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Chapter no 86

The Final Gambit (The Inheritance Games, 3)

On the biggest night of my life, I stood in front of a full- length mirror wearing a deep red ball gown fit for a queen. The color was unbearably rich, darker than a ruby but just as luminescent. Golden thread and delicate jewels combined to form understated vines that twisted and turned their way up the full skirt. The bodice was plain, custom fit to my body, with airy, translucent red sleeves that kissed my wrists.

Around my neck, I wore a single teardrop diamond.

Five hours and twelve minutes to go.ย Anticipation built inside me. Soon, my year at Hawthorne House would be up.

Nothing would ever be the same again.

โ€œRegretting letting Xander talk you into this party?โ€

I turned from my mirror to the doorway, where Jameson stood wearing his white tuxedoโ€”with a red vest this time, the same deep color as my dress. His jacket was unbuttoned, the black bow tie around his neck a little crooked and a little loose.

โ€œItโ€™s hard to regret Hawthornes in tuxedos,โ€ I told him, a smile pulling at my lips as I walked to join him. โ€œAnd tonight is going to be my kind of affair.โ€

We were calling it the Countdown Party.ย Like New Yearโ€™s Eve, Xander had said, making his pitch for the festivities,ย but at midnight, youโ€™re a billionaire!

Jameson held out a hand, palm up. I took it, our fingers intertwining, the tip of my index finger grazing a small scar on the inside of his.

โ€œWhere to first, Heiress?โ€

I grinned. Unlike the introvertโ€™s ball, tonight was of my design, a rotating party where we would be spending one hour each in five different locations in Hawthorne House, counting our way down to midnight. The guest list was smallโ€”the usual suspects minus Max, who was stuck at college and would be joining via video call near the end of the party. โ€œThe sculpture garden.โ€

Jamesonโ€™s green eyes made a study of my face. โ€œAnd what will we be doing in the sculpture garden?โ€ he asked, an appropriate amount of suspicion in his tone.

I smiled. โ€œGuess.โ€

 

 

โ€œThe name of the game is Hide and Go Soak.โ€ Wearing a brilliant-blue tuxedo that looked like it belonged on the red carpet, and holding what had to be the worldโ€™s biggest water gun, Xander was truly in his element. โ€œThe objective: utter aqua domination.โ€

Five minutes later, I ducked behind a bronze sculpture of Theseus and the Minotaur. Libby was already back there, squatting on the ground, her vintage 1950s dress bunched up around her thighs.

โ€œHow are you feeling?โ€ Libby asked me, keeping her voice low. โ€œBig night.โ€

I peeked out around the Minotaurโ€™s haunches, then retreated again. โ€œRight now, Iโ€™m feelingย hunted.โ€ I grinned. โ€œHow are you?โ€

โ€œReady.โ€ Libby looked down at the water balloons she held in each handโ€”and at her twin tattoos:ย SURVIVORย on one wrist, and on the otherโ€ฆย TRUST.

Footsteps.ย I braced myself just as Nash scaled Theseus and landed between Libby and me, holding what appeared to be aย meltedย water gun. โ€œJamie and Gray have joined forces. Xander has a blowtorch. This is never good.โ€ Nash looked to me. โ€œYouโ€™re still armed. Good. Steady and calm, kid. No mercy.โ€

Libby leaned around Nash to catch my eyes. โ€œRemember,โ€ she told me, her eyes dancing, โ€œthereโ€™s no such thing as fighting dirty if you win.โ€

I turned my water gun on Nash right as she creamed him with a water balloon.

 

 

At eight, the party moved indoors to the climbing wall. Jameson sidled up to me. โ€œSoaking wet in a ball gown,โ€ he murmured. โ€œThis could be a challenge.โ€

I wrung out my hair and flicked water his way. โ€œIโ€™m up for it.โ€

At nine, we made our way to the bowling alley. At ten, we headed for the potteryโ€”as in, a room with potting wheels and a kiln.

By the time eleven oโ€™clock rolled around and we made our way down the labyrinthine halls of Hawthorne House to the arcade, our gowns and tuxes had been soaked, ripped, and spattered with clay. I was exhausted, sore, and filled with an exhilaration that defied description.

This was it.

This wasย theย night. This was everything. This wasย us.

In the arcade, four private chefs met us, each with a signature dish to present.ย Slow-braised beef soup served with pork buns so tender they should be illegal. Lobster risotto.ย The first two courses nearly undid me, and that was before I bit into a sushi roll that looked like a work of art just as the final chef set our dessert on fire.

I looked to Oren. He was the one whoโ€™d cleared the private chefs to come here tonight. โ€œYou have to try this,โ€ I told him. โ€œAll of it.โ€

I watched as Oren gave in and tasted a pork bun, and then I felt someone else watching me. Grayson was wearing a silver tuxedo with sharp, angular lines, no bow

tie, the shirt buttoned all the way up.

I thought he might keep his distance, but he strode over to me, his expression assessing. โ€œYou have a plan,โ€ he commented, his voice low and smooth and sure.

My heart rate ticked up. I didnโ€™t just have a plan. I hadย A Plan. โ€œI wrote it down,โ€ I told Grayson. โ€œAnd then I rewrote it, again and again.โ€

He was the Hawthorne Iโ€™d thought of the most as I was doing it, the one whose reaction I could least predict.

โ€œIโ€™m glad,โ€ Grayson told me, the words slow and deliberate, โ€œthat it was you.โ€ He took a step back, clearing the way for Jameson to slide in next to me.

โ€œHave you decided yet,โ€ Jameson asked me, โ€œwhat room youโ€™re going to add on to Hawthorne House this year?โ€

I wondered if he could feel my anticipation, if he had any idea what we were counting downย to. โ€œIโ€™ve made a lot of decisions,โ€ I said.

Alisa hadnโ€™t arrived yet, but she would be here soon.

โ€œIf youโ€™re planning to build a death-defying obstacle course on the south side of the Black Wood,โ€ Xander said, bouncing up, high off a Skee-Ball victory, โ€œcount me in! I have a lead on where we can get a reasonably priced two- story-tall teeter-totter.โ€

I grinned. โ€œWhat would you do,โ€ I asked Jameson, โ€œif you were adding on a room?โ€

Jameson pulled my body back against his. โ€œIndoor skydiving complex, accessible from a secret passage at the base of the climbing wall. Four stories tall, looks just like another turret from the outside.โ€

โ€œPlease.โ€ Thea sauntered over holding a pool cue. She was wearing a long silver dress that left wide strips of bronze skin on display and was slit to the thigh. โ€œThe correct answer is obviouslyย ballroom.โ€

โ€œThe foyer is as big as a ballroom,โ€ I pointed out. โ€œPretty sure itโ€™s been used that way for decades.โ€

โ€œAnd yet,โ€ Thea countered, โ€œit remainsย not a ballroom.โ€

She turned back toward the pool table, where she and Rebecca were facing off against Libby and Nash. Bex leaned over the table, lining up what looked to be an impossible shot, her green velvet tuxedo pulling against her chest, her dark red hair combed to one side and falling into her face

The world had accepted my account of Will Blakeโ€™s death. The blame was laid squarely at the feet of Tobias Hawthorne. But once Toby had appeared, miraculously alive, and announced that he was changing his name to Tobias Blake, it hadnโ€™t taken the press long to piece together that he was Willโ€™s sonโ€”or to start speculating about who Tobyโ€™s biological mother was.

Rebecca had made it clear that she still didnโ€™t regret stepping into the light.

She sank the shot, and Thea strolled back toward her, shooting Nash a gloating look. โ€œStill feeling cocky, cowboy?โ€

โ€œAlways,โ€ Nash drawled.

โ€œThat,โ€ Libby said, her eyes catching his, โ€œis an understatement.โ€

Nash smirked. โ€œThirsty?โ€ he asked my sister.

Libby poked him in the chest. โ€œThereโ€™s a cowboy hat in the refrigerator, isnโ€™t there?โ€

She looked down at her wrists, then stalked over to the refrigerator and pulled out a pink soda and a black velvet cowboy hat. โ€œIโ€™ll wear this hat,โ€ she told Nash, โ€œifย youย paint your nails black.โ€

Nash gave her what could only be described as aย cowboy smile. โ€œFingers or toes?โ€

A yip behind me had me turning toward the doorway. Alisa stood there holding a very wiggly puppy. โ€œI found her in the gallery,โ€ she informed me dryly. โ€œBarking at a Monet.โ€

Xander took the puppy and held her up, crooning at her. โ€œNo eating Monets,โ€ he baby-talked. โ€œBad Tiramisu.โ€ He

gave her the worldโ€™s biggest, goofiest smile. โ€œBad dog. Just for thatโ€ฆ you have to cuddle Grayson.โ€

Xander dumped the puppy on his brother.

โ€œAre you ready for this?โ€ Alisa asked beside me as Grayson let the puppy lick his nose and challenged his brothers to a round of hold-the-puppy pinball.

โ€œAs ready as Iโ€™m ever going to be.โ€

Thirty minutes to go. Twenty. Ten.ย No amount of winning or losing at pool, air hockey, or foosball, no amount of puppy pinball or trying to beat the high score on a dozen different arcade games could distract me from the way the clock was ticking down.

Three minutes.

โ€œThe trick to a good poker face,โ€ Jameson murmured, โ€œisnโ€™t keeping your face blank. Itโ€™s thinking about something other than your cardsโ€”the same something the whole time.โ€ Jameson Winchester Hawthorne offered me a hand, and for the second time that night, I took it. He pulled me in for a slow dance, the kind that required no music. โ€œYouโ€™ve got your poker face on now, Heiress.โ€

I thought about flying around a racetrack, standing on the edge of the roof, riding on the back of his motorcycle, dancing barefoot on the beach. โ€œGen H verity,โ€ I said.

Jameson arched a brow. โ€œAs in generational truth for people far older than us?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s your anagram,โ€ I told him, โ€œforย everything.โ€

My phone rang before he could reply, a video call from Max. I answered.

โ€œAm I in time for the countdown?โ€ she asked, yelling over what appeared to be very loud music.

โ€œDo you have your champagne?โ€ I asked.

She brandished a flute. Right on cue, Alisa appeared beside me, holding a tray of the same. I took a glass and met her eyes.ย Itโ€™s almost time.

โ€œPiotr,โ€ Max said darkly, โ€œabsolutely refuses to have a glass on duty. He did, however, pick a bodyguard theme

song. I threatened him with show tunes.โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s my girl!โ€ Xander bellowed. โ€œWoman,โ€ Max corrected.

โ€œThatโ€™s my woman! In a completely not possessive and absolutely unpatriarchal kind of way!โ€

Max lifted her glass to toast him. โ€œElf yeah.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s time.โ€ Jameson said. I leaned into him as the others crowded around. โ€œTenโ€ฆ nineโ€ฆ eightโ€ฆโ€

Jameson, Grayson, Xander, and Nash. Libby, Thea, and Rebecca.

Me.

Alisa held a glass of champagne but stood back from the group. She was the only one who knew what was about to happen.

โ€œThreeโ€ฆโ€ โ€œโ€ฆ twoโ€ฆโ€ โ€œโ€ฆ one.โ€

โ€œHappy New Year!โ€ Xander yelled. The next thing I knew, confetti was flying everywhere. I had no idea where Xander had gotten confetti, but he continued to produce it, seemingly out of nowhere.

โ€œHappy new life,โ€ Jameson corrected. He kissed me like it was New Yearโ€™s Eve, and I savored it.

Iโ€™d survived a year in Hawthorne House. I had fulfilled the conditions of Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s will. I was a billionaire. One of the richest, most powerful people on the planet.

And I hadย A Plan.

โ€œShall I?โ€ Alisa asked me. Nashโ€™s eyes narrowed. He knew herโ€”and that meant he knew quite well when she was up to some-thing.

โ€œDo it,โ€ I told Alisa.

She turned the flat-screen television on and to a twenty- four-hour financial channel. It took a minute or two, but then theย BREAKING NEWSย beacon flashed across the screen.

โ€œPrecisely what kind of breaking news?โ€ Grayson asked me.

I let the reporter answer for me. โ€œWeโ€™ve just received word that Hawthorne heiress Avery Grambs has officially inherited the billions left to her by the late Tobias Hawthorne. After estate taxes and taking into account appreciation over the past year, the current value of the inheritance is estimated to be upward of thirty billion dollars. Ms. Grambs has announcedโ€”โ€

The reporter cut off, the words dying in his throat.

For the second time in my life, I felt every pair of eyes in a room turn to me. There was an eerie symmetry between this moment and the moment right before Mr. Ortega had read the final terms of Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s will.

โ€œMs. Grambs has announced,โ€ the reporter tried again, his voice strangled, โ€œthat as of midnight, she has signed paperwork transferring ninety-four percent of her inheritance into a charitable trust to be distributed in its entirety in the next five years.โ€

It was done. It was legal. I couldnโ€™t have undone it even if Iโ€™d wanted to.

Thea was the first one to break the silence. โ€œWhat the hell?โ€

Nash turned to his ex-fiancรฉe. โ€œYou helped her give away all that money?โ€

Alisa raised her chin. โ€œThe partners at the firm didnโ€™t even know.โ€

Nash let out a low chuckle. โ€œYou are so getting fired.โ€

Alisa smiledโ€”not the tight, professional smile she normally used, but a real one. โ€œJob security isnโ€™t everything.โ€ She shrugged. โ€œAnd as it so happens, Iโ€™ve accepted a new position at a charitable trust.โ€

I couldnโ€™t quite bring myself to look at Jameson. Or Grayson. Or even Xander or Nash. I hadnโ€™t asked for their permission. I wasnโ€™t going to be asking for forgiveness, either. Instead, I thrust my chin out, the way Alisa had.

โ€œYouโ€™ll all be receiving your invitations to join the board of the Hannah the Same Backward as Forward Foundation soon.โ€

Silence.

This time, it was Grayson who broke it. โ€œYou want us to help you give it away?โ€

I met his eyes. โ€œI want you to help me find the best ideas and the best people to determine how to give it all away.โ€

Libby frowned. โ€œWhat about the Hawthorne Foundation?โ€ In addition to Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s fortune, Iโ€™d also inherited control of his charitable enterprise.

โ€œZaraโ€™s agreed to stay on for a few years while Iโ€™m otherwise occupied,โ€ I answered. The Hawthorne Foundation had its own charter, which laid out the minimum and maximum percentage of its assets that could be given away each year. I couldnโ€™t empty it outโ€”but I could make sure that my foundation had different rules.

That my inheritance wouldnโ€™t stayย earmarkedย for charity

for long.

Grinning, I handed Libby a sheet of paper. โ€œWhatโ€™s this?โ€ she asked.

โ€œItโ€™s account information for about a dozen different websites I signed you up for,โ€ I told her. โ€œMutual aid, mostly, and microloans to women entrepreneurs in the developing world. The new foundation will be handling official charitable giving, but we both know what itโ€™s like to need help and have nowhere to go. Iโ€™ve set aside ten million a year for youโ€”for that.โ€

Before she could reply, I tossed something to Nash. He caught it, then examined what Iโ€™d tossed him.ย Keys.

โ€œWhatโ€™s this?โ€ he drawled, his accent thick with amusement at this entire turn of events.

โ€œThose,โ€ I told him, โ€œare the keys to my sisterโ€™s new cupcake truck.โ€

Libby stared at me, her eyes round, her lips making an

O. โ€œI canโ€™t accept this, Ave.โ€

โ€œI know.โ€ I smirked. โ€œThatโ€™s why I gave the keys to Nash.โ€

Before I could say anything else, Jameson stepped in front of me. โ€œYouโ€™re giving it away,โ€ he said, his expression as much of a mystery to me as it had been the day we met. โ€œAlmost everything the old man left to you, everything he chose youย forโ€”โ€

โ€œIโ€™m keeping Hawthorne House,โ€ I told him. โ€œAnd more than enough money to maintain it. I might even keep a vacation home or twoโ€”after Iโ€™ve seen them all.โ€

Afterย weย had seen them all.

โ€œIf Tobias Hawthorne were here,โ€ Thea declared, โ€œhe wouldย lose it.โ€

All that money. All that power. Dispersed, where no one person would ever control it again.

โ€œI guess thatโ€™s what happens,โ€ Jameson said, his eyes never leaving mine as his lips curled upward, โ€œwhen you take a very risky gamble.โ€

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