The next day, I paid a price for sleeping in my car. My whole body ached, and I had to shower after gym, because paper towels in the bathroom at the diner could only go so far. I didnโt have time to dry my hair, so I arrived at my next class sopping wet. It wasnโt my best look, but Iโd gone to school with the same kids my whole life. I was wallpaper.
No one was looking.
โRomeo and Julietย is littered with proverbsโsmall, pithy bits of wisdom that make a statement about the way the world and human nature work.โ My English teacher was young and earnest, and I deeply suspected sheโd had too much coffee. โLetโs take a step back from Shakespeare. Who can give me an example of an everyday proverb?โ
Beggars canโt be choosers, I thought, my head pounding and water droplets dripping down my back.ย Necessity is the mother of invention. If wishes were horses, beggars would ride.
The door to the classroom opened. An office aide waited for the teacher to look at her, then announced loudly enough for the whole class to hear, โAvery Grambs is wanted in the office.โ
I took that to mean that someone had graded my test.
I knew better than to expect an apology, but I also wasnโt expecting Mr. Altman to meet me at his secretaryโs desk, beaming like heโd just had a visit from the Pope. โAvery!โ
An alarm went off in the back of my head, because no one was ever that glad to see me.
โRight this way.โ He opened the door to his office, and I caught sight of a familiar neon-blue ponytail inside.
โLibby?โ I said. She was wearing skull-print scrubs and no makeup, both of which suggested sheโd come straight from work. In the middle of a shift. Orderlies at assisted living facilities couldnโt just walk out in the middle of shifts.
Not unless something was wrong.
โIs Dadโฆโ I couldnโt make myself finish the question.
โYour father is fine.โ The voice that issued that statement didnโt belong to Libby or Principal Altman. My head whipped up, and I looked past my sister. The chair behind the principalโs desk was occupiedโby a guy not much older than me.ย What is going on here?
He was wearing a suit. He looked like the kind of person who should have had an entourage.
โAs of yesterday,โ he continued, his low, rich voice measured and precise, โRicky Grambs was alive, well, and safely passed out in a motel room in Michigan, an hour outside of Detroit.โ
I tried not to stare at himโand failed.ย Light hair. Pale eyes. Features sharp enough to cut rocks.
โHow could you possibly know that?โ I demanded.ย Iย didnโt even know where my deadbeat father was. How could he?
The boy in the suit didnโt answer my question. Instead, he arched an eyebrow. โPrincipal Altman?โ he said. โIf you could give us a moment?โ
The principal opened his mouth, presumably to object to being removed from his own office, but the boyโs eyebrow lifted higher.
โI believe we had an agreement.โ
Altman cleared his throat. โOf course.โ And just like that, he turned and walked out the door. It closed behind him, and I resumed openly staring at the boy whoโd banished him.
โYou asked how I know where you father is.โ His eyes were the same color as his suitโgray, bordering on silver. โIt would be best, for the moment, for you to just assume that I know everything.โ
His voice would have been pleasant to listen to if it werenโt for the words. โA guy who thinks he knows everything,โ I muttered. โThatโs new.โ
โA girl with a razor-sharp tongue,โ he returned, silver eyes focused on mine, the ends of his lips ticking upward.
โWho are you?โ I asked. โAnd what do you want?โย With me, something inside me added.ย What do you want with me?
โAll I want,โ he said, โis to deliver a message.โ For reasons I couldnโt quite pinpoint, my heart started beating faster. โOne that has proven rather difficult to send via traditional means.โ
โThat might be my fault,โ Libby volunteered sheepishly beside me. โWhat might be your fault?โ I turned to look at her, grateful for an
excuse to look away from Gray Eyes and fighting the urge to glance back. โThe first thing you need to know,โ Libby said, as earnestly as anyone
wearing skull-print scrubs had ever said anything, โis that I hadย noย idea the letters were real.โ
โWhat letters?โ I asked. I was the only person in this room who didnโt know what was going on here, and I couldnโt shake the feeling that not knowing was a liability, like standing on train tracks but not knowing which direction the train was coming from.
โThe letters,โ the boy in the suit said, his voice wrapping around me, โthat my grandfatherโs attorneys have been sending, certified mail, to your residence for the better part of three weeks.โ
โI thought they were a scam,โ Libby told me.
โI assure you,โ the boy replied silkily, โthey are not.โ
I knew better than to put any confidence in the assurances of good- looking guys.
โLet me start again.โ He folded his hands on the desk between us, the thumb of his right hand lightly circling the cuff link on his left wrist. โMy name is Grayson Hawthorne. Iโm here on behalf of McNamara, Ortega, and Jones, a Dallas-based law firm representing my grandfatherโs estate.โ Graysonโs pale eyes met mine. โMy grandfather passed away earlier this month.โ A weighty pause. โHis name was Tobias Hawthorne.โ Grayson studied my reactionโor, more accurately, the lack thereof. โDoes that name mean anything to you?โ
The sensation of standing on train tracks was back. โNo,โ I said. โShould it?โ
โMy grandfather was a very wealthy man, Ms. Grambs. And it appears that, along with our family and people who worked for him for years, you have been named in his will.โ
I heard the words but couldnโt process them. โHisย what?โ
โHis will,โ Grayson repeated, a slight smile crossing his lips. โI donโt know what he left you, exactly, but your presence is required at the willโs
reading. Weโve been postponing it for weeks.โ
I was an intelligent person, but Grayson Hawthorne might as well have been speaking Swedish.
โWhy would your grandfather leave anything to me?โ I asked.
Grayson stood. โThatโs the question of the hour, isnโt it?โ He stepped out from behind the desk, and suddenly I knewย exactlyย what direction the train was coming from.
His.
โIโve taken the liberty of making travel arrangements on your behalf.โ This wasnโt an invitation. It was aย summons. โWhat makes you thinkโโ
I started to say, but Libby cut me off. โGreat!โ she said, giving me a healthy side-eye.
Grayson smirked. โIโll give you two a moment.โ His eyes lingered on mine too long for comfort, and then, without another word, he strode out the door.
Libby and I were silent for a full five seconds after he was gone. โDonโt take this the wrong way,โ she whispered finally, โbut I think he might be God.โ
I snorted. โHe certainly thinks so.โ It was easier to ignore the effect heโd had on me now that he was gone. What kind of person had self-assurance that absolute? It was there in every aspect of his posture and word choice, in every interaction. Power was as much a fact of life for this guy as gravity. The world bent to the will of Grayson Hawthorne. What money couldnโt buy him, those eyes probably did.
โStart from the beginning,โ I told Libby. โAnd donโt leave anything out.โ
She fidgeted with the inky-black tips of her blue ponytail. โA couple of weeks ago, we started getting these lettersโaddressed to you, care of me. They said that youโd inherited money, gave us a number to call. I thought they were a scam. Like one of those emails that claims to be from a foreign prince.โ
โWhy would this Tobias Hawthorneโa man Iโve never met, never even heard ofโput me in his will?โ I asked.
โI donโt know,โ Libby said, โbutย thatโโshe gestured in the direction Grayson had goneโโis not a scam. Did youย seeย the way he dealt with Principal Altman? What do you think their agreement was? A bribeโฆ or a
threat?โ
Both.ย Pushing down that response, I pulled out my phone and connected to the schoolโs Wi-Fi. One internet search for Tobias Hawthorne later, the two of us were reading a news headline:ย Noted Philanthropist Dies at 78.
โDo you know whatย philanthropistย means?โ Libby asked me seriously. โIt meansย rich.โ
โIt means someone who gives to charity,โ I corrected her.
โSoโฆย rich.โ Libby gave me a look. โWhat ifย youย are charity? They wouldnโt send this guyโs grandson to get you if heโd just left you a few hundred dollars. We must be talking thousands. You could travel, Avery, or put it toward college, or buy a better car.โ
I could feel my heart starting to beat faster again. โWhy would a total stranger leave me anything?โ I reiterated, resisting the urge to daydream, even for a second, because if I started, I wasnโt sure I could stop.
โMaybe he knew your mom?โ Libby suggested. โI donโt know, but I do know that you need to go to the reading of that will.โ
โI canโt just take off,โ I told her. โNeither can you.โ Weโd both miss work. Iโd miss class. And yetโฆ if nothing else, a trip would get Libby away from Drake, at least temporarily.
And if this is realโฆย It was already getting harderย notย to think about the possibilities.
โMy shifts are covered for the next two days,โ Libby informed me. โI made some calls, and so are yours.โ She reached for my hand. โCome on, Ave. Wouldnโt it be nice to take a trip, just you and me?โ
She squeezed my hand. After a moment, I squeezed back. โWhere exactly is the reading of the will?โ
โTexas!โ Libby grinned. โAnd they didnโt just book our tickets. They booked themย first class.โ