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Chapter no 22

The Inheritance Games (The Inheritance Games, 1)

Jameson was gone in a blink. He disappeared into a crowd of burgundy blazers and shiny hair, and I was left still buckled into my seat, unable to move.

โ€œItโ€™s just a school,โ€ Oren told me. โ€œTheyโ€™re just kids.โ€

Rich kids. Kids whose baseline for normal was probably โ€œjustโ€ being the child of a brain surgeon or hotshot lawyer. When they thoughtย college, they were probably talking about Harvard or Yale. And there I was, wearing a pleated plaid skirt and a burgundy blazer, complete with a navy crest embossed with Latin words I didnโ€™t know how to read.

I grabbed my new phone and sent a message to Max.ย This is Avery. New number. Call me.

Glancing at the front seat again, I forced my hand to the door. It wasnโ€™t Orenโ€™s job to coddle me. It was his job to protect meโ€”and not from the stares I fully expected the moment I stepped out of this car.

โ€œDo I meet you back here at the end of the day?โ€ I asked. โ€œIโ€™ll be here.โ€

I waited a beat, in case Oren had any other instructions, and then I opened the door. โ€œThanks for the ride.โ€

 

 

Nobody was staring at me. Nobody was whispering. In fact, as I walked toward the twin archways marking the entrance to the main building, I got the distinct feeling that the lack of response was deliberate. Not-staring. Not-talking. Just the lightest of glances, every few steps. Whenever I looked at anyone, they looked away.

I told myself that they were probably tryingย notย to make a big deal of my arrival, that this was what discretion looked likeโ€”but it still felt like Iโ€™d

wandered into a ballroom where everyone else was dancing a complicated waltz, twisting, spinning around me like I wasnโ€™t even there.

As I closed the distance to the archways, a girl with long black hair bucked the trend of ignoring me like a Thoroughbred shaking off an inferior rider. She watched me intently, and one by one, the girls around her did the same.

When I reached them, the black-haired girl stepped away from the group

โ€”toward me.

โ€œIโ€™m Thea,โ€ she said, smiling. โ€œYou must be Avery.โ€ Her voice was perfectly pleasantโ€”borderline musical, like a siren who knew with the least bit of effort she could sing sailors into the sea. โ€œWhy donโ€™t I show you to the office?โ€

 

 

โ€œThe headmaster is Dr. McGowan. Sheโ€™s got a PhD from Princeton. Sheโ€™ll keep you in her office for at least a half hour, talking aboutย opportunitiesย andย traditions. If she offers you coffee, take itโ€”her own personal roast, to die for.โ€ Thea seemed well aware of the fact that we were both getting plenty of stares now. She also seemed to be enjoying it. โ€œWhen Dr. Mac gives you your schedule, make sure you have time for lunch every day. Country Day uses what they call modular scheduling, which means we operate on a six-day cycle, even though we only have school five days a week. Classes meet anywhere from three to five times a cycle, so if youโ€™re not careful, you can end up in class straight through lunch on A day and B day but have practically no classes on C or F.โ€

โ€œOkay.โ€ My head was spinning, but I forced out one more word. โ€œThanks.โ€

โ€œPeople at this school are like fairies in Celtic mythology,โ€ Thea said lightly. โ€œYou shouldnโ€™t thank us unless you want to owe us a boon.โ€

I wasnโ€™t sure how to reply to that, so I said nothing. Thea didnโ€™t seem to take offense. As she led me down a long hallway with old class portraits lining the walls, she filled the silence. โ€œWeโ€™re not so bad, really. Most of us anyway. As long as youโ€™re with me, youโ€™ll be fine.โ€

That rankled. โ€œIโ€™ll be fine regardless,โ€ I told her.

โ€œClearly,โ€ Thea said emphatically. That was a reference to the money. It

had to be. Didnโ€™t it? Theaโ€™s dark eyes roved over mine. โ€œIt must be hard,โ€ she said, studying my response with an intensity that her smile did absolutely nothing to hide, โ€œliving in that house with those boys.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s fine,โ€ I said.

โ€œOh, honey.โ€ Thea shook her head. โ€œIf thereโ€™s one thing the Hawthorne family isnโ€™t, itโ€™s fine. They were a twisted, broken mess before you got here, and theyโ€™ll be a twisted, broken mess once youโ€™re gone.โ€

Gone.ย Where exactly did Thea think I was going?

Weโ€™d reached the end of the hallway now and the door to the headmasterโ€™s office. It opened, and four boys poured out in single file. All four of them were bleeding. All four were smiling. Xander was the fourth. He saw meโ€”and then he saw who I was with.

โ€œThea,โ€ he said.

She gave him a too-sweet smile, then lifted a hand to his faceโ€”or more specifically, to his bloodied lip. โ€œXander. Looks like you lost.โ€

โ€œThere are no losers in Robot Battle Death Match Fight Club,โ€ Xander said stoically. โ€œThere are only winners and people whose robots sort of explode.โ€

I thought about Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s officeโ€”about the patents Iโ€™d seen on the walls. What kind of geniusย wasย Xander Hawthorne? And was he missing anย eyebrow?

Thea proceeded as if that was exactly nothing to remark upon. โ€œI was just showing Avery to the office and giving her some insider tips on surviving Country Day.โ€

โ€œCharming!โ€ Xander declared. โ€œAvery, did the ever-delightful Thea Calligaris happen to mention that her uncle is married to my aunt?โ€

Zaraโ€™s last name was Hawthorne-Calligaris.

โ€œI hear Zara and your uncle are looking for ways to challenge the will.โ€ Xander gave every appearance of talking to Thea, but I got the distinct feeling that he was really issuing a warning to me.

Donโ€™t trust Thea.

Thea gave an elegant little shrug, undaunted. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t know.โ€

โ€Œ

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