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Chapter no 55

The Hawthorne Legacy (The Inheritance Games, 2)

The next day at school, I didnโ€™t wait for Jameson to find me. I found him. โ€œWhat if the numbers arenโ€™t dates?โ€ I said.

That got me a slow, winding, wicked smile. โ€œHeiress, you took the words right out of my mouth.โ€

 

 

I half expected to end up back on the roof, but this time Jameson took me to one of the โ€œlearning podsโ€ in the STEM Center. Basically, it was a small, square room where the walls, ceiling, and floor were all painted with whiteboard material. There were two white rolling chairs in the center of the room, and nothing else.

Eli started to follow us inside, and Jameson took that as his cue to run a hand down my back and bring his lips to the spot where my neck met my jawline. I arched my neck, and Eli went bright red and stepped out of the room.

Jameson shut the doorโ€”and went to work. There were five dry-erase markers attached to the back of each of the rolling chairs. Jameson grabbed one of the markers and began writing on the wall directly in front of the chair. โ€œEight, three, seven, five,โ€ he said.

I rattled off the next four numbers from memory as he continued writing. โ€œNine, seven, four, eight.โ€

Writing the numbers without the dashes freed up countless possibilities. โ€œA passcode?โ€ I asked Jameson. โ€œA PIN number?โ€

โ€œNot enough digits in either of them for a phone number or a zip code.โ€ Jameson stepped back, sat down in one of the chairs, and pushed off. โ€œAn address. A combination.โ€

I flashed back to the moment when he and I had stepped off a helicopter, with a different sequence of numbers. The air between us had felt electricโ€” just like it did now. Weโ€™d been flying highโ€”and thirty seconds later, heโ€™d gone cold.

But this time was different, because this time we were on the same page. This time there were no expectations. I was in control. โ€œCoordinates,โ€ I said. That had been one of Jamesonโ€™s suggestions, the last time around.

He turned the chair and, with a push of his heels, came skidding back to me. โ€œCoordinates,โ€ he repeated, eyes alight. โ€œNine-seven-four-eight. Assuming the numbers are already in the correct order, nine has to be the number of degrees. Ninety-seven is too big.โ€

I thought back to my fifth-grade geography class. โ€œLatitude and longitude run from negative ninety to ninety.โ€

โ€œYou two donโ€™t know the valence of any of the numbers, obviously.โ€ Jameson and I whipped our heads back toward the door of the pod.

Xander was standing there. I could see Eli, still red-faced, behind him. Xander stepped into the pod, shut the door, and, with no hesitation whatsoever, leaped forward to flying-tackle Jameson to the ground.

โ€œHow many times do I have to tell you?โ€ the youngest Hawthorne demanded. โ€œThis is my game. No one is solving this without me.โ€ He plucked the marker from Jamesonโ€™s hand and stood. โ€œThat was a friendly tackle,โ€ he assured me. โ€œMostly.โ€

Jameson rolled his eyes. โ€œWe donโ€™t know the valence of the numbers.โ€ He echoed the last thing Xander had said pre-tackle. โ€œAnd we also donโ€™t know which is latitude and which is longitude, so nine degrees could be nine degrees north, south, west, or east.โ€

โ€œEight-three-seven-five.โ€ I grabbed another marker off one of the chairs and underlined the numbers on the board in different combinations. โ€œThe degrees could be eightย orย eighty-three.โ€

Jameson smiled. โ€œNorth, south, east, or west.โ€ โ€œHow many total possibilities?โ€ Xander mused.

โ€œTwenty-four,โ€ Jameson and I answered at the exact same time.

Xander gave us a look. โ€œIs there something going on here that I should be aware of?โ€ he asked, gesturing between the two of us.

Jameson shared a brief look with me. โ€œNothing of note.โ€ He said

nothingย like it wasย something.

โ€œNone of my business!โ€ Xander declared. โ€œBut for the record: You lovebirds are incorrect. There are way more than twenty-four possible locations here.โ€

Jameson narrowed his eyes. โ€œI can do the math, Xan.โ€

โ€œAnd I can humbly inform you, big brother, that there are three different ways of listing coordinates.โ€ Xander grinned. โ€œDegrees, minutes, seconds. Degrees, decimal minutes. And decimal degrees.โ€

โ€œWith only four digits,โ€ Jameson insisted, โ€œweโ€™re probably looking at decimal degrees.โ€

Xander winked at me. โ€œButย probablyย is never good enough.โ€

 

 

โ€œPacific Ocean,โ€ Jameson called out, and I wrote the location next to the designated coordinates. โ€œIndian Ocean. Bay of Bengal.โ€

Xander picked up right where his brother had left off. โ€œArctic Ocean.

Arctic Ocean again!โ€

Both of them were entering coordinates into a map search. My brain kicked up a gear with each location they called out.ย The Arctic.ย That couldnโ€™t be where this clue was supposed to point us, could it? And that was assuming that these numbers were coordinates at all.

โ€œAntarctic Ice Shield,โ€ Jameson offered. โ€œTimes four.โ€

By the time we were finished, the number of actual, non-arctic land locations on our list was much smaller than Iโ€™d expected. There were two in Nigeria, one in Liberia, one in Guinea, and one inโ€ฆ

โ€œCosta Rica.โ€ I said out loud, unsure at first why that location was the one that had jumped out to me, but a moment later, I remembered the last time Iโ€™d read the wordsย Costa Ricaโ€”in the binder.

โ€œYou have that look on your face,โ€ Jameson told me, his lips quirking upward. โ€œYou know something.โ€

I closed my eyes and focused on the memory, not his lips. Skyeโ€™s bequest had led to True North, one of the Hawthorne familyโ€™s many vacation homesโ€”mine, now. I tried to remember the pages Iโ€™d flipped through the night of the auction.ย Patagonia. Santorini. Kauai. Malta. Seychellesโ€ฆ

โ€œCartago, Costa Rica.โ€ I opened my eyes. โ€œTobias Hawthorne owned a house there.โ€ I pulled out my phone and looked up the latitude and longitude of Cartago, then turned my phoneโ€™s screen toward the boys. โ€œItโ€™s a match.โ€

I tried to remember what the Cartago house looked like, but all I could see in my mindโ€™s eye was the surrounding vegetation and flowers, lush and bright and larger than life.

โ€œWe need to go to Costa Rica.โ€ Xander didnโ€™t exactly sound put out about that.

โ€œI canโ€™t,โ€ I said, frustrated. Iโ€™d had to fight to go to Colorado. There was no way that Oren and Alisa would sign off on international travelโ€”not when I could only spend two more nights away from Hawthorne House this month.

โ€œXanderโ€™s not going anywhere, either.โ€

For a second time, I found myself turning toward the doorway of the pod. Thea stood there.

โ€œAre you just lettingย anyoneย in?โ€ I called to Eli.

The reply I got was muffled, but I made out the words โ€œnot my job.โ€

โ€œRebecca needs you,โ€ Thea told Xander. For the first time since Iโ€™d met her, she wasnโ€™t wearing any makeup. She looked almost mortal. โ€œShe didnโ€™t come to school today. Itโ€™s her mom. I know it is. Rebecca wonโ€™t answer my calls, so itโ€™s going to have to be you.โ€ It was clearly killing Thea to ask him, but there she was.

I expected Xander to put up a fight. How many times had he said that this wasย hisย game? But Xander just stared at Thea for a moment, then turned back to Jameson. โ€œI guess youโ€™re going to Cartago.โ€

Jameson glanced at me. I was fully prepared for him to ask me for another plane. Instead, the expression on his face shifted. โ€œCan you call Libby and Nash?โ€

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