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Chapter no 15

The Hawthorne Legacy (The Inheritance Games, 2)

We need to talk.โ€ Jameson found me hidden away in the archive (prep school forย library) the next day. Until now, heโ€™d kept his distance within the walls of Heights Country Day.

Not that anyone but Eli was around to see us.

โ€œI have to finish my calculus homework.โ€ I avoided looking directly at him. I needed space. I needed to think.

โ€œItโ€™s E-day.โ€ Jameson pulled up a seat next to mine. โ€œYou have plenty of free time.โ€

The modular scheduling system at Heights Country Day was complicated enough that I hadnโ€™t even memorized my own schedule. But Jameson apparently had.

โ€œIโ€™m busy,โ€ I insisted, annoyed at the way I always felt his presence.

The way heย wantedย me to.

Jameson leaned back in his chair, balancing it on two legs, then let the front legs drop down and leaned to whisper directly into my ear. โ€œToby Hawthorne is your father.โ€

 

 

I followed Jameson. Eli, who couldnโ€™t possibly have heard Jamesonโ€™s whisper, followed meโ€”out of the main building, across the quad, down a stone path to the Art Center. Inside, Jameson strode past studio after studio, until we ended up in what a sign informed me was the Black Box Theater: an enormous square room with black walls, a black floor, and stage lights built into a black ceiling. Jameson flipped a series of switches, and the overhead lights turned on. Eli took up a position by the door, and I followed Jameson to the far side of the room.

โ€œWhat I said in the archive,โ€ Jameson murmured. โ€œIt was just a theory.โ€ The room was built for acoustics, built for voices to carry. โ€œTell me Iโ€™m wrong.โ€

I glanced back at Eli and chose my words carefully in response. โ€œI found a hidden compartment in your grandfatherโ€™s desk. There was a copy of my birth certificate.โ€

I didnโ€™t say Tobyโ€™s name. I wouldnโ€™t, not with an audience. โ€œAnd?โ€ Jameson prompted.

โ€œThe name was my fatherโ€™s.โ€ I lowered my voice so much that Jameson had to step closer to hear it. โ€œThe signature wasnโ€™t.โ€

โ€œI knew it.โ€ Jameson started pacing, but he turned back toward me before he got too far away. โ€œDo you realize what this means, Heiress?โ€ he asked, his green eyes alight.

I did. Iโ€™d said it out loud once. It made senseโ€”more sense than anything else had made since I arrived for the reading of the will. โ€œThere could be other explanations,โ€ I said hoarsely, even though I didnโ€™t really believe that.ย I have a secret.ย My mom hadnโ€™t invented that game out of nowhere. My whole life, sheโ€™d been telling me there was something I didnโ€™t know.

Something big. Something about me.

โ€œIt makes perfect senseโ€”Hawthorneย sense.โ€ Jameson couldnโ€™t contain himself. If I would have let him, he probably would have picked me up and twirled me around. โ€œTwelve birds, one stone, Heiress. Whatever happened twenty years ago, the old man intended to use you to pull his prodigal son back onto the board now.โ€

โ€œDoesnโ€™t seem like it worked,โ€ I said, the words bitter on my tongue. I was the biggest news story in the world. I had no idea where Toby was, but the same couldnโ€™t be said in reverse.

If he is my father, then where is he? Why isnโ€™t he here?

As if that thought had beckoned him toward me, Jameson came closer. โ€œLetโ€™s call off the bet,โ€ he said softly.

I whipped my head up to look at him. I searched for a tell on his face, something to let me know what angle he was playing.

โ€œThis is big, Heiress.โ€ If heโ€™d been anyone else, his voice might have sounded gentleโ€”but the Jameson Hawthorne I knew wasnโ€™t gentle. โ€œBig enough that neither of us needs extra motivation now. Neither of us is going

to solve this alone.โ€

There was something undeniable about the way he said the wordย us, but I resisted the pull of it. โ€œIโ€™m at the center of this.โ€ It would have been so easy to let myself get sucked back in. To let myself feel like we really were a team. โ€œYou need me.โ€

That was what this was about. The gentle voice.ย Us.

โ€œAnd you donโ€™t need anyone?โ€ Jameson stepped forward. Despite every warning screeching in the back of my brain, when he reached out to touch me, I didnโ€™t pull back.

The past twelve hours had turned my entire world upside down. I neededโ€ฆย something. It didnโ€™t have to mean anything. There didnโ€™t have to be feelings involved. โ€œFine,โ€ I said, my voice rough in my throat. โ€œLetโ€™s call off the bet.โ€

I expected him to kiss me thenโ€”to take advantage of my moment of weakness, to push me back against the wall and wait for my head to angle up toward his, wait for aย yes. He looked like he wanted to.ย Iย wanted it.

But instead, Jameson took a step back and cocked his head to the side. โ€œHow would you feel about getting some air?โ€

 

 

Two minutes later, Jameson Hawthorne and I were onย topย of the Art Center. This time, Eli didnโ€™t get a chance to position himself in the doorway before Jameson locked him out.

My bodyguard knocked on the door to the roof, then pounded.

โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ I yelled back, watching as Jameson walked over to stand at the very edge of the roof. The toes of his dress shoes hung over the edge. The wind picked up. โ€œBe careful,โ€ I said, even though he didnโ€™t know the meaning of the word.

โ€œYou know something funny, Heiress? My grandfather always said that Hawthorne men have nine lives.โ€ Jameson turned back to me. โ€œHawthorne men,โ€ he repeated, โ€œhave nine lives. He was talking about Toby. The old man knew his son had survived. He knew that Toby was out there. But he never did more than drop hints until he left that message for Xander.โ€

โ€œFind Tobias Hawthorne the Second,โ€ I said quietly.

After holding my gaze for a moment longer, Jameson disappeared behind a nearby column and came back with what appeared to be a roll of Astroturf and a bucket of golf balls. He set the bucket down, then rolled out the turf. He disappeared a second time, then came back with a golf club and snatched a ball from the bucket. He laid the ball on the turf and lined up his shot.

โ€œI come up here,โ€ he said, looking out at the picturesque woods on the back side of the campus, โ€œto get away.โ€ His feet shoulder width apart, he swung the club back, then took his shot. The golf ball soared off the roof of the Art Center and into the woods. โ€œIโ€™m not saying that I think youโ€™re overwhelmed, Heiress. Iโ€™m not saying that I think youโ€™re hurting. Iโ€™m just sayingโ€โ€”he held the golf club out to meโ€”โ€œsometimes it feels good to smack the hell out of something.โ€

I stared at him, incredulous, then smiled. โ€œThis has got to be against the rules.โ€

โ€œWhat rules?โ€ Jameson smirked. When I didnโ€™t move to take the club, he got another ball and lined up another shot. โ€œAllow me to let you in on a Hawthorne trade secret, Heiress: There are no rules that matter more than winning.โ€ He paused, just for a moment. โ€œI donโ€™t know who my father is. Skye was never what one would callย maternal. The old man raised us. He made us in his own image.โ€ Jameson swung, and the ball went soaring. โ€œXan has his mind. Grayson got the gravitas. Nash has a savior complex. And Iโ€ฆโ€ Another ball. Another shot. โ€œI donโ€™t know when to give up.โ€

Jameson turned back to me and held the club out once more. I remembered Skye telling me that the word to describe Jameson wasย hungry.

I took the club from his hand. My fingers brushed his.

โ€œIโ€™m the one who doesnโ€™t give up,โ€ Jameson reiterated. โ€œBut Xanderโ€™s the one the old man asked to find Toby.โ€

On the other side of the door to the roof, Eli was still banging.ย I should put him out of his misery.ย I looked at Jameson.ย I should walk away.ย But I didnโ€™t. This was the closest Jameson had come to opening up to me about what it was like growing up Hawthorne.

I walked over to the bucket of golf balls and tossed one onto the turf. Iโ€™d never held a golf club before. I had no idea what I was doing, but it looked satisfying. Sometimes, itย didย feel good to smack the hell out of something.

The first time I swung, I missed the ball.

โ€œHead down,โ€ Jameson told me. He stepped up behind me and adjusted my grip, his arms wrapping around mine, guiding them from shoulder to fingertips. Even through my uniform blazer, I could feel the heat of his body.

โ€œTry again,โ€ he murmured.

This time, when I swung back, Jameson swung, too. Our bodies moved in sync. I felt my shoulders rotating, felt him behind me, felt every inch of contact between us. The club connected with the ball, and I watched it soar.

A rush of emotion built up inside me, and this time I didnโ€™t push it down. Jameson had brought me up here to let go.

โ€œIf Tobyโ€™s my father,โ€ I said, louder than Iโ€™d meant to, โ€œwhere has he been all my life?โ€

I turned to face Jameson, well aware that we were standing far too close. โ€œYou know the way your grandfatherโ€™s mind operated,โ€ I told him fiercely. โ€œYou know his go-to tricks. What are we missing?โ€

We.ย Iโ€™d saidย we.

โ€œToby โ€˜diedโ€™ years before you were born.โ€ Jameson always looked at me like I had the answer. Like Iย wasย the answer. โ€œItโ€™s been twenty years since the fire on Hawthorne Island.โ€

I felt my thoughts fall in sync with his. It had been twenty years since the fire. Twenty years since Tobias Hawthorne had revised his will to disinherit his entire family. And just like that, I had an idea.

โ€œIn the last game we played,โ€ I told Jameson, my heart thudding, โ€œthere were clues embedded in the old manโ€™s will.โ€ My pulse jumped, and it had nothingโ€”almost nothingโ€”to do with the way he wasย stillย looking at me. โ€œBut that wasnโ€™t the old manโ€™s only will.โ€

Jameson knew exactly what I was saying. He saw what I saw. โ€œThe old man changed his middle name to Tattersall right after Tobyโ€™s supposed death. And right after that, he wrote a will disinheriting the family.โ€

I swallowed. โ€œYouโ€™re always saying he had favorite tricks. What do you think the chances are that the old will is part ofย thisย puzzle?โ€

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