Eventually, the car slowed to a stop. Eventually, reality crashed down around us. Oren was there, with a team in tow.ย Uh-oh.
โYou and I,โ my head of security told Jameson the second we exited the car, โare going to be having a little talk.โ
โIโm a big girl,โ I said, eyeing the backup Oren had brought with him. โIf you want to yell at someone, yell at me.โ
Oren didnโt yell. He did personally deposit me back in my room and indicate that we would โtalkโ in the morning. Based on his tone, I wasnโt entirely sure that I would survive aย talkย with Oren unscathed.
I barely slept that night, my brain a mess of electrical impulses that wouldnโtโcouldnโtโstop firing. I still had no idea what to make of the names highlighted in the Red Will, if they really were a reference to the boysโ fathers, or if Tobias Hawthorne had chosen his grandsonsโ middle names for a different reason altogether.
All I knew was that Skye had been right. Jameson was hungry.ย And so am I.ย But I could also hear Skye telling me that I didnโt matter, that I was no Emily.
When I did fall asleep that night, I dreamed of a teenage girl. She was a shadow, a silhouette, a ghost, a queen. And no matter how fast I ran, down one corridor after another, I could never catch up to her.
My phone rang before dawn. Groggy and in a mood, I grabbed for it with every intention of launching it through the closest window, then realized who was calling.
โMax, itโs five thirty in the morning.โ
โThree thirty my time. Where did you get that car?โ Max didnโt sound even remotely sleepy.
โA room full of cars?โ I replied apologetically, and then sleep cleared from my brain enough for me to process the implications of her question.
โHow did you know about the car?โ
โAerial photo,โ Max replied. โTaken from a helicopter, and what do you meanย a room full of cars? Exactly how big is this room?โ
โI donโt know.โ I groaned and rolled over in bed. Of course the paparazzi had caught me out with Jameson. I didnโt even want to know what the gossip rags were saying.
โEqually important,โ Max continued, โare you having a torrid affair with Jameson Hawthorne and should I plan for a spring wedding?โ
โNo.โ I sat up in bed. โItโs not like that.โ โBull fox-faxing ship.โ
โI have to live with these people,โ I told Max. โFor a year. They already have enough reasons to hate me.โ I wasnโt thinking about Skye or Zara or Xander or Nash when I said that. I was thinking about Grayson. Silver- eyed, suit-wearing, threat-issuing Grayson. โGetting involved with Jameson would just be throwing gasoline on the fire.โ
โAnd what a lovely fire it would be,โ Max murmured.
She was, without question, a bad influence. โI canโt,โ I reiterated. โAnd besidesโฆ there was a girl.โ I thought back to my dream and wondered if Jameson had taken Emily driving, if she had ever played one of Tobias Hawthorneโs games. โShe died.โ
โBack the fax up there. What do you mean, sheย died? How?โ โI donโt know.โ
โHow can you not know?โ
I pulled my comforter tight around me. โHer name was Emily. Do you know how many people named Emily there are in the world?โ
โIs he still hung up on her?โ Max asked. She was talking about Jameson, but my brain went back to that moment when Iโd said Emilyโs name to Grayson. It had gutted him. Destroyed him.
There was a rap at my door. โMax, I have to go.โ
Oren spent more than an hour going over security protocols with me. He indicated that he would be happy to do the same thing, every morning at dawn, until it stuck.
โPoint taken,โ I told him. โIโll be good.โ
โNo you wonโt.โ He gave me a look. โBut Iโll be better.โ
My second dayโand the start of my first full weekโat private school shaped up much like the week before. People did their best not to stare at me. Jameson avoided me. I avoided Thea. I wondered what gossip Jameson thought we would provoke if we were seen together, wondered if there had been whispers when Emily died.
I wonderedย howย sheโd died.
Youโre not a player.ย Nashโs words of caution came back to me, again and again, every time I caught sight of Jameson in the halls.ย Youโre the glass ballerinaโor the knife.
โI heard that you have a need for speed.โ Xander pounced on me outside the physics lab. He was clearly in high spirits. โGod bless the paparazzi, am I right? I also heard that you had a very special chat with my mother.โ
I wasnโt sure if he was pumping me for information or commiserating. โYour mother is something else,โ I said.
โSkye is a complicated woman.โ Xander nodded sagely. โBut she taught me how to read tarot and moisturize my cuticles, so who am I to complain?โ
Skye wasnโt the one whoโd forged them, pushed them, set them to challenges, expected the impossible. She wasnโt the one whoโd made themย magic.
โYour brothers all got the same letter from your grandfather,โ I told Xander, examining his reaction.
โDid they now?โ
I narrowed my eyes slightly. โI know that you got it, too.โ
โMaybe I did,โ Xander admitted cheerily. โBut hypothetically, if I had, and if I hypothetically were playing this game and wanted, just this onceโ and just hypotheticallyโto winโฆโ He shrugged. โIโd want to do it my way.โ
โDoes your way involve robots and scones?โ
โWhat doesnโt?โ Grinning, Xander nudged me into the lab. Like everything at Country Day, it looked like a million dollarsโfiguratively. Probably more than a million dollars, literally. Curved lab tables circled the
room. Floor-to-ceiling windows had replaced three of the four walls. There was colored writing on the windowsโcalculations in different handwritings, like scratch paper was just so passรฉ. Each lab table came complete with a large monitor and a digital whiteboard. And that wasnโt even touching on the size of the microscopes.
I felt like Iโd just walked into NASA.
There were only two free seats. One was next to Thea. The other was as far away from Thea as you could get, next to the girl Iโd seen in the archive. Her dark red hair was pulled into a loose ponytail at the nape of her neck. Her coloring was stop-and-stare strikingโhairย thatย red, skinย thatย paleโbut her eyes were downcast.
Thea met my gaze and gestured imperiously toward the seat next to her.
I glanced back toward the red-haired girl.
โWhatโs her story?โ I asked Xander. No one was talking to her. No one was looking at her. She was one of the most beautiful people Iโd ever seen, and she might as well have been invisible.
Wallpaper.
โHer storyโโXander sighedโโinvolves star-crossed love, fake dating, heartbreak, tragedy, twisted familial relationships, penance, and a hero for the ages.โ
I gave him a look. โAre you serious?โ
โYou should know by now,โ Xander replied lightly, โIโm not the serious Hawthorne.โ
He plopped down in the seat next to Thea, leaving me to make my way toward the red-haired girl. She proved to be a decent lab partner: quiet, focused, and able to calculate almost anything in her head. The entire time we worked in tandem, she didnโt say a single word to me.
โIโm Avery,โ I said, once weโd finished and it became clear that she still wasnโt going to introduce herself.
โRebecca.โ Her voice was soft. โLaughlin.โ She saw the shift in my expression when she said her last name and confirmed what I was thinking. โMy grandparents work at Hawthorne House.โ
Her grandparentsย ranย Hawthorne House, and neither one of them had seemed overly enthused about the prospect of working for me. I wondered if that was why Iโd gotten the silent treatment from Rebecca.
Sheโs not talking to anyone else, either.
โHas someone shown you how to turn in assignments on your tablet?โ Rebecca asked beside me. The question was tentative, like she fully expected to be slapped down. I tried to wrap my mind around the fact that someone that beautiful could be tentative about anything.
Everything.
โNo,โ I said. โCould you?โ
Rebecca demonstrated, uploading her results with a few clicks on the touch screen. A moment later, her tablet returned to its main screen. She had a photo as her wallpaper. In it, Rebecca looked off to the side, while another, amber-haired girl laughed directly into the camera. They both had wreaths of flowers on their heads, and they had the same eyes.
The other girl wasnโt any more beautiful than Rebeccaโand probably lessโbut somehow, it was impossible to look away from her.
โIs that your sister?โ I asked.
โWas.โ Rebecca closed the cover on her tablet. โShe died.โ
My ears roared, and I knew, then, exactly who I was looking at. I felt, on some level, like Iโd known it from the moment Iโd seen her. โEmily?โ
Rebeccaโs emerald eyes caught on mine. I panicked, thinking that I should have said something else.ย Iโm sorry for your lossโor something.
But Rebecca didnโt seem to find my response odd or off-putting. All she said, pulling her tablet into her lap, was โShe would have been very interested to meet you.โ