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Chapter no 85

The Final Gambit (The Inheritance Games, 3)

The knight returns with the damsel in distress,โ€ Jameson declared as I made my way toward him. He glanced toward Grayson. โ€œYouโ€™re the damsel.โ€

โ€œI figured,โ€ Grayson deadpanned.

โ€œWhat are you doing here?โ€ I asked Jameson, but the truth was, I didnโ€™t care why heโ€™d comeโ€”only that he was here. Iโ€™d wonโ€”after everything,ย I had wonโ€”and Jameson was the only person on the planet capable of fully understanding exactly how it had felt the moment Iโ€™d realized that my plan was going to work.

The rush. The thrill. The adrenaline-soaked awe.

The moment victory had been within my grasp had been like standing at the edge of the worldโ€™s most powerful waterfall, the roar of the moment blocking out everything else.

It was like jumping off a cliff and finding out you could fly.

It was like Jameson and me and Jameson-and-me, and I wanted to live it all over again with him.

โ€œI thought you could use a ride home,โ€ Jameson told me. I looked past him, expecting to see the McLaren or one of the Bugattis or the Aston Martin Valkyrie, but instead, my gaze landed on a helicopterโ€”smaller than the one Oren had flown here.

โ€œPretty sure you arenโ€™t allowed to land a helicopter there,โ€ Grayson told his brother.

โ€œYou know what they say about permission and forgiveness,โ€ Jameson replied, then he focused back on me

with a familiar lookโ€”equal partsย I dare youย andย Iโ€™ll never let you go. โ€œWant to learn to fly?โ€

 

 

That night, I turned the cube Toby had given me over in my hands. My finger caught on an edge, and I realized that it was made of interlocking pieces. Working slowly, I solved the puzzle, disassembling the cube and laying the pieces out in front of me.

On each one, heโ€™d carved a word.

I

See So

Much Of Your Mother In

You

And that, even more than the moment Iโ€™d defeated Blake, was when I knew.

 

 

The next morning, before anyone else was awake, I went to the Great Room and lit a fire in the massive fireplace. I could have done this in my own roomโ€”or in any of the other dozen fireplaces in Hawthorne Houseโ€”but it felt right to return to the room where the will had been read. I could almost see ghosts here: all of us, in that moment.

Me, thinking how life-changing inheriting a few thousand dollars would be.

The Hawthornes, learning the old man had left their fortune to me.

The flames flickered higher and higher in the fireplace, and I looked down at the papers in my hand: the trust paperwork Alisa had drawn up.

โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ Libby padded toward me, wearing house shoes shaped like coffins and stifling a yawn.

I held up the papers. โ€œIf I sign this, it will tie my assets up in a trustโ€”at least for a little while.โ€

All that money. All that power.

Libby looked from me to the fireplace. โ€œWell,โ€ she said as chipper as anyone wearing herย otherย I EAT MORNING PEOPLEย shirt had ever sounded, โ€œwhat are you waiting for?โ€

I looked down at the trust paperwork, up at the fireplace

โ€”and tossed it all in. As the flames licked at the pages, devouring the legalese and, with it, the option to foist the power and responsibility Iโ€™d been given off on anyone else, I felt something in me begin to loosen, like the petals of a tulip opening to the slightest bloom.

I could do this.

I would do this.

If the past year had been any kind of testโ€”I was ready.

 

 

I started taking the leather notebook Grayson had given me everywhere. I didnโ€™t have a year to make my plans. I had days. And yes, there were financial advisors and a legal team and a status quo that I could lean into if I wanted to buy myself time, but that wasnโ€™t what I wanted.

That wasnโ€™t the plan.

Deep down, I knew what I wanted to do. What I needed to do. And all of the lawyers and financial advisors and power players in the state of Texasโ€”they werenโ€™t going to like it.

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