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Chapter no 52

The Inheritance Games (The Inheritance Games, 1)

Iย knew from the map roughly where the Black Wood was. I found Jameson on the outskirts, standing eerily still, like heย couldnโ€™tย move. Without warning, he broke that stillness, punching furiously at a nearby tree, hard and fast, the bark tearing at his hands.

Thea brought up Emily. This is what even the mention of her name does to him.

โ€œJameson!โ€ I was almost to him now. He jerked his head toward me, and I stopped, overwhelmed with the feeling that I shouldnโ€™t have been there, that I had no right to witness any of the Hawthorne boys hurting that much.

The only thing I could think to do was try to make what Iโ€™d just seen matter less. โ€œBroken any fingers lately?โ€ I asked lightly.ย The Pretending It Doesnโ€™t Matter Game.

Jameson was ready and willing to play. He held his hands up, grunting as he bent them at the knuckles. โ€œStill intact.โ€

I dragged my eyes from him and took in our surroundings. The perimeter was so densely wooded that if the trees hadnโ€™t already shed their leaves, no light would have been able to make it to the forest floor.

โ€œWhat are we looking for?โ€ I asked. Maybe he didnโ€™t consider me a real partner in this hunt. Maybe there was no realย weโ€”but he answered.

โ€œYour guess is as good as mine, Heiress.โ€

All around us, bare branches stretched up overhead, skeletal and crooked.

โ€œYou skipped school today to doย something,โ€ I pointed out. โ€œYou have a guess.โ€

Jameson smiled like he couldnโ€™t feel the blood welling up on his hands. โ€œFour middle names. Four locations. Four cluesโ€”carvings, most likely. Symbols, if the clue on the bridge was infinity; numbers, if it was an eight.โ€ I wondered what, if anything, heโ€™d done to clear his mind between last

night and entering the Black Wood.ย Climbing. Racing. Jumping.

Disappearing into the walls.

โ€œDo you know how many trees four acres can hold, Heiress?โ€ Jameson asked jauntily. โ€œTwo hundred, in a healthy forest.โ€

โ€œAnd in the Black Wood?โ€ I prompted, taking first one step toward him, then another.

โ€œAt least twice that.โ€

It was like the library all over again. Like the keys. There had to be a shortcut, a trick we werenโ€™t seeing.

โ€œHere.โ€ Jameson bent down, then placed a roll of glow-in-the-dark duct tape in my hand, letting his fingers brush mine as he did. โ€œIโ€™ve been marking off trees as I check them.โ€

I concentrated on his wordsโ€”not his touch. Mostly. โ€œThere has got to be a better way,โ€ I said, turning the duct tape over in my hands, my eyes finding their way to his once more.

Jamesonโ€™s lips twisted into a lazy, devil-may-care smirk. โ€œGot any suggestions, Mystery Girl?โ€

 

 

Two days later, Jameson and I were still doing things the hard way, and we still hadnโ€™t found anything. I could see him becoming more and more single-minded. Jameson Winchester Hawthorne would push until he hit a wall. I wasnโ€™t sure what he would do to break through it this time, but every once in a while, I caught him looking at me in a way that made me think he had some ideas.

That was how he was looking at me now. โ€œWe arenโ€™t the only ones searching for the next clue,โ€ he said as dusk began to give way to darkness. โ€œI saw Grayson with a map of the woods.โ€

โ€œTheaโ€™s tailing me,โ€ I said, ripping off a piece of tape, hyperaware of the silence all around us. โ€œThe only way I can shake her is when she sees an opportunity to mess with Xander.โ€

Jameson brushed gently past me and marked off the next tree over. โ€œThea holds a grudge, and when she and Xander broke up, it was ugly.โ€

โ€œThey dated?โ€ I slid past Jameson and searched the next tree, running my fingers over the bark. โ€œThea is practically your cousin.โ€

โ€œConstantine is Zaraโ€™s second husband. The marriage is recent, and Xanderโ€™s always been a fan of loopholes.โ€

Nothing with the Hawthorne brothers was ever simpleโ€”including what Jameson and I were doing now. Since weโ€™d worked our way to the center of the forest, the trees were spread farther apart. Up ahead, I could see a large open spaceโ€”the only place in the Black Wood where grass was able to grow on the forest floor.

My back to Jameson, I moved to a new tree and began running my hands over the bark. Almost immediately, my fingers hit a groove.

โ€œJameson.โ€ It wasnโ€™t pitch-dark yet, but there was little enough light in the woods that I couldnโ€™t entirely make out what Iโ€™d found until Jameson appeared beside me, shining an extra light. I ran my fingers slowly over the letters carved into the tree.

TOBIAS HAWTHORNE II

Unlike the first symbol weโ€™d found, these letters werenโ€™t smooth. The carving hadnโ€™t been done with an even hand. The name looked like it had been carved by a child.

โ€œThe Iโ€™s at the end are a Roman numeral,โ€ Jameson said, his voice going electric. โ€œTobias Hawthorne the Second.โ€

Toby, I thought, and then I heard aย crack. A deafening echo followed, and the world exploded. Bark flying. My body thrown backward.

โ€œGet down!โ€ Jameson yelled.

I barely heard him. My brain couldnโ€™t process what I was hearing, what had just happened.ย Iโ€™m bleeding.

Pain.

Jameson grabbed me and pulled me toward the ground. The next thing I knew, his body was over mine and the sound of a second gunshot rang out.

Gun. Someoneโ€™s shooting at us.ย There was a stabbing pain in my chest.

Iโ€™ve been shot.

I heard footsteps beating against the forest floor, and then Oren yelled, โ€œStay down!โ€ Weapon drawn, my bodyguard put himself between us and the shooter. A small eternity passed. Oren took off running in the direction the shots had come from, but I knew, with a prescience I couldnโ€™t explain,

that the shooter was gone.

โ€œAre you okay, Avery?โ€ Oren doubled back. โ€œJameson, is she okay?โ€ โ€œSheโ€™s bleeding.โ€ That was Jameson. Heโ€™d pulled back from my body

and was looking down at me.

My chest throbbed, just below my collarbone, where Iโ€™d been hit.

โ€œYour face.โ€ Jamesonโ€™s touch was light against my skin. The moment his fingertips skimmed lightly over my cheekbone, the nerves in my face were jarred alive.ย Hurts.

โ€œDid they shoot me twice?โ€ I asked, dazed.

โ€œThe assailant didnโ€™t shoot you at all.โ€ Oren made quick work of displacing Jameson and ran his hands expertly over my body, checking for damage. โ€œYou got hit by a couple of pieces of bark.โ€ He probed at the wound below my collarbone. โ€œThe other cutโ€™s just a scratch, but the barkโ€™s lodged deep in this one. Weโ€™ll leave it until weโ€™re ready to stitch you up.โ€

My ears rang. โ€œStitch me up.โ€ I didnโ€™t want to just repeat what he was saying back to him, but it was literally all my mouth would do.

โ€œYouโ€™re lucky.โ€ Oren stood, then did a quick check of the tree, where the bullet had hit. โ€œA couple of inches to the right, and weโ€™d be looking at removing a bullet, not bark.โ€ My bodyguard stalked past the place where the tree had been hit to another tree behind us. In one smooth motion, he produced a knife from his belt and jammed it into the tree.

It took me a moment to realize that he was digging out a bullet. โ€œWhoever fired this is long gone now,โ€ he said, wrapping the bullet in

what appeared to be some kind of handkerchief. โ€œBut we might be able to trace this.โ€

This, as in a bullet. Someone had just tried to shoot us.ย Me.ย My brain was finally catching up now.ย They werenโ€™t aiming for Jameson.

โ€œWhat just happened here?โ€ For once, Jameson didnโ€™t sound like he was playing. He sounded like his heart was beating as rapidly and viciously as mine.

โ€œWhat happened,โ€ Oren replied, glancing back into the distance, โ€œis that someone saw the two of you out here, decided you were easy targets, and pulled their trigger. Twice.โ€

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