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Chapter no 45

The Inheritance Games (The Inheritance Games, 1)

That night, when Alisa called to read me the I-canโ€™t-do-my-job-if-you- wonโ€™t-let-me riot act, she didnโ€™t allow me to get a word in edgewise. After sheโ€™d said a terse good-bye, which seemed to promise more retribution to come, I sat down at my computer.

โ€œHow bad is it?โ€ I said out loud. The answer, it turned out, was leading- story-on-every-news-site bad.

Hawthorne Heiress Keeping Secrets. What Does Avery Grambs Know?

I barely recognized myself in the pictures the paparazzi had taken. The girl in the photos was pretty and full of righteous fury. She looked as arrogant and dangerous as a Hawthorne.

I didnโ€™t feel like that girl.

I fully expected to get a text from Max, demanding to know what was going on, but even when I messaged her, she didnโ€™t message back. I went to close my laptop but then stopped, because I remembered telling Max that the reason I had no idea what had happened to Emily was thatย Emilyย was such a common name. I hadnโ€™t been able to search for her before.

But I knew her last name now. โ€œEmily Laughlin,โ€ I said out loud. I typed her name into the search field, then addedย Heights Country Day Schoolย to narrow the results. My finger hovered over the return key. After a long moment, I pulled the trigger.

I hit Enter.

An obituary came up, but that was it. No news coverage. No articles suggesting that a local golden girl had died by suspicious cause. No mention of Grayson or Jameson Hawthorne.

There was a picture with the obituary. Emily was smiling this time instead of laughing, and my brain soaked up all the details Iโ€™d missed before. Her hair was layered, and she wore it long. The ends curved this

way and that, but the rest was silky straight. Her eyes were too big for her face. The shape of her upper lip made me think of a heart. She had a scattering of freckles.

Thump. Thump. Thump.

My head shot up at the noise, and I slammed my laptop closed. The last thing I wanted was anyone knowing what Iโ€™d just looked up.

Thump.ย This time, I did more than just register the sound. I flipped my bedside lamp on, swung my feet to the floor, and walked toward it. By the time I ended up at the fireplace, I was fairly certain who was on the other side.

โ€œDo you ever use doors?โ€ I asked Jameson, once Iโ€™d utilized the candlestick to open the passage.

Jameson cocked an eyebrow and cocked his head. โ€œDo youย wantย me to use the door?โ€

I felt like what he was really asking was if I wanted him to be normal. I remembered sitting beside him at high speed and thought about the climbing wallโ€”and his hand reaching out to catch mine.

โ€œI saw your press conference.โ€ Jameson had that expression on his face again, the one that made me feel like we were playing chess and heโ€™d just made a move designed to be seen as a challenge.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t so much a press conference as a very bad idea,โ€ I admitted wryly.

โ€œHave I ever told you,โ€ Jameson murmured, staring at me in a way that had to be intentional, โ€œthat Iโ€™m a sucker for bad ideas?โ€

When heโ€™d shown up here, Iโ€™d felt like Iโ€™d summoned him by searching for Emilyโ€™s name, but now I saw this midnight visit for exactly what it was. Jameson Hawthorne was here, in my bedroom, at night. I was wearing my pajamas, and his body was listing toward mine.

None of this was an accident.

Youโ€™re not a player, kid. Youโ€™re the glass ballerinaโ€”or the knife.

โ€œWhat do you want, Jameson?โ€ My body wanted to lean toward him.

The rational part of me wanted to step back.

โ€œYou lied to the press.โ€ Jameson didnโ€™t look away. He didnโ€™t blink, and neither did I. โ€œWhat you told themโ€ฆ itย wasย a lie, wasnโ€™t it?โ€

โ€œOf course it was.โ€ If Iโ€™d known why Tobias Hawthorne left me his fortune, I wouldnโ€™t have been working side by side with Jameson to figure

it out.

I wouldnโ€™t have lost my breath when Iโ€™d seen that map at the foundation. โ€œItโ€™s hard to tell with you sometimes,โ€ Jameson commented. โ€œYouโ€™re not exactly an open book.โ€ He fixed his gaze somewhere in the vicinity of my

lips. His face inched toward mine.

Never lose your heart to a Hawthorne.

โ€œDonโ€™t touch me,โ€ I said, but even as I stepped back, I could feel somethingโ€”the same something Iโ€™d felt when I brushed up against Grayson back at the foundation.

A thing I had no business feelingโ€”for either of them.

โ€œOur thrill ride last night paid off,โ€ Jameson told me. โ€œGetting out of my own head let me look at the puzzle with new eyes. Ask me what I figured out about our middle names.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t have to,โ€ I told him. โ€œI solved it, too. Blackwood. Westbrook. Davenport. Winchester. Theyโ€™re not just names. Theyโ€™re placesโ€”or at least, the first two are. The Black Wood. The West Brook.โ€ I let myself focus on the puzzle and not the fact that this room was lit only by lamplight and we were standing too close. โ€œIโ€™m not sure about the other two yet, butโ€ฆโ€

โ€œButโ€ฆโ€ Jamesonโ€™s lips curved upward, his teeth flashing. โ€œYouโ€™ll figure it out.โ€ He brought his lips near my ear. โ€œWeย will, Heiress.โ€

There is noย we. Not really. Iโ€™m a means to an end for you.ย I believed that. I did, but somehow what I found myself saying was โ€œFeel like a walk?โ€

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