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A missing game of Wordle helps end a 17-hour hostage ordeal

Image source, Getty Images

A Chicago grandmother was rescued from a 17-hour hostage ordeal after police were alerted for the unlikeliest of reasons: a missing solution to the day’s Wordle challenge.

Denyse Holt, 80, was alone at home in Illinois on 5 February when a naked and mentally ill suspect entered her home.

Her daughter in faraway Seattle noticed something was amiss when Ms Holt failed to send her daily Wordle.

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The suspect now faces several felony charges.

According to Ms Holt, she was asleep in bed in Chicago’s Lincolnwood area when 32-year-old James H. Davis III entered her home and pointed a pair of scissors at her. He was naked and bleeding after being cut by window shards while entering the house.

“I didn’t think I was going to live,” she told CBS. “I was in shock. I was trying to survive.”

While Mr Davis told her he wouldn’t harm her, he did force her – still wearing a nightgown – to take a warm bath with him before taking two knives from the kitchen, disconnecting phones, and locking her in a cold basement bathroom.

Across the country in Seattle, Ms Holt’s daughter, Meredith Holt-Caldwell, soon noticed that her mother wasn’t responding to text messages and hadn’t sent in her Wordle, a popular daily word puzzle.

“That was disconcerting to her,” Ms Holt said, because her daughter knew that this was a routine she never missed.

Alarmed, Ms Holt-Caldwell alerted police, who conducted a well-being check at her home on 6 February. A stand-off with Mr Davis ensued, ending only when a police SWAT team used a stun gun to subdue him and take him into custody.

Police say that Mr Davis now faces a range of felony charges, including home invasion with a deadly weapon, aggravated kidnapping, and assault against a peace officer.

Ms Holt was unharmed during the incident.

“I never thought in a million years this is what was happening, but it was,” she said. “I’m very lucky”.

Wordle, which was purchased by the New York Times for an undisclosed seven-figure sum in January, gives players six attempts to guess a hidden five-letter word each day.

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