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Chapter no 75 – JAMESON

The Brothers Hawthorne

Well done, my boy.ย Jameson didnโ€™t just hear Ian say that; heย feltย the words. Physically. Like heโ€™d been holding a breath too long, finally gasped in air, and discovered that breathing hurt.

He just asked me to hand over the keys. To hand over the entire damn game.

Avery shifted closer to Jameson, the back of her hip brushing his leg. Without a word, Jameson pressed the key heโ€™d just discoveredโ€”with its shining, maze-like headโ€”into her hand.

Almost like he didnโ€™t trust himself with it.

โ€œWhat are you doing here, Ian?โ€ Jameson asked. Heโ€™d meant for the question to sound sharper.

Ian Johnstone-Jameson strolled casually forward, like his appearance in the middle of the Game was only natural, like Jameson shouldnโ€™t have been surprised to see him in the least.

โ€œIs that your way of asking if the Factotum knows Iโ€™m treading on these hallowed grounds, interfering in his little game?โ€ Ian asked with an expression that danced the line between a smile and a smirk. โ€œIf so, the answer, Iโ€™m afraid, is no.โ€

Heโ€™s not supposed to be here.ย Jameson managed to pry his gaze away from Ian and glance at Katharine.ย She must have tipped him off about the location of the Game.ย Did she have a phone hidden somewhere?ย Does it matter?

โ€œYou have two keys,โ€ Ian murmured, his gaze lingering on the key in Averyโ€™s hands. โ€œTwo out of threeโ€”and only one for my holier-than-thou

brother. Iโ€™m liking our odds.โ€

Our as in yours and mine?ย Jameson thought bitterly.ย Or yours and Katharineโ€™s?ย โ€œWhatโ€™s she doing here?โ€ he demanded.

Katharine looked slightly amused at the question, like nothing Jameson could say or do would amount to more than childish antics in her mind.

โ€œThe formidable Katharine and I have come to an agreement of sorts.โ€ Ianโ€™s lips curled again, more smile than smirk this time and wholly self-satisfied. โ€œYouโ€™ll give her those keys,โ€ Ian continued grandly, โ€œand everyone will leave here happyโ€”except my oldest brother, of course, which I have to admit has its appeal.โ€

โ€œWhat about Vantage?โ€ Jameson asked. He had enough self-awareness to know that what he was really asking wasย what about me?

Ian gave a little shrug. โ€œI really donโ€™t see how thatโ€™s any concern of yours.โ€

And that was the thing, Jameson realized. Ian reallyย didnโ€™t. The offer to leave Jameson Vantage had been impulsive, spur-of-the-moment.ย Forgotten.

โ€œYou sold me out.โ€ Jamesonโ€™s could feel the intensity in his voice. โ€œYou asked me to play this game. You aimed me like an arrow at an almost impossible target.โ€

And now, when Jameson was on the verge of hitting the bullโ€™s-eyeโ€” after working his way into the Devilโ€™s Mercy, after everything heโ€™d done to win entrance to the Game, after puttingย thatย secret on the line, coming here and solving puzzle after puzzleโ€”Ian expected him toย pull back?

โ€œWhat did Katharine offer you?โ€ Averyโ€™s tone was flat as she assessed Ian like a speck beneath a microscope. โ€œSheโ€™s working for your other brother, right? What didย heย offer you?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m afraid the terms of our deal are confidential.โ€ Katharine wasnโ€™t the smiling type, but there was a certain amount of satisfaction in her tone. โ€œThe keys, if you please, children?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Jameson didnโ€™t think, didnโ€™t consider his optionsโ€”because there werenโ€™t any. He hadnโ€™t come here, hadnโ€™t put everything on the line, to back down now.

โ€œNo?โ€ Katharine arched a brow, then turned her head toward Ian, a silent

fix this.

โ€œNo,โ€ Jameson repeated. โ€œAs in the opposite of yes, to decline, deny, or

negate.ย No.โ€

โ€œJameson.โ€ Ian walked to stand directly in front of him and laid a hand on his shoulder. โ€œYou did what I needed you to do, son.โ€

I have his eyes.ย Jameson let himself think that, just this once.ย Grayson has his fatherโ€™s eyes, and I have mine. I have his laugh.

โ€œYou said you needed a player,โ€ Jameson replied, ignoring the hand on his shoulder. Nothing could hurt you unless you let it. โ€œSomeone smart and cunning, mercilessโ€”โ€

โ€œBut never dull,โ€ Ian cut in. โ€œYes, yes, I know. And you played. Well done, you. But now, the plan has changed.โ€

Your plan, Jameson thought, emotions twisting in his gut like brambles full of thorns. Heโ€™d known from the beginning that Ian was using him. Heโ€™dย knownย that. But at least heโ€™d been indispensable to the plan before. But now?

Iโ€™m disposable.ย โ€œYou wanted a player who could calculate odds,โ€ Jameson said, and he could hear the wild fury building in his own voice. โ€œSomeone who could defy those odds.โ€

And I did that.

โ€œI needed a player, and you played,โ€ Ian said, sounding annoyed now. โ€œItโ€™s over. Now give me the keys.โ€

You love a challenge, Jameson could hear the man in front of him saying.ย You love to play. You love to win. And no matter what you win, you always need more.

For a brief time, Jameson had almost felt seen. โ€œIโ€™m not giving you anything,โ€ he said fiercely. โ€œWould the deal youโ€™ve struck even give you Vantage back?โ€ Jameson let the question hang in the air, but he knew the answer, had known it the first time heโ€™d uttered the wordsย What about Vantage?

Katharineโ€”and his other uncleโ€”werenโ€™t playing for Vantage. They were playing for the damning secret of a powerful man, which meant that Katharine must have offered Ian something else, something he wanted more than the estate his mother had left him. The place where he grew up. A property that had been in his motherโ€™s family for generations.

He doesnโ€™t care. Not about family. Not about this place.ย Jameson breathed in.ย Not about me.

โ€œTime is wasting,โ€ Katharine declared, her tone brisk. โ€œAnd Iโ€™ll still

need to locate the boxes that those keys unlock.โ€

Ianโ€™s eyes narrowed at Jameson. โ€œI know that you arenโ€™t wired to lose, Jameson,โ€ he said, his voice silky. โ€œBut you need to do what I say, because neither am I.โ€

That was a warning. A threat.

โ€œDo I look like a person whoโ€™s easy to threaten?โ€ Jameson smiled, even though it hurt his bruised and battered face.

โ€œNot particularly.โ€ Rohan appeared as if by magic, stepping out from behind a statue. โ€œSome people,โ€ the Factotum continued, โ€œjust donโ€™t know when to stay down.โ€

Jameson wasnโ€™t sure if that was a reference to Ian or himself. Either way, it didnโ€™t matter. Jameson was done talking.ย What happens to Ian now

โ€”what Rohan does to him for interferingโ€”is none of my concern.

โ€œLetโ€™s go,โ€ he told Avery, a lump rising in his throat. Heโ€™d gone a lifetime without a father. He didnโ€™t need one now.

All Jameson Winchester Hawthorne needed was to win.

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