Ms. Grambs, you understand that if you are emancipated, you will be considered a legal adult. You will be responsible for yourself. You will be held to adult standards. You are literally signing away the rest of your childhood.โ
In the past six weeks, Iโd been shot at, blown up, kidnapped, and paraded around as the living, breathing embodiment of Cinderella stories. To the world, I was a scandal, a mystery, a curiosity, a fantasy.
To Tobias Hawthorne, Iโd been a tool.
โI understand,โ I told the judge. And just like that, it was done.
โCongratulations,โ Alisa said as we stepped out of the courthouse. Orenโs men cleared a path through the paparazzi, and I made my way to the SUV. โYouโre an adult.โ Alisa sounded pretty darn satisfied with herself. โYou can write your own will.โ
I leaned back in my seat and thought about how carefully my lawyer had been managing my public image, how much she wanted the world to believe that the firm was calling the shots.
I smiled. โI can do a lot more than that.โ
Three hours later, I found Jameson on the roof. He was holding a familiar knife in his hands. He faked like he was going to toss it to me, and my heart sped up.
His eyes met mine, and it sped up more.
โI have a lot to tell you.โ The wind caught my hair, whipping it around my face. โI met Toby, face-to-face. He has a daughter, but itโs not me. She looks just like Emily Laughlin.โ
Jamesonโs green eyes looked fathomless. โIโm intrigued, Heiress.โ
I reached into my pocket and pulled out a coin. This felt more dangerous than riding on the back of a motorcycle or speeding down a racetrack or getting shot at in the Black Wood. This wasnโt just a rush.
This was a riskโone the old Avery never would have been capable of taking.
My eyes on Jamesonโs, I uncurled my fingers, revealing the coin in my palm. โToby took the disk,โ I said. โWe might never know what it was.โ
Jamesonโs lips ticked up at the edges. โThis is Hawthorne House, Heiress. There will always be another mystery. Just when you think youโve found the last hidden passage, the last tunnel, the last secret built into the wallsโthere will always be one more.โ
There was an energy in his voice when he spoke about the House. โThatโs why you love it.โ I locked my eyes on his. โThe House.โ
He leaned forward. โThatโs why I love the House.โ
I held up the coin. โItโs not the disk,โ I said. โBut sometimes you have to improvise.โ My heart was racing. I was vibrating with the same energy Iโd heard in his tone.
And like Jameson, I loved it.
โHeads, you kiss me,โ I said. โTails, I kiss you. And this timeโฆโ My voice cracked. โIt means something.โ
Jameson shot me one of those devastating, crooked Jameson Winchester Hawthorne grins. โWhat are you saying, Heiress?โ
I tossed the coin into the air, and as it turned, I thought about everything that had happened. All of it.
Iโd found Toby.
I knew my motherโs secret.
I understood, more than ever, why my name had caught the attention of a billionaire whoโd only met me once. Maybe that was all there was to it. Or maybe I was one stone meant for twelve birds, most of them still undiscovered.
Like Jameson had said, this was Hawthorne House. There would always be another mystery. Like me, Jameson would always be driven to solve them.
The coin landed. โTails,โ I said. โI kiss you.โ I wrapped my arms around his neck. I pressed my lips to his. And this time, the joke was on meโ
because I wasnโt playing. This wasnโt nothing.
This was the beginningโand I was ready to be bold.