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Chapter no 47

The Final Gambit (The Inheritance Games, 3)

As I pulled open the door to the wine cellar, so much of that night came back to me: the cocktail party, the way Grayson had deftly deflected every person whoย just wanted a minuteย of my time to tell me aboutย a unique financial opportunity, the little girl in the pool, Grayson diving in to save her.

I could remember the way heโ€™d looked climbing out of the water, dripping wet in an Armani suit. Grayson hadnโ€™t even asked for a towel. Heโ€™d acted like he wasnโ€™t even wet. I remembered people talking to him, the little girl being returned to her parents. I remembered the brief glimpse I caught of his faceโ€”hisย eyesโ€”right before he disappeared down these stairs.

Iโ€™d known that he wasnโ€™t okay, but Iโ€™d had no idea why.

Focus on the game.ย I tried to stay in the momentโ€”here, now, with both of them. Jameson went first down the spiraling stone steps. I was a step behind him, walking where he walked, not daring to look back over my shoulder at Grayson.

Just find the next clue.ย I let that be my beacon, my focus, but the moment we hit the bottom of the stone staircase, the landing came into view: a tasting room with an antique table made of the darkest cherry wood. Chairs sat on either side of the table, their arms carved so that the ends became lions: one set watchful, one set roaring.

And just like that, I was taken back.

The lines of Graysonโ€™s body are like architecture: his shoulders even, his neck straight, though his head and eyes

are cast down. A crystal glass sits on the table in front of him. His hands lay on either side of the glass, the muscles in them tensed, like he might push off at any moment.

โ€œYou shouldnโ€™t be here.โ€ Grayson doesnโ€™t pull his eyes from the glassโ€”or the amber liquid heโ€™s been drinking.

โ€œAnd itโ€™s your job to tell me what I should and shouldnโ€™t do?โ€ I retort. The question feels dangerous. Just being here does, for reasons I canโ€™t even begin to explain.

โ€œDid someone say something to you?โ€ I ask. โ€œAt the party

โ€”did someone upset you?โ€

โ€œI do not upset easily,โ€ Grayson says, the words sharp. He still hasnโ€™t looked away from the glass, and I canโ€™t shake the feeling that Iโ€™m not supposed to be seeing this.

That no one is supposed to see Grayson Hawthorne like this.

โ€œThe childโ€™s grandfather.โ€ Graysonโ€™s tone is modulated, but I can see the tension in his neck, like the words want to come roaring out of him, ripping their way from his throat. โ€œDo you know what he told me?โ€ Grayson lifts his glass and drains what remainsโ€”every last drop. โ€œHe said that the old man would have been proud of me.โ€

And there it is, the thing that has Grayson down here drinking alone. I cross to sit in the chair opposite his. โ€œYou saved that little girl.โ€

โ€œImmaterial.โ€ Haunted silver eyes meet mine. โ€œShe was easy to save.โ€ He picks up the bottle, pours exactly two fingers into the glass, those icy eyes of his watchful. Thereโ€™s tension in his fingers, his wrists, his neck, his jaw. โ€œThe true measure of a man is how many impossible things he accomplishes before breakfast.โ€

I understand suddenly that Grayson is gutted because he doesnโ€™t believe that Tobias Hawthorne was or would be proud of himโ€”not for saving that girl or anything else.

โ€œBeing worthy,โ€ he continues, โ€œrequires being bold.โ€ He lifts the glass to his mouth again and drinks.

โ€œYou are worthy, Grayson,โ€ I tell him, reaching for his

hands and holding them in mine.

Grayson doesnโ€™t pull back. His fingers curl into fists beneath my hands. โ€œI saved that girl. I didnโ€™t save Emily.โ€ Thatโ€™s a statement of fact, a truth carved into his soul. โ€œI didnโ€™t save you.โ€ He looks up at me. โ€œA bomb went off, and you were lying on the ground, and I just stood there.โ€

His voice vibrates with intensity. Beneath my touch, I can feel his body doing the same.

โ€œItโ€™s okay. Iโ€™m fine,โ€ I say, but itโ€™s clear he doesnโ€™t hear it

โ€”wonโ€™t hear it. โ€œLook at me, Grayson. I am right here. I am fine.ย Weย are fine.โ€

โ€œHawthornes arenโ€™t supposed to break.โ€ His chest rises and falls. โ€œEspecially me.โ€

I stand and make my way to his side of the table without ever letting go of his hands. โ€œYouโ€™re not broken.โ€

โ€œI am.โ€ The words are swift and brutal. โ€œI always will be.โ€

โ€œLook at me,โ€ I say, but he wonโ€™t. I bend down toward him. โ€œLook at me, Grayson. You are not broken.โ€

His eyes catch on mine. Our chests rise and fall in unison now.

โ€œEmily was in my head.โ€ Thereโ€™s something hushed and barely restrained in his voice. โ€œI heard her after the bomb went off, like she was right there. Like she was real.โ€

This is a confession. Iโ€™m standing, and heโ€™s sitting, back straight, head bowed.

โ€œFor weeks, I hallucinated her voice. For weeks, she whispered to me.โ€ Grayson looks up at me. โ€œTell me again that Iโ€™m not broken.โ€

I donโ€™t think. I just take his head in my hands. โ€œYou loved her, and you lost her,โ€ I start to say.

โ€œI failed her, and she will haunt me until the day I die.โ€ Graysonโ€™s eyes close. โ€œIโ€™m supposed to be stronger than this. I wanted to be stronger than this. For you.โ€

Those last two words nearly undo me. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to be anything for me, Grayson.โ€ I wait until he opens his

eyes, until heโ€™s looking at me. โ€œThis,โ€ I say. โ€œYou. Itโ€™s enough.โ€

He drops from the chair to his knees, his eyes closing again, the enormity of this moment all around us. I kneel, wrap my arms around him.

โ€œYouโ€™re enough,โ€ I say again. โ€œIt will never be enough.โ€

The memory was everywhere. I could feel Grayson curling in on himself, into me. I could feel his shudder. And then heโ€™d told me to go, and Iโ€™d fled because deep down, I knew what he meant when he said that it would never be enough. He meantย us. What we wereโ€”and what we werenโ€™t. What had shattered in those weeks when Emily had been whispering in his ear.

What might have been. Whatย couldย have been. What couldnโ€™t be, now.

The next day, Grayson had left for Harvard without even saying good-bye. And now he was back, right there behind me, and we were doing this.

Grayson, Jameson, and me.

โ€œThis way.โ€ Grayson nodded to a clear glass door to our right. When he opened it, a burst of cold air hit my face. Stepping through the doorway, I let out a long, slow breath, half expecting to see it, wispy and white in the chilly air.

โ€œThis place is enormous.โ€ I stayed in the present through sheer force of will.ย No more flashbacks. No more what-ifs.ย I focused on the game. That was what was needed. What I needed and what both of them needed from me.

โ€œThere are technicallyย fiveย cellars, all interconnected,โ€ Jameson narrated. โ€œThis oneโ€™s for white wine. Through there is red. If you keep wrapping around, youโ€™ll hit scotch, bourbon, and whiskey.โ€

There had to be a fortune down here in alcohol alone.

Think about that. Nothing but that.

โ€œWeโ€™re looking for a red wine.โ€ Graysonโ€™s voice cut into

my thoughts. โ€œA Bordeaux.โ€

Jameson reached for my hand. I took it, and he stepped away, allowing his fingers to trail down mineโ€”an invitation to follow as he wound into the next room. I did.

Grayson pushed past me, past Jameson, snaking his way through aisle after aisle, scanning rack after rack. Finally, he stopped. โ€œChateau Margaux,โ€ he said, pulling a bottle out of the closest rack. โ€œNineteen seventy-three.โ€

The caption on the photograph. Margaux. 1973.

โ€œYou want to guess what the steamerโ€™s for?โ€ Jameson asked me.

A bottle of wine. A steamer.ย I took the Chateaux Margaux from Grayson, turning it over in my hand. Slowly, the answer took hold. โ€œThe label,โ€ I said. โ€œIf we try to tear it off, it might rip. But steam will loosen the adhesive.โ€ฆโ€

Grayson held the steamer out to me. โ€œYou do the honors.โ€

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