Now that Ms. Grambs has been removed from both the premises and the Game, there is the matter of her key.โ The Factotum said the wordย removedย in a way that made Jameson want to go for his throat. Rohan hadnโt laid a hand on Averyโnot in Jamesonโs sight, at leastโbut now she was gone, and the rest of them were back in the room where this had all started.
โIโm the one who was attacked,โ Zella said with an aristocratic tilt of her chin. โThat makes the attackerโs key mine, does it not?โ
โWhereโs Avery?โ Jameson demanded. โWhat did you do with her?โ Branford placed a hand on his shoulder. โEasy, nephew.โ
โSoft touch,โ Katharine scoffed. โYou always have been, Simon.โ
โEnough.โ Rohan held up a hand, silencing all four remaining players. Then he turned to Zella. โDo you really expect me to just hand this over to you?โ He brandished the final key.
โNo.โ Zellaโs smile looked almost serene, but to Jameson, it didnโtย feelย like a smile. โTruthfully, Rohan, I make it a rule to have no expectations at all where you are concerned.โ
Rohan openly studied the duchess for a moment, like she was a puzzle he hadnโt quite solvedโand didnโt particularly enjoy solving. โAs to your question, Mr. Hawthorne,โ the Factotum said, his gaze still locked on Zella, โAvery Grambs has been returned to her rather overzealous bodyguardโa touching reunion, I assure you.โ With a flourish, Rohan held the key up once more. He hopped onto the stone windowsill โThe Game will begin anew,โ he announced, โwith the striking of the bell.โ
The Factotum smiled. Jameson did not trust that smile.
โI sincerely hope,โ Rohan continued, jumping down and making his way to the door, โthat none of you are afraid of heights.โ
Time slowed to a crawl. Jameson turned his attention first to what Rohan had said, then to searching the room from top to bottom again, and finally to the silver chest in his hands. Elaborate, raised swirls marked the top and sides of the box, fine metal fashioned to look like twisting, twirling ropes.
โYou may as well set that down, young man,โ Katharine told Jameson. She walked toward him and stopped at the table, placing her palms flat on its surface. โYou have no use for it as of yet.โ
Nice try, Katharine.ย Jameson gave the older woman a look. โYou didnโt know my grandfather, did you?โ
Brilliant, mercenary Tobias Hawthorne had raised no fools. Jameson might have lost the key, he might have lost his partner in the Game, but he had the chest, and as long as he held on to it, no one was winning but him.
โThis,โ Jameson said, his voice low and intense, โis mine.โ
โYou earned it.โ Katharine let her hands fall away from the table. โThatโs what youโre telling yourself, is it not?โ She let the question hang in the air.
I did earn it, Jameson thought.
โBut reallyโฆโ Katharineโs shrewd eyes locked on to his face. Jameson almost felt like he was back in the old manโs office, his every effort judged. โWhen have you, Jameson Hawthorne, ever earned anything? Even now, you defend yourself by throwing around your grandfatherโs name. What are you without him?โ Katharine made a noise like a hmmm, but sharper somehow, more pointed. โWithout your heiress?โ
Compared to your brothersโJameson couldnโt shake the memoryโ
your mind is ordinary.
โIn my experience,โ Katharine continued, โthird-born sons areโฆ disappointing. Always have something to prove, never truly manage to prove it.โ
โThatโs enough, Katharine,โ Branford told her sharply.
The silver-haired woman paid him no heed. โWhat are you without the
Hawthorne name?โ she asked Jameson, each word a slice of the knife. โWithout the money. Without borrowing against someone elseโs power. Without Avery Grambs by your side.โ
Ordinary.ย Jameson pushed back against that word and all it entailed. He knew Katharine was trying to manipulate him, get under his skin, bait him into making a mistake.
โI saidย enough, Katharine.โ Branford crossed the room to stand right in front of her.
Whatever else the viscount said to her, Jameson couldnโt hear it as he held tight to the chest heโd retrieved, his one advantage in the Game going forward. Jameson Winchester Hawthorne wasnโt giving that up. He wasnโt giving up, period.
What are you without the Hawthorne name?
He wasnโt Grayson, who could command respect as easily as he could breathe, who was Averyโs right hand at her new foundation, who had pretty much been born with purpose. He wasnโt Xander, who turned napkin doodles into patents and thought so far outside the box that sometimes he couldnโt evenย seeย the box. Jameson wasnโt even Nash, whoโd spent most of his adult life pretending his last name wasnโt Hawthorne and gotten by just fine.
The truth, Jameson, is that you are indeed intelligent.ย But what had he done with his gap year? What had he ever really done, period, that was his? Not Averyโs. Not his grandfatherโs.ย His.
Do great things.ย Jameson had spent his entire life knowing that if he wanted to be extraordinary, he had to want it more. He had to be willing to risk more.
Third-born sons areโฆ disappointing.
Jameson banished that thought, banished every memory of coming in secondโor third or fourth. He breathed in a ragged breath, then a steady one. He kept right on breathing.
And then the bell rang.