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Go to My LibraryOperation Trinity (The 39 Clues: The Cahill Files, Book 1)
by
- Language
- English
- Published in
- Publisher
- Scholastic Incorporated
- Pages
- 144
- ISBN
- 9780545060486
Subjects
Original edition details
The Emperor's Code Originally published in 2010
Original language
English
Original publisher Scholastic
Other editions (9)
Other editions

The Emperor's Code (The 39 Clues, Book 8)
2011 • Scholastic Inc.
English

The Emperor's Code
2010 • Scholastic
English

The Emperor's Code
2010 • Scholastic
English

The Emperor's Code
2010 • Scholastic
English

Imparatorun Sifresi - 39 Ipucu Sekizinci Kitap
2019 • Alfa Basim Yayim Dagitim
Turkish

The Emperor's Code
2012 • produced at American Printing House for the Blind, Incorporated
English

El código del emperador: The 39 Clues 8 (Las 39 Pistas / The 39 Clues) (Spanish Edition)
2012 • Destino Infantil & Juvenil
Spanish

The Emperor's Code (The 39 Clues)
2010 • Scholastic Audio Books
English

Codigo Del Emperador (the Emporer's Code)
2012 • Lectorum Publications, Incorporated
Spanish
The question haunted them on the long flight to China, a shadow darker than the discovery that they belonged to the most powerful family in human history. They were Madrigals. The word itself was a stain, a whisper of stealth, sabotage, and murder. Amy felt it like a sickness in her soul. *It's like living your whole life without ever looking in a mirror,* she thought, *and suddenly you see your reflection, and you're a monster.* Her brother, Dan, fidgeted beside her, his misery a buzzing energy that filled the space between them. Their only guide was a strange message delivered through the in-flight entertainment: a film about China's last emperor, Puyi, with a fleeting glimpse of a Janus crest painted on a palace wall. It was a flimsy lead, but it was all they had.
In Beijing, they found the crest hidden in the sprawling Forbidden City, tucked away on the wall of a small, forgotten temple. While Amy created a diversion, Dan scaled the roof and dropped into a secret attic teeming with crickets, where he discovered a sheet of pale gold silk. It bore an equation of family crests - Lucian plus Janus plus Tomas plus Ekat equals Cahill - and a cryptic poem. But the discovery came at a cost. The weight of their Madrigal identity, the mystery of their parents' past, and the strain of the hunt finally boiled over in the vastness of Tiananmen Square. “Mom and Dad were Madrigals,” Amy said, her voice choked. “What if… that's how the rest of the family saw them? A couple of loose cannons who had to be stopped?” The accusation hung in the air, monstrous and unforgivable. “Maybe we should be relieved they're dead,” she blurted out. Dan's face radiated a heat beyond anger. “I hate you!” he cried, and ran, disappearing into the churning crowd. Moments later, strong arms pulled him into a painted sedan chair, and he was gone.
Kidnapped by their cousins, Ian and Natalie Kabra, Dan was interrogated, his arm twisted until pain erased all thought. But he refused to give them the silk, protecting Amy even in his anger. The Kabras, finding nothing, left him drugged and abandoned on a factory conveyor belt, inches from being stamped into a Jonah Wizard lollipop holder. He was saved by the hip-hop star himself, who swept Dan into a whirlwind of designer clothes, five-star hotels, and all-night video game marathons. Jonah was kind, almost brotherly, but Dan couldn't shake the feeling that he was a pawn. The suspicion proved true when Jonah led him to the ancient Terracotta Army, sending him into the silent ranks of clay soldiers as a decoy. It was a trap. A figure disguised as a warrior attacked with a spiked mace, and only a desperate, half-remembered wushu move learned from Shaolin monks allowed Dan to survive.
Meanwhile, a frantic Amy, aided by her au pair Nellie, forged a reluctant alliance with their treacherous cousin Alistair Oh. They tracked Jonah to a chaotic concert, but missed Dan by seconds. Their hope fading, they followed a final, desperate lead to the Great Wall of China. There, in a tower marked with a character meaning “grace,” they found a dusty room filled with strangely arranged furniture - a feng shui puzzle left by Emperor Puyi. As Amy, guided by lessons from her grandmother, shifted mirrors and tables, a beam of sunlight refracted through the room, projecting a stark silhouette onto the wall: the unmistakable, jagged peak of Mount Everest. Puyi's poem echoed in her mind: *Where the Earth meets the sky.*
Dan, having escaped the Wizards after a shocking confrontation with their matriarch, Cora, saw the same destination in a news report about the Holt family attempting to summit the mountain. He and Amy, following separate paths of desperation and instinct, converged in the tiny Tibetan village of Tingri, at the foot of the great peak. Their reunion was a collision of relief and recrimination, an explosion of worry that melted into a fierce, unbreakable hug. With Nellie's mysterious and powerful connections securing them a ride in an experimental high-altitude helicopter, they ascended toward the roof of the world.
The summit was a brutal, alien landscape of wind and ice, a garbage dump of prayer flags and spent oxygen canisters left by decades of climbers. With only minutes before the helicopter would be forced to leave, they dug frantically in the snow. Just as their time ran out, Amy's fingers closed around a small, ice-encrusted glass vial bearing Puyi's seal and the Janus wolf crest. In that moment, she understood. The 39 Clues were not objects or locations; they were ingredients for four chemical serums - one for each branch - that when combined would create a master formula, granting its user the ultimate strengths of the entire Cahill family.
Their victory was short-lived. A roar of fury announced the arrival of Eisenhower Holt, who snatched the vial from Amy's grasp. He was immediately set upon by Ian Kabra and his team of Sherpas. As the factions battled at 29,000 feet, the helicopter's tail rotor swung wildly, knocking Ian off the summit. He dangled over an 11,000-foot drop, clinging to a fragile snow cornice. Amy held the recovered vial in one hand, the key to unimaginable power. With the other, she could reach for her enemy, the son of the woman who murdered her parents.
Without hesitation, she dropped the vial. It shattered on the rocks thousands of feet below as she and the Sherpas hauled a terrified Ian to safety. The clue was lost, but something far more important was found. “I had a choice,” she told Dan as the helicopter lifted away, her voice ringing with newfound certainty. “I did the human thing. We don't have to be evil just because we're Madrigals.”
Back in the quiet warmth of a Tingri guesthouse, they pieced together the true prize from their journey. The lost vial had contained liquid silk, the real ingredient. And Dan produced a final treasure he'd found hidden in a mountain cave: an antique locket containing a miniature portrait of a woman with their mother's face. Inside the frame was a name - Anne Bonny, the most notorious female pirate in history. As the shadow of Everest loomed outside, they knew their path was clear. Their hunt would take them from the highest point on Earth to the warm, treacherous waters of the Caribbean.
In Beijing, they found the crest hidden in the sprawling Forbidden City, tucked away on the wall of a small, forgotten temple. While Amy created a diversion, Dan scaled the roof and dropped into a secret attic teeming with crickets, where he discovered a sheet of pale gold silk. It bore an equation of family crests - Lucian plus Janus plus Tomas plus Ekat equals Cahill - and a cryptic poem. But the discovery came at a cost. The weight of their Madrigal identity, the mystery of their parents' past, and the strain of the hunt finally boiled over in the vastness of Tiananmen Square. “Mom and Dad were Madrigals,” Amy said, her voice choked. “What if… that's how the rest of the family saw them? A couple of loose cannons who had to be stopped?” The accusation hung in the air, monstrous and unforgivable. “Maybe we should be relieved they're dead,” she blurted out. Dan's face radiated a heat beyond anger. “I hate you!” he cried, and ran, disappearing into the churning crowd. Moments later, strong arms pulled him into a painted sedan chair, and he was gone.
Kidnapped by their cousins, Ian and Natalie Kabra, Dan was interrogated, his arm twisted until pain erased all thought. But he refused to give them the silk, protecting Amy even in his anger. The Kabras, finding nothing, left him drugged and abandoned on a factory conveyor belt, inches from being stamped into a Jonah Wizard lollipop holder. He was saved by the hip-hop star himself, who swept Dan into a whirlwind of designer clothes, five-star hotels, and all-night video game marathons. Jonah was kind, almost brotherly, but Dan couldn't shake the feeling that he was a pawn. The suspicion proved true when Jonah led him to the ancient Terracotta Army, sending him into the silent ranks of clay soldiers as a decoy. It was a trap. A figure disguised as a warrior attacked with a spiked mace, and only a desperate, half-remembered wushu move learned from Shaolin monks allowed Dan to survive.
Meanwhile, a frantic Amy, aided by her au pair Nellie, forged a reluctant alliance with their treacherous cousin Alistair Oh. They tracked Jonah to a chaotic concert, but missed Dan by seconds. Their hope fading, they followed a final, desperate lead to the Great Wall of China. There, in a tower marked with a character meaning “grace,” they found a dusty room filled with strangely arranged furniture - a feng shui puzzle left by Emperor Puyi. As Amy, guided by lessons from her grandmother, shifted mirrors and tables, a beam of sunlight refracted through the room, projecting a stark silhouette onto the wall: the unmistakable, jagged peak of Mount Everest. Puyi's poem echoed in her mind: *Where the Earth meets the sky.*
Dan, having escaped the Wizards after a shocking confrontation with their matriarch, Cora, saw the same destination in a news report about the Holt family attempting to summit the mountain. He and Amy, following separate paths of desperation and instinct, converged in the tiny Tibetan village of Tingri, at the foot of the great peak. Their reunion was a collision of relief and recrimination, an explosion of worry that melted into a fierce, unbreakable hug. With Nellie's mysterious and powerful connections securing them a ride in an experimental high-altitude helicopter, they ascended toward the roof of the world.
The summit was a brutal, alien landscape of wind and ice, a garbage dump of prayer flags and spent oxygen canisters left by decades of climbers. With only minutes before the helicopter would be forced to leave, they dug frantically in the snow. Just as their time ran out, Amy's fingers closed around a small, ice-encrusted glass vial bearing Puyi's seal and the Janus wolf crest. In that moment, she understood. The 39 Clues were not objects or locations; they were ingredients for four chemical serums - one for each branch - that when combined would create a master formula, granting its user the ultimate strengths of the entire Cahill family.
Their victory was short-lived. A roar of fury announced the arrival of Eisenhower Holt, who snatched the vial from Amy's grasp. He was immediately set upon by Ian Kabra and his team of Sherpas. As the factions battled at 29,000 feet, the helicopter's tail rotor swung wildly, knocking Ian off the summit. He dangled over an 11,000-foot drop, clinging to a fragile snow cornice. Amy held the recovered vial in one hand, the key to unimaginable power. With the other, she could reach for her enemy, the son of the woman who murdered her parents.
Without hesitation, she dropped the vial. It shattered on the rocks thousands of feet below as she and the Sherpas hauled a terrified Ian to safety. The clue was lost, but something far more important was found. “I had a choice,” she told Dan as the helicopter lifted away, her voice ringing with newfound certainty. “I did the human thing. We don't have to be evil just because we're Madrigals.”
Back in the quiet warmth of a Tingri guesthouse, they pieced together the true prize from their journey. The lost vial had contained liquid silk, the real ingredient. And Dan produced a final treasure he'd found hidden in a mountain cave: an antique locket containing a miniature portrait of a woman with their mother's face. Inside the frame was a name - Anne Bonny, the most notorious female pirate in history. As the shadow of Everest loomed outside, they knew their path was clear. Their hunt would take them from the highest point on Earth to the warm, treacherous waters of the Caribbean.
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