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Chapter no 63 – GRAYSON

The Brothers Hawthorne

Aย single call to Zabrowski was all it took to obtain Kimberly Wrightโ€™s address, two towns away.

โ€œXan and I will wait outside,โ€ Nash told Grayson once they arrived. โ€œI wager we can find a way of entertaining ourselves.โ€

This was something for Grayson andย his sistersย to do alone. Now that the truth was out there, the last remains of the barriers heโ€™d erected against thinking of them that way crumbled. The twinsย wereย his sisters, regardless of whether or not he was anything to them.

โ€œItโ€™s been a while since weโ€™ve heard from Jamie,โ€ Xander added amiably. โ€œHeโ€™s due for some yodeling. Take all the time you need, Gray.โ€

Grayson exited the SUV, waited for Savannah and Gigi to do the same, and then the three of them made their way up to Kimberly Wrightโ€™s front door. A three-foot-tall chain-link fence surrounded the front yard, which was all dirt and weeds, no grass. The house was painted a cheerful yellow that contrasted with the dark metal bars across the windows.

There was a No Solicitors sign on the front door.

Gigi knocked. Two seconds later, Grayson heard a dog barking, and two seconds after that, the door opened, revealing a woman in a ratty floral bathrobe. She used one foot to hold back a dachshund that looked remarkably rotund for the breed.

โ€œThat is a very fat dachshund,โ€ Gigi said, her eyes round.

โ€œItโ€™s mostly hair,โ€ the woman in the bathrobe said. โ€œIsnโ€™t that right, Cinnamon?โ€ The dog growled at Grayson and attempted to get its front paws up on the foot that was holding her back.

It failed.

โ€œIโ€™d tell you I donโ€™t want whatever youโ€™re selling,โ€ Kimberly Wright continued, โ€œbut youโ€™ve got his eyes.โ€ She was looking at Savannah when she said that, but then she shifted her gaze to Grayson. โ€œYou too.โ€

Gigi offered up a friendly smile. โ€œIโ€™m Gigi. Thatโ€™s Savannah.โ€

โ€œI know who you are,โ€ Kim replied gruffly. โ€œDown, Cinnamon.โ€ Cinnamon, Grayson could not help but notice, was already down. โ€œAnd thatโ€™s Grayson,โ€ Gigi continued. โ€œOur brother.โ€

Grayson waited for Savannah to correct her twin, but she didnโ€™t.ย Our brother.

โ€œWell, donโ€™t just stand there,โ€ Kim said, bending down to pick up Cinnamonโ€”no easy task. โ€œCome in.โ€

 

 

The house was compact: a den to the right of the front door, a kitchen straight ahead, and a short hall to the left, which presumably led to the bedrooms. Kim ushered them into the den.

โ€œI like your recliners,โ€ Gigi said earnestly. There were four of them in a room that wasnโ€™t big enough for much else. On the back of each recliner, there was a crocheted blanket. The blankets matched; the recliners didnโ€™t.

โ€œYouโ€™re a smiley one, arenโ€™t you?โ€ Kim asked Gigi.

โ€œI try,โ€ Gigi replied, but the words didnโ€™t come out quite as cheerful as Grayson would have expected. It occurred to him for the first time that maybe Gigi wasnโ€™t just naturally sunny.

Maybe that was a choice.

Their aunt stared at Gigi for a moment. โ€œYou look like him, you know.

My boy.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ Gigi said softly.

Grayson thought about Acacia telling him that the resemblance had endeared Gigi to their father when she was very young, and for reasons he could neither pinpoint nor understand, his heart ached.

This woman was his aunt.ย Theirย aunt, and sheโ€™d never met a single one of them.

โ€œAre you here to tell me why your father wonโ€™t return my calls?โ€ Kim

asked bluntly.

Savannah was the first one to summon up a reply to that question. โ€œDadโ€™s gone.โ€

Kimโ€™s eyes narrowed. โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

โ€œHe left on a business trip a year and a half ago and never came back.โ€ Savannahโ€™s voice didnโ€™t waver.

โ€œDid you call the police?โ€ Kim dumped her dachshund on one of the recliners. Cinnamon hopped to the floor with a thud.

โ€œMom did, back then. But heโ€™s notย missing,โ€ Gigi told her aunt. โ€œHe left.โ€

Grayson could hear how saying those words hurt her.ย Now you believe he left.ย That should have made Grayson happy. That had been his goal, after all. To keep herโ€”to keep both of themโ€”from questioning that explanation, from getting at the truth.

All I have to do is make sure it stays that way.

โ€œIt appears your brother was having some difficulties,โ€ Grayson told his aunt. โ€œFinancial and with the law.โ€

Kim walked to the far wall. She braced her hand against it for a moment, then pulled down a framed picture. โ€œThis is him.โ€ She walked back, more slowly, then held out the frame. โ€œShep. He was twelve or thirteen here. Thatโ€™s Colin beside him.โ€

Grayson made himself look at the photograph. A lanky young teen with silvery gray eyes held a basketball. A toddler reached up for it.

Kim let out a breath. โ€œShep came to live with me not long after Colin was born. Our mom died, and her husband decided he was done with kids who werenโ€™t his. It was either take Shep in or let him go to foster care, so I took him in. Colinโ€™s father was in and out of prison for years, so most of the time, it was just me, taking care of both boys.โ€

โ€œYou call him Shep,โ€ Grayson said, because that observation felt like less of a landmine than looking at that picture and searching for any kind of resemblance between himself and the boys in the frame.

โ€œThat was his name. Not short for anything. Just Shep. He changed it the summer before he went to college. His last name, too.โ€ She snorted. โ€œSheffield Grayson. He got a basketball scholarship. Met a pretty girl.โ€ Kim settled down into one of the recliners and waited for each of them to do the same before she continued, โ€œMy brother was pretty much done with me

after that. Didnโ€™t want anything to do with the rest of my kids, but he loved Colin.โ€ There was a slight pause. โ€œShep took care of Colin a lot growing up. Too much, probably. Used to take him with him to basketball practice when I wasโ€ฆโ€ Kim looked down. โ€œWorking.โ€

Kim was a recovered addict. Her brother hadnโ€™t just watched her son while she wasย working.

As if she could hear his thoughts, the woman looked away from Grayson and to the girls. โ€œAfter Shep married your mother, he told me that Colin was going to live with them.โ€

โ€œAnd you let your brother take your son,โ€ Grayson said softly.

โ€œI had other mouths to feed. Shep agreed to help with that. But he wanted Colin with him.โ€

Grayson hadnโ€™t realized, when Sheffield Grayson had said that his nephew was the closest thing heโ€™d ever had to a son, that heโ€™d raised the kid from the time he was a child himself.

Grayson wonderedโ€”just for a momentโ€”if a man whoโ€™d loved his nephew like that, sacrificed for his nephew like that, could have been all bad.

He thought about the photos in the safe-deposit box, and breathing got just a little bit harder.ย We didnโ€™t come here to talk about the past, he reminded himself. โ€œDid your brother continue to help you financially after Colin passed?โ€ Grayson asked, steering the conversation back toward the reason theyโ€™d come.

The withdrawal slips. Petty cash, with a notation on the back.

โ€œNot the way he could have,โ€ Kim said bitterly. โ€œNot the way he would have if Colin was alive. Shep blamed me, you know. Said that Colin picked up my bad habits, but itโ€™s not true. Colin never touched pills until he tore his ACL. It put him out a season, but do you think the greatย Sheffield Graysonย ever let up?โ€

Grayson didnโ€™t know much about Colin Anders Wright, other than the fact that he and a young Toby Hawthorne, Graysonโ€™s uncle, had met at a high-priced residential rehab facility more than two decades before. Colin and Toby had then reunited for a drug-and-alcohol-fueled road trip that had ended on Hawthorne Island with three dead, Colin included.

โ€œThere was just so much pressure on my Colin,โ€ Kim said. โ€œShep was determined heโ€™d play college ball. I should have brought my baby back here

once they started fighting, but what did I have to offer? I told myself that it would be okay, that Acacia was there, too. And Colin worshipped her. He worshipped Shep, for that matter, when they werenโ€™t fighting.โ€

โ€œThey were a family,โ€ Savannah said softly.

Kim closed her eyes. โ€œI always thought Shep married your mother for the money, but when he saw how she was with Colinโ€”thatโ€™s when he fell in love.โ€

Grayson felt the way that statement hit his sisters, both of them.

โ€œDo you still have the slips?โ€ Savannah asked him, her voice curt, the change of subject intentional.

Grayson nodded and withdrew them from his suit jacket. โ€œBefore he left,โ€ he told his aunt, โ€œyour brother made fairly regular withdrawals of relatively small amounts of cash. Two-hundred seventeen dollars. Five hundred six dollarsโ€ฆ you get the point. Your nameโ€”or what we believe to be an abbreviation of your nameโ€”was written on the back of the slips.โ€

โ€œHe brought me money now and then,โ€ Kim admitted, her tone defensive. โ€œNever too much. He didnโ€™t trust me with too much.โ€ She narrowed her eyes at Grayson. โ€œOnly even amounts, though. Two hundred or five hundred or what-have-you. The rest must have been for himself.โ€

Grayson seriously doubted that Sheffield Grayson had withdrawn seventeen dollarsโ€”or sixโ€”for his own spending needs.

โ€œHe came here and brought you money,โ€ Savannah summarized. โ€œDid he bring anything else with him when he did?โ€

Grayson saw the logic of her question. If Sheffield Grayson had been hiding somethingโ€”like, say, records of illegal transactionsโ€”his estranged sisterโ€™s house, a world away from his own, would be a good place to hide it.

โ€œBesides the money? No.โ€ Kim shook her headโ€”and averted her eyes. Gigi leaned forward in her chair. โ€œWhat arenโ€™t you telling us, Aunt

Kim?โ€

Grayson instantly saw what it meant to the woman for Gigi to call her that.

โ€œShep would talk to me for a bit,โ€ Kim said hoarsely, โ€œthen heโ€™d leave the money on the kitchen counter and go shut himself in Colinโ€™s room.โ€

โ€œWhat did he do in there?โ€ Savannah asked.

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ Kim replied. โ€œJustโ€ฆ sit, I guess.โ€ She paused. โ€œOne time, I tried to go in and talk to him. He yelled at me to get out. There was

something on the floor. A box.โ€

โ€œWhat kind of box?โ€ Grayson pressed.

โ€œWooden. Nice. Real nice. He left it here, in Colinโ€™s closet, told me that if I ever touched it, if I ever even looked at it, heโ€™d stop coming, and Iโ€™d never see another dime from him.โ€

Grayson exchanged a look with Savannah.ย We need that box.ย โ€œCould we see Colinโ€™s room?โ€ he askedโ€”but it wasnโ€™t really a question.

Kimโ€™s eyes narrowed. โ€œThe room,โ€ she repeated harshly. โ€œOr the box?โ€

Gigi was the one who replied. โ€œOur dad is gone,โ€ she said simply. โ€œHe left, and he never came back. And now weโ€™re finding out that he wasnโ€™t who we thought he was.โ€ She swallowed. โ€œWhoย Iย thought he was,โ€ she corrected.

Savannah met her twinโ€™s eyes, just for a moment, before turning her attention to their aunt. โ€œI found out about Dad cheating on Mom, about the fact that he had another kid out there, when I was fourteen,โ€ Savannah said.

Grayson doubted sheโ€™d ever said those words out loud before.

โ€œAnd my dad, he acted like it was nothing. But all I could thinkโ€โ€” Savannahโ€™s words slowedโ€”โ€œwas that he had aย son.ย Basketball was always our thing, but when I hit middle school, I noticed that he stopped saying that I played basketball and started saying that I played on theย girlsโ€™ย basketball team.โ€ There wasnโ€™t a hitch in Savannahโ€™s voice, but Grayson felt the effort it took her to fight it. โ€œHe started asking me why I was such a tomboy.โ€

Kim frowned. โ€œYou donโ€™t look like a tomboy to me.โ€

Savannah fingered the end of her long blonde hair. โ€œExactly.โ€ She drew in another steady breath. โ€œOur dad loved Colin. Maybe he loved us, too, but we werenโ€™t Colin.โ€

โ€œWhy are you telling me this?โ€ Kim asked.

โ€œBecause I want you to understand,โ€ Savannah replied. โ€œOur dad abandoned us, and we deserve to know why. Our momโ€™s in trouble. Whatever Dad was keeping in that boxโ€”what if it could help her?โ€

Cinnamon chose that moment to squat. Spurred to action, Kim leaped to grab her. โ€œOutside, Cinnamon! Outside!โ€ She rushed to the door. After putting the dog down on the lawn, she came back but didnโ€™t come all the way into the den.

โ€œDown the hall,โ€ she said gruffly, โ€œlast door on your left. That was

Colinโ€™s room. Do what you want with the damn box. Not like Shepโ€™s coming back anyway.โ€

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