Iย thought you said your firm had this locked down.โ Oren gave Alisaย a look. She scowled back at him, made three phone calls in quick succession
โtwo of them in Spanishโand then turned back to my head of security. โThe leak didnโt come from us.โ Her eyes darted toward Libby. โIt came from your boyfriend.โ
Libbyโs answer was barely more than a whisper. โMy ex.โ
โIโm sorry.โ Libby had apologized at least a dozen times. Sheโd told Drake everythingโabout the will, the conditions on my inheritance, where we were staying.ย Everything.ย I knew her well enough to know why. He would have been angry that sheโd taken off. She would have tried to pacify him. And the moment sheโd told him about the money, he would have demanded to tag along. He would have started making plans to spend the Hawthorne money. And Libby, God bless her, would have told him that it wasnโt theirs to spend, that it wasnโtย his.
He hit her. She left him. He went to the press.ย And now they were here.
A horde descended on us as Oren led me out a side door. โThere she is!โ a voice yelled.
โAvery!โ
โAvery, over here!โ
โAvery, how does it feel to be the richest teenager in America?โ โHow does it feel to be the worldโs youngest billionaire?โ โHow did you know Tobias Hawthorne?โ
โIs it true that youโre Tobias Hawthorneโs illegitimate daughter?โ
I was shuffled into an SUV. The door closed, dulling the roar of the reportersโ questions. Exactly halfway through our drive, I got a textโnot
from Max. From an unknown number.
I opened it and saw a screenshot of a news headline.ย Avery Grambs: Who Is the Hawthorne Heiress?
A short message accompanied the picture.
Hey, Mystery Girl. Youโre officially famous.
There were more paparazzi outside the gates of Hawthorne House, but once we pulled past them, the rest of the world faded away. There was no welcome party. No Jameson. No Grayson. No Hawthornes of any kind. I reached for the massive front doorโlocked. Alisa disappeared around the back of the house. When she finally reappeared, there was a pained expression on her face. She handed me a large envelope.
โLegally,โ she said, โthe Hawthorne family is required to provide you with keys. Practically speakingโฆโ She narrowed her eyes. โThe Hawthorne family is a pain in the ass.โ
โThat a legal term?โ Oren asked dryly.
I ripped open the envelope and found that the Hawthorne family had indeed provided me with keysโsomewhere in the neighborhood of a hundred of them.
โAny idea which one of these goes to the front door?โ I asked. They werenโt normal keys. They were oversized and ornately made. They all looked like antiques, and each key was distinctโdifferent designs, different metals, different lengths and sizes.
โYouโll figure it out,โ someone said.
My gaze jerked upward, and I found myself staring at an intercom.
โCut the games, Jameson,โ Alisa ordered. โThis isnโt nearly as cute as you all think it is.โ
No reply.
โJameson?โ Alisa tried again.
Silence, and then: โI have faith in you, M.G.โ
The intercom cut off, and Alisa blew out a long, frustrated breath. โGod save me from Hawthornes.โ
โM.G.?โ Libby asked, bewildered.
โMystery Girl,โ I clarified. โFrom what Iโve gathered, thatโs Jameson
Hawthorneโs idea of a nickname.โ I turned my attention to the ring of keys in my hand. The obvious solution was to try them all. Assuming one of these keys opened the front door, Iโd get lucky eventually. But luck didnโt feel like enough. I was already the luckiest girl in the world.
Some part of me wanted to deserve it.
I flipped through the keys, inspecting the designs on the handles.ย An apple. A snake. A pattern of swirls reminiscent of water.ย There were keys for each letter of the alphabet, in fancy, old-fashioned script. There were keys with numbers and keys with shapes, one with a mermaid and four different keys featuring eyes.
โWell?โ Alisa said abruptly. โDo you want me to make a phone call?โ โNo.โ I turned my attention from the keys to the door. The design was
simple, geometricโnot a match for anything on any of the keys Iโd looked at so far.ย That would be too easy, I thought.ย Too simple.ย A second later, a parallel thought followed.ย Not simple enough.
Iโd learned this much playing chess: The more complicated a personโs strategy seemed, the less likely an opponent was to look for simple answers. If you could keep someone looking at your knight, you could take them with a pawn.ย Look past the details. Past the complications.ย I shifted my focus from the handles of the keys to the part that actually went into the lock. Though the keys differed in size overall, the lock end was sized similarly from key to key.
Not justย sizedย similarly, I realized, looking at two of the keys side by side. The patternโthe mechanism that actually turned the lockโwas identical between the two. I moved on to a third key.ย The same. I began working my way through the ring, comparing each key to the next, one by one.ย Same. Same. Same.
There werenโt a hundred keys on this ring. The faster I flipped through them, the surer I was. There were twoโdozens of copies of the wrong key, dressed up to look different from each other, and thenโฆ
โThis one.โ I finally hit a key with a different pattern from the others. The intercom crackled, but if Jameson was still on the other side, he didnโt say a word. I moved to put the key in the lock, and adrenaline jolted through my veins when it turned.
Eureka.
โHow did you know which key to use?โ Libby asked me.
The answer came from the intercom. โSometimes,โ Jameson Hawthorne said, sounding strangely contemplative, โthings that appear very different on the surface are actually exactly the same at their core.โ