— that’s still scrambled. Let me try a direct shift of –5 properly:

Let’s test ROT15: n(14)+15=29 mod26=3→c, w(23)+15=38 mod26=12→l, d(4)+15=19→s, z(26)+15=41 mod26=15→o → “clso” — no.

Given the complexity, this may be a or part of an ARG.

Let me try (A↔Z, B↔Y): n (14) ↔ m (13)? No, Atbash: n (14th letter) ↔ 27-14=13 → m. w (23) ↔ 27-23=4 → d d (4) ↔ 27-4=23 → w z (26) ↔ 1 → a So “nwdz” → “mdwa” — not English.

ROT5 (A→F): sbie rvfy kdcdb qgsbym rwxdy pybpm — nonsense.

But if shift 11 on “nwdz” = “y h o k” → “y hok” — not clear.

Given the symmetry, I suspect it’s a — possibly a book cipher or a keyed Vigenère. The mention of “msryt” (Egypt in some languages? No — “msryt” = “mystery” with shift? m→m, s→y? No).