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Chapter no 42

The Final Gambit (The Inheritance Games, 3)

Aย motion-sensor light came on as I stepped onto the patio. In my mind, in the span of a single heartbeat, I saw the pool the way it looked in daytime, with light reflecting off the water, the tiles on the bottom making it look as breathtakingly blue-green as the Mediterranean.

The same shade as the piece of glass I carried in my right hand. I held the beach towel in my left. Clearly, this was going to require getting wet.

At night, the water was darker, shadowy. I heard Grayson swimming before I saw him and felt the exact moment he became aware of my presence.

Grayson Davenport Hawthorneโ€™s hand slapped the edge of the pool. He pulled himself upright. โ€œAvery.โ€ His voice was quiet, but in the still of the night, it carried. โ€œYou shouldnโ€™t be here.โ€ย With meย went unsaid. โ€œYou should be asleep.โ€

Grayson and hisย oughts andย shoulds.ย Hawthornes arenโ€™t supposed to break.ย His voice spoke deep in my memory.ย Especially me.

I shook off the memory as much as I could. โ€œIs there a light out here?โ€ I asked. I didnโ€™t want to have to deal with things going dark every time I stood too stillโ€”and I couldnโ€™t bring myself to look at Grayson, look at his light, piercing eyes, the way I had that night.

โ€œThereโ€™s a control panel under the portico.โ€

I managed to find it and turn the pool lights on but ended up accidentally turning a fountain on, too. Water sprayed upward in a magnificent arc as the pool light

cycled through colors: pink, purple, blue, green, violet. It felt like watching fireworks. Like magic.

But I hadnโ€™t come down here for magic. One touch turned off the fountain. Another stopped the cycle of colors in the light.

โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ Grayson asked me, and I knew that he was asking why I wasย here, with him.

โ€œDid Jameson tell you about the bag your grandfather left me?โ€ I asked.

Grayson pushed off the wall, treading water as he measured his response. โ€œJamie doesnโ€™t tell me everything.โ€ The silences in Graysonโ€™s sentences always spoke volumes. โ€œIn fairness, thereโ€™s quite a bit that I donโ€™t tell him.โ€

That was the closest heโ€™d ever come to mentioning that night in the wine cellar, the things heโ€™d confessed to me.

I held up the glass circle. โ€œThis was one of several items in a bag that your grandfather instructed be delivered to me if Eve and I ever met. There was alsoโ€”โ€

โ€œWhat did you say?โ€ Without warning, Grayson pulled himself out of the water. It was October and cool enough at night that he had to be freezing, but he did a very good impression of someone utterly incapable of feeling cold.

โ€œWhen I met Eve, it triggered one of your grandfatherโ€™s games.โ€

โ€œThe old man knew?โ€ Grayson was standing so still that if the pool light hadnโ€™t been on, he would have disappeared into the darkness. โ€œMy grandfather knew about Eve? He knew that Toby had a daughter?โ€

I swallowed. โ€œYes.โ€

Every muscle in Graysonโ€™s body had gone tight. โ€œHe knew,โ€ he repeated savagely. โ€œAnd he left her there? He knew, and he didnโ€™t say a damn word to any of us?โ€ Grayson strode toward meโ€”then past me. He braced himself against the portico wall, his palms flat, the muscles in his back so tense that it looked like his shoulder blades might split the skin.

โ€œGrayson?โ€ I didnโ€™t say more than that. I wasnโ€™t sure what else to say.

โ€œI used to tell myself that the old man loved us,โ€ Grayson stated with all the precision of a surgeon slicing through good flesh to get to bad. โ€œThat if he held us to impossible standards, it was for the noble purpose of forging his heirs into what we needed to be. And if the great Tobias Hawthorne was harder on me than on my brothers, I told myself that it was because I needed to be more. I believed that he taught me about honor and duty becauseย heย was honorable, because he felt the weight ofย hisย duty and wanted to prepare me for it.โ€

Grayson slammed his hand down onto the wall hard enough for the rough surface to tear into his palm.

โ€œBut the things he did? The dirty little secrets in those file folders? Knowing about Eve and letting her be raised by people who treated her as less than? Pretending that our family owed Tobyโ€™s daughter nothing? Thereโ€™s nothingย honorableย about that.โ€ Grayson shook.ย โ€œAny of it.โ€

I thought about Grayson never allowing himself to break because he knew the man heโ€™d been raised to be. I thought about Jameson saying that Grayson had always been soย perfect. โ€œWe donโ€™t know how long your grandfather knew about Eve,โ€ I said. โ€œIf it was a recent discovery, if he knew that she looked like Emily, maybe he thought it would be too painfulโ€”โ€

โ€œMaybe he thought I was too weak.โ€ Grayson turned to face me. โ€œThatโ€™s what youโ€™re saying, Avery, as hard as you try to make it mean something else.โ€

I took a step toward him. โ€œGrief doesnโ€™t make you weak, Grayson.โ€

โ€œLove does.โ€ Graysonโ€™s voice went brutally low. โ€œI was supposed to be the one who was above it all. Emotion. Vulnerability.โ€

โ€œWhy you?โ€ I asked. โ€œWhy not Nash? Heโ€™s the oldest.

Why not Jameson or Xanโ€”โ€

โ€œBecause it was supposed to be me.โ€ย Grayson took in a ragged breath. I could practically see him fighting to slam the cage door closed on his emotions once more. โ€œMy whole life, Avery, it was supposed to be me. That was why I had to be better, why I had to sacrifice and be honorable and put family first, why I couldย neverย lose controlโ€” because the old man wasnโ€™t going to be around forever, andย Iย was the one who was supposed to take the reins once he was gone.โ€

It was supposed to be Grayson.ย I thought.ย Not me.ย A year on, and part of Grayson still couldnโ€™t let go of that, even knowing that the old man had never really intended to leave him the fortune.

โ€œAnd I understood, Averyโ€”I didโ€”why the old man might have looked at this family, looked atย me, and decided that we were unworthy ofย hisย legacy.โ€ Graysonโ€™s voice shook. โ€œI understood why he thought I wasnโ€™t good enoughโ€”and you were. But if the great Tobias Hawthorneย wasnโ€™tย honorable? If he never met a line he wouldnโ€™t cross for his own selfish gain? If โ€˜family firstโ€™ was just some bullshit lie he fed to me? Then why?โ€ Grayson brought his eyes to mine. โ€œWhatโ€™s the point, Avery, of any of this?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€ My voice sounded just as raw as his. Hesitantly, I raised the glass circle again. โ€œBut maybe thereโ€™s more to it, a piece of the puzzle that we donโ€™t know.โ€ฆโ€

โ€œMore games.โ€ Grayson slammed his hand against the wall again. โ€œThe old bastard has been dead a year, and heโ€™s still pulling strings.โ€

My right hand holding the blue-green glass, I dropped the towel with my left and reached for him.

โ€œDonโ€™t,โ€ Grayson breathed. He turned to walk past me. โ€œI told you once before, Avery: Iโ€™m broken. I wonโ€™t break you, too. Go back to bed. Forget about that piece of glass and whatever else was in that bag. Stop playing the old manโ€™s games.โ€

โ€œGraysonโ€”โ€

โ€œJust stop.โ€

That felt final in a way that nothing else between us ever had. I didnโ€™t say anything. I didnโ€™t go after him. And when the way heโ€™d told me to stop rang in my mind, I thought about Jameson, who never stopped.

About the person I was with Jameson.

I walked over to the water. I took off my pants and my shirt, laid the glass gingerly on the side of the pool, and dove in.

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