My fingers itched to pull out my phone and start taking pictures, but I resisted. Libby had no such compunctions.
โMademoiselleโฆโ Xander side-stepped to block one of Libbyโs shots. โMay I ask: What are your feelings on roller coasters?โ
I thought Libbyโs eyes might actually pop out of her head. โThis place has a roller coaster?โ
Xander grinned. โNot exactly.โ The next thing I knew, the โbabyโ of the Hawthorne familyโwho was six foot three if he was an inchโwas pulling my sister toward the back of the foyer.
I was dumbfounded.ย How can a house โnot exactlyโ have a roller coaster?ย Beside me, Grayson snorted. I caught him looking at me and narrowed my eyes. โWhat?โ
โNothing,โ Grayson said, the tilt of his lips suggesting otherwise. โItโs justโฆ you have a very expressive face.โ
No. I didnโt. Libby was always saying that I was hard to read. My poker face had single-handedly been funding Harryโs breakfasts for months. I wasnโt expressive.
There was nothing remarkable about my face.
โI apologize for Xander,โ Grayson commented. โHe tends not to buy into such antiquated notions as thinking before one speaks and sitting still for more than three consecutive seconds.โ He looked down. โHeโs the best of us, even on his worst days.โ
โMs. Ortega said there were four of you.โ I couldnโt help myself. I wanted to know more about this family. Aboutย him.ย โFour grandsons, I mean.โ
โI have three brothers,โ Grayson told me. โSame mother, different fathers. Our aunt Zara doesnโt have any children.โ He looked past me. โAnd on the topic of my relations, I feel as though I should issue a second
apology, in advance.โ
โGray, darling!โ A woman swept up to us in a swirl of fabric and motion. Once her flowy shirt had settled around her, I tried to peg her age. Older than thirty, younger than fifty. Beyond that, I couldnโt tell. โTheyโre ready for us in the Great Room,โ she told Grayson. โOr they will be shortly. Whereโs your brother?โ
โSpecificity, Mother.โ
The woman rolled her eyes. โDonโt you โMotherโ me, Grayson Hawthorne.โ She turned to me. โYouโd think he was born wearing that suit,โ she said with the air of someone confiding a great secret, โbut Gray was my little streaker. A real free spirit. We couldnโt keep clothes on him at all, really, until he was four. Frankly, I didnโt even try.โ She paused and assessed me without bothering to hide what she was doing. โYou must be Ava.โ
โAvery,โ Grayson corrected. If he felt any embarrassment about his purported past as a toddler nudist, he didnโt show it. โHer name is Avery, Mother.โ
The woman sighed but also smiled, like it was impossible for her to look at her son and not find herself utterly delighted in his presence. โI always swore my children would call me by my first name,โ she told me. โIโd raise them as my equals, you know? But then, I always imagined having girls. Four boys laterโฆโ She gave the worldโs most elegant shrug.
Objectively, Graysonโs mother was over the top. But subjectively? She was infectious.
โDo you mind if I ask, dear, when is your birthday?โ
The question took me by surprise. I had a mouth. It was fully functioning. But I couldnโt keep up with her enough to reply. She put a hand on my cheek. โScorpio? Or Capricorn? Not a Pisces, clearlyโโ
โMother,โ Grayson said, and then he corrected himself.ย โSkye.โ
It took me a moment to realize that must be her first name, and that heโd used it to humor her in an attempt to get her to stop astrologically cross- examining me.
โGraysonโs a good boy,โ Skye told me. โToo good.โ Then she winked at me. โWeโll talk.โ
โI doubt Ms. Grambs plans to stay long enough for a fireside chatโor a tarot reading.โ A second woman, Skyeโs age or a little older, inserted herself
into our conversation. If Skye was flowy fabric and oversharing, this woman was pencil-skirts and pearls.
โIโm Zara Hawthorne-Calligaris.โ She eyed me, the expression on her face as austere as her name. โDo you mind if I askโhow did you know my father?โ
Silence descended on the cavernous foyer. I swallowed. โI didnโt.โ Beside me, I could feel Grayson staring again. After a small eternity,
Zara offered me a tight smile. โWell, we appreciate your presence. Itโs been a trying time these past few weeks, as Iโm sure you can imagine.โ
These past few weeks,ย I filled in,ย when no one could get ahold of me.
โZara?โ A man with slicked-back hair interrupted us, slipping an arm around her waist. โMr. Ortega would like a word.โ The man, who I took to be Zaraโs husband, didnโt spare so much as a glance for me.
Skye made up for itโand then some. โMy sister โhas wordsโ with people,โ she commented. โI have conversations. Lovely conversations. Quite frankly, thatโs how I ended up with four sons. Wonderful,ย intimateย conversations with four fascinating menโฆโ
โI will pay you to stop right there,โ Grayson said, a pained expression on his face.
Skye patted her sonโs cheek. โBribe. Threaten. Buy out. You couldnโt be more Hawthorne, darling, if you tried.โ She gave me a knowing smile. โThatโs why we call him the heir apparent.โ
There was something in Skyeโs voice, something about Graysonโs expression when his mother said the phraseย heir apparent, that made me think I had greatly underestimated just how much the Hawthorne family wanted that will read.
They donโt know whatโs in the will, either.ย I suddenly felt like Iโd stepped into an arena, utterly unaware of the rules of the game.
โNow,โ Skye said, looping one arm around me and one around Grayson, โwhy donโt we make our way to the Great Room?โ