped himself. Of
course there were no bodies. Their bodies would have crumbled. He felt like an
idiot.
Billy was pretty much an open guy.
He didn't seem to care so much about propriety, like his parents did. Once they
had made it back to the house, he had stripped of all his silver, taken a
shower and dressed back in his leathers. He was friendly enough, though a
little rough around the edges. Overall Edward liked him. It was too bad he
couldn't remember him from before.
"So Maggie, what's your story? I
hear you own the pretty little number in the driveway."
"Yep. I bought with my own money."
"Your money?"
"Yep! I stole it fair and square
from a thief."
"I knew I liked you. You're my kind
of girl. Ya got any extra laying around for poor old Billy?"
"I'll see what I can do for you!'
The conversation turned back to
more grave matters. Billy pointed out what they already knew, or rather didn't
know. "If the box is empty, what was inside it to begin with?"
"We don't know. I looks like it was
designed to hold a ring, but there was no ring, or even a trace of one. It
looks like it was removed, the box locked and the key hidden away.'
Billy picked it up. "Can you close
it without the key being in it, like a normal lock?"
"No. The key has to be in the
lock."
"Smart. That way someone couldn't
do something stupid and stick the key in the box and then close it. Self
defeating. So the key had to be in it to lock it. But whatever was in it was
gone. So if everyone wanted what was inside it, why not leave it open and show
them it was gone?"
"Good question son," said Marcus.
"Have you got an answer?"
He turned the box over in his
hands. On the top was the obvious sign, that of a full moon and a werewolf.
There were words and inscriptions over the whole box, but none seemed to make
any sense. Under the lock were tiny words inscribed with great care by a
delicate hand. Convertimini ad justitiam,
et tunc revertimini.
"Hey pop. What does this say?"
"It depends on the translation.
Roughly translated it means "turn ye unto righteousness, and then return."
Billy let out a laugh. "Righteousness?
That's a laugh. Only the ignorant chose that path. All that means is that you
picked a direction that someone else chose for you and followed it. I can't
believe that Leonardo da Vinci would have been so dense as to put that on a box
meant to hold something valuable to the kind."
Edward leaned forward."Could it
have been added later?"
"Nah. It's all the same hand. Most
of it is just names and dates. It must have meant something to someone a long
time ago. It certainly doesn't tell us how to open the box."
"Righteousness. Do they mean sort
like pure of heart, like the old legend concerning unicorns. The tales say only
a virgin had control over one."
"Son, do you know how rare they
are?"
"Unicorns?"
Billy started pounding the table in
an outburst of laughter. "Nah. Virgins!"
Edward started to say something but
Sophia put her finger to her lips. "He doesn't mean any harm son. He just likes
to laugh a lot."
Billy settled down, tears streaming
from his eyes. "Sorry. I get carried away once in a while. It's good to laugh,
but I don't do it public. Ruins the effect." He made a sweep of his body,
indicating his outfit.
"But could it have something to do
with that?"
"Innocence and virginity? I doubt
it. Nothing in this world cares about a little piece of thin flesh but
husband-to-bes and dirty old men. Besides, you already opened it. It's empty.
Get over it."
Maggie crouched down in front of
the table. Then she sat down. She turned the box, running it over in her mind.
The book hadn't mentioned the box, just the key. She got up, opened the book up
on the floor and turned to the page.
"Look! Here's the inscription
running around the key. I ignored it before, because this book is filled with
words. And I don't know Latin. But it says the same thing as the box. Why would
they put it in two places if it wasn't important?"
Billy was suddenly serious. "Kid,
you're nearly as smart as I am. I think you're right. Where would be the best
place to put instructions except with the object they were meant for. Otherwise
you might lose them."
"Instructions? I've done way too
many things in the past week for me to be righteous."
"Maggie punched him. "You killed
Albert Fish, and then fixed the problem you caused with the wolves. You found
Verona's aunt and uncle. I'd say you've done pretty good!"
"I know what I've done Mags. But if
being righteous has anything to do with this, then I'm not the man for it. I
think you need to find a priest or a nun."
"None of the kind right now happen
to be in the priesthood. And I would think that this box was meant only for members
of the kind."
Maggie picked up the key. She stuck
it in the box and turned it in the lock. He lid popped up. Billy looked inside.
"Yeah, it's empty as a politician's head. Whatever was in there was removed a
long time ago. I think Eddy's grandma and granddaddy were protecting nothing."
Maggie's eyes lit up. "And then
return!"
Sophia bent down. "What is it dear?"
"And then return!"
"Return what dear? The key?"
"YES!"
She set the box on the table and
without closing the lid, turned the key back and then all the way to the left.
The bottom of the interior of the box popped up just a crack "It was right
under our noses! Turn the key right to open the box, and then left again to
finish opening it. It has a hidden compartment! Leonardo was a genius!"