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Chapter no 27

The Inheritance Games (The Inheritance Games, 1)

We could be making something out of nothing,โ€ I said hours later. Jameson and I stood in the Hawthorne House library, looking up at the shelves circling the room, filled with books from eighteen-foot ceiling to floor.

โ€œHawthorne-born or Hawthorne-made, thereโ€™s always something to be played.โ€ Jameson spoke with a singsong rhythm, like a child skipping rope. But when he brought his gaze down from the shelves to me, there was nothing childlike in his expression. โ€œEverything is something in Hawthorne House.โ€

Everything,ย I thought.ย And everyone.

โ€œDo you know how many times in my life one of my grandfatherโ€™s puzzles has sent me to this room?โ€ Jameson turned slowly in a circle. โ€œHeโ€™s probably rolling in his grave that it took me this long to see it.โ€

โ€œWhat do you think weโ€™re looking for?โ€ I asked.

โ€œWhat doย youย think weโ€™re looking for, Heiress?โ€ Jameson had a way of making everything sound like it was either a challenge or an invitation.

Or both.

Focus, I told myself. I was here because I wanted answers at least as much as the boy beside me did. โ€œIf the clue isย a book by its cover,โ€ I said, turning the riddle over in my mind โ€œthen Iโ€™d guess that weโ€™re looking for either a book or a coverโ€”or maybe a mismatch between the two?โ€

โ€œA book that doesnโ€™t match its cover?โ€ Jamesonโ€™s expression gave no hint of what he thought of that suggestion.

โ€œI could be wrong.โ€

Jamesonโ€™s lips twistedโ€”not quite a smile, not quite a smirk. โ€œEveryone is a little wrong sometimes, Heiress.โ€

An invitationโ€”and a challenge. I had no intention of beingย a little wrongโ€”not with him. The sooner my body remembered that, the better. I

physically turned away from Jameson to do a three-sixty, slowly taking in the scope of the room. Just looking up at the shelves felt like standing at the edge of the Grand Canyon. We were completely encircled by books, going up two stories. โ€œThere must be thousands of books in here.โ€ Given how big the library was, given how high the shelves went up, if weย wereย looking for a book mismatched to its cover sleeveโ€ฆ

โ€œThis could take hours,โ€ I said.

Jameson smiledโ€”with teeth this time. โ€œDonโ€™t be ridiculous, Heiress. It could take days.โ€

 

 

We worked in silence. Neither one of us left for dinner. A thrill ran through my body each time I realized that I was holding a first edition. Every once in a while, Iโ€™d flip a book open to find it signed. Stephen King. J. K. Rowling. Toni Morrison. Eventually, I managed to stop pausing in awe at what I held in my hands. I lost track of time, lost track of everything except the rhythm of pulling books off shelves and covers off books, replacing the cover, replacing the book. I could hear Jameson working. I could feel him in the room, as we moved through our respective shelves, closer and closer to each other. Heโ€™d taken the upper level. I was working down below. Finally, I glanced up to see him right on top of me.

โ€œWhat if weโ€™re wasting our time?โ€ I asked. My question echoed through the room.

โ€œTime is money, Heiress. You have plenty to waste.โ€ โ€œStop calling me that.โ€

โ€œI have to call you something, and you didnโ€™t seem to appreciate Mystery Girl or the abbreviation thereof.โ€

It was on the tip of my tongue to point out that I didnโ€™t call him anything. I hadnโ€™t said his name once since entering this room. But somehow, instead of offering that retort, I looked up at him, and a different question came out of my mouth instead.

โ€œWhat did you mean in the car today, when you said that the last thing I needed was for anyone to see us together?โ€

I could hear him taking books off shelves and covers off books and replacing them bothโ€”again and againโ€”before I got a response. โ€œYou spent

the day at the fine institution that is Heights Country Day,โ€ he said. โ€œWhat do you think I meant?โ€

He always had to be the one asking questions, always had to turn everything around.

โ€œDonโ€™t tell me,โ€ Jameson murmured up above, โ€œthat you didnโ€™t hear any whispers.โ€

I froze, thinking about what I had heard. โ€œI met a girl.โ€ I made myself continue working my way through the shelfโ€”book off, cover off, cover on, book reshelved. โ€œThea.โ€

Jameson snorted. โ€œThea isnโ€™t a girl. Sheโ€™s a whirlwind wrapped in a hurricane wrapped in steelโ€”and every girl in that school follows her lead, which means Iโ€™m persona non grata and have been for a year.โ€ He paused. โ€œWhat did Thea say to you?โ€ Jamesonโ€™s attempt to sound casual might have fooled me if Iโ€™d been looking at his face, but without the expression to sell it, I heard a telltale note underneath.ย He cares.

Suddenly, I wished I hadnโ€™t brought Thea up. Sowing discord was probably her goal.

โ€œAvery?โ€

Jamesonโ€™s use of my given name confirmed for me that he didnโ€™t just want a response; he needed one.

โ€œThea kept talking about this house,โ€ I said carefully. โ€œAbout what it must be like for me to live here.โ€ That was trueโ€”or true enough. โ€œAbout all of you.โ€

โ€œIs it still a lie,โ€ Jameson asked loftily, โ€œif youโ€™re masking what matters, but what youโ€™re saying is technically true?โ€

He wanted the truth.

โ€œThea said there was a girl and that she died.โ€ I spoke like I was ripping off a bandage, too fast to second-guess what I was saying.

Overhead, the rhythm of Jamesonโ€™s work slowed. I counted five seconds of utter silence before he spoke. โ€œHer name was Emily.โ€

I knew, though I couldnโ€™t pinpoint how, that he wouldnโ€™t have said it if Iโ€™d been able to see his face.

โ€œHer name was Emily,โ€ he repeated. โ€œAnd she wasnโ€™t just a girl.โ€

A breath caught in my throat. I forced it out and kept checking books, because I didnโ€™t want him to know how much Iโ€™d heard in his tone.ย Emily mattered to him. She still matters to him.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ I saidโ€”sorry for bringing it up and sorry she was gone. โ€œWe should call it a night.โ€ It was late, and I didnโ€™t trust myself not to say something else I might regret.

Jamesonโ€™s working rhythm stopped overhead and was replaced with the sound of footsteps as he made his way to and down the wrought-iron spiral stairs. He positioned himself between me and the exit. โ€œSame time tomorrow?โ€

It suddenly felt imperative that I not let myself look at his deep green eyes. โ€œWeโ€™re making good progress,โ€ I said, forcing myself to head for the door. โ€œEven if we donโ€™t find a way to shortcut the process, we should be able to make it through all the shelves within the week.โ€

Jameson leaned toward me as I passed. โ€œDonโ€™t hate me,โ€ he said softly.

Why would I hate you?ย I felt my pulse jump in my throat. Because of what heโ€™d just said, or because of how close he was to me?

โ€œThereโ€™s a slight chance that we might not be done within the week.โ€ โ€œWhy not?โ€ I asked, forgetting to avoid looking at him.

He brought his lips right next to my ear. โ€œThis isnโ€™t the only library in Hawthorne House.โ€

โ€Œ

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