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Chapter no 88

The Inheritance Games (The Inheritance Games, 1)

Iย place two sugar packets vertically on the table and bring theirย ends together, forming a triangle capable of standing on its own. โ€œThere,โ€ I say. I do the same with the next pair of packets, then set a fifth across them horizontal, connecting the two triangles I built.

โ€œAvery Kylie Grambs!โ€ My mom appears at the end of the table, smiling. โ€œWhat have I told you about building castles out of sugar?โ€

I beam back at her. โ€œItโ€™s only worth it if you can go five stories tall!โ€

In my dream, that was where the memory had ended, but this time, holding the sugar in my hand, my brain took me one step further.ย A man eating in the booth behind me glances back. He asks me how old I am.

โ€œSix,โ€ I say.

โ€œI have some grandsons at home who are just about your age,โ€ he says. โ€œTell me, Avery, can you spell your name? Your full name, like your mom said a minute ago?โ€

I can, and I do.

โ€œI met him,โ€ I said quietly. โ€œJust once, years agoโ€”just for a moment, in passing.โ€ Tobias Hawthorne had heard my mom say my full name. Heโ€™d asked me to spell it.

โ€œHe loved anagrams more than scotch,โ€ Nash said. โ€œAnd he was a man whoย lovedย a good scotch.โ€

Had Tobias Hawthorne mentally rearranged the letters in my full name right in that moment? Had it amused him? I thought about Grayson, hiring someone to dig up dirt on me. On my mother. Had Tobias Hawthorne been curious about us? Had he done the same?

โ€œHe would have kept track of you,โ€ Grayson said roughly. โ€œA little girl with a funny little name.โ€ He glanced at Jameson. โ€œHe must have known her date of birth.โ€

โ€œAnd after Emily diedโ€ฆโ€ Jameson was looking at me nowโ€”only at me.

โ€œHe thought of you.โ€

โ€œAnd decided to leave me his entire fortune because ofย my name?โ€ I said. โ€œThatโ€™s insane.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re the one who said it, Heiress: He didnโ€™t disinherit usย forย you. We werenโ€™t getting the money anyway.โ€

โ€œIt was going to charity,โ€ I argued. โ€œAnd youโ€™re telling me that on a whim, he wiped out the will heโ€™d had for twenty years? Thatโ€™sโ€”โ€

โ€œHe needed something to get our attention,โ€ Grayson said. โ€œSomething so unexpected, so bewildering, that it could only be seenโ€”โ€

โ€œโ€”as a puzzle,โ€ Jameson finished. โ€œSomething we couldnโ€™t ignore. Something to wake us up again. Something to bring us hereโ€”all four of us.โ€

โ€œSomething to purge the poison.โ€ Nashโ€™s tone was hard to read.

Theyโ€™d known the old man. I hadnโ€™t. What they were sayingโ€”it made sense toย them. In their eyes, this hadnโ€™t been a whim. It had been a very risky gamble.ย Iย had been a very risky gamble. Tobias Hawthorne had bet that my presence in the House would shake things up, that old secrets would be laid bare, that somehow, someway, one last puzzle would change everything.

That, if Emilyโ€™s death had torn them apart, I could bring them back together.

โ€œI told you, kid,โ€ Nash said beside me. โ€œYouโ€™re not a player. Youโ€™re the glass ballerinaโ€”or the knife.โ€

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