“Open one? So they’re like jars?”
“There’s more!” Jillian went back to reading, holding up one finger to indicate that Louise should wait.
Louise gasped and then caught hold of her excitement. “But we don’t have one of these.”
“But we know they exist! Magic can save our baby brother and sisters.”
“We don’t have one, and he might not describe how to make one.”
“He had one here on Earth.”
“Three hundred years ago in Paris.”
“Grandpa Dufae has this codex and the old photographs. He might have it. I’m sure he would let us use it.”
“And he might take us away from Mom and Dad!”
Jillian waved away the objection. “He already knew there were other embryos. If he wanted more kids, he would have arranged for them to be born.”
“He didn’t have the money to pay for surrogate mothers. Esme did.”
“He gave Esme copies of all the Dufae family stuff. He must have thought she was arranging more kids to be born or something.”
They both paused and frowned as the logic of their mother once again escaped them. Why had she left the puzzle box with April? Except for the odd mystery photographs, there had been nothing of her in the box.
“They would have never made her captain if they thought she was crazy,” Jillian pointed out.
“There is that,” Louise agreed. They had to be missing some vital information that made Esme’s action logical, but so far Louise couldn’t even guess what that might be. “We need more information.”
Jillian growled in frustration and sat down at her desk and started to link her tablet to the house computer.
“What are you doing?”
“This is taking too much time. I’m speeding it up.”
“How?”
“I’m going to machine translate the entire document so we can do text searches and see everything he says about the
Needless to say, the spells made the translation software have hissy fits.
The next entry of
“No, not another song!” Jillian cried as the next paragraph started out with “Knock knock, pick the lock, open the box. .”
“Well, we know that the