Iย told Grayson that he could take Eve to Tobyโs wing, and he informed me that that wasnโt the deal. Iโd said thatย Iย would show Eve Tobyโs wing. I deeply suspected he was headed for the pool.
Packing up the satchel and taking it with me, I held up my end of the bargain.
Eveโs pace slowed as Tobyโs wing came into view. There was still rubble visible from the brick wall that the old man had erected decades ago.
โTobias Hawthorne closed off this wing the summer that Toby disappeared,โ I told Eve. โWhen we found out that Toby was still alive, we came here looking for clues.โ
โWhat did you find?โ Eve asked, something like awe in her tone as we stepped through the remains of bricks and into Tobyโs foyer.
โSeveral things.โ I couldnโt blame Eve for wanting to know. โFor starters, this.โ I knelt to trigger the release on one of the marble tiles. Beneath, there was a metal compartment, empty but for a poem engraved on the metal. โโA Poison Tree,โโ I said. โAn eighteenth-century poem
written by a poet named William Blake.โ
Eve dropped to her knees. She trailed her hand over the poem, reading it silently without so much as taking or expelling a breath.
โLong story short,โ I said, โteenaged Toby seemed to identify with the feeling of wrathโand what it cost to hide it.โ
Eve didnโt respond. She just stayed there, her fingers on
the poem, her eyes unblinking. It was like Iโd ceased to exist for her, like the entire world had.
It was at least a minute before she looked up. โIโm sorry,โ she said, her voice wavering. โItโs just, what you just said about Toby identifying with this poemโyou could have been describing me. I didnโt even know he liked poetry.โ She stood and turned three-sixty, taking in the rest of the wing. โWhat else?โ
โThe title of the poem led us to a legal text on Tobyโs bookshelf,โ I said, the air thick with memories. โIn a section on the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine, we found a coded message that Toby left behind before he ran awayโ another poem, one he wrote himself.โ
โWhat did it say?โ Eve asked, her tone almost urgent. โTobyโs poem?โ
Iโd been over the words often enough that I knew them by heart. โSecrets, lies, all I despise. The tree is poison, donโt you see? It poisoned S and Z and me. The evidence I stole is in the darkest hole. Light shall reveal all, I writ upon theโฆโ
I trailed off, the way the poem had. I expected Eve to finish it for me, to fill in the word that both Jameson and I had known went at the end.ย Wall.
But she didnโt. โWhat does he mean, the evidence he stole?โ Eveโs voice rang through Tobyโs empty suite. โEvidence of what?โ
โHis adoption, Iโm guessing,โ I said. โHe kept a journal on his walls, written in invisible ink. There are still some black lights in this room from when we read them. Iโll turn them on and kill the lights.โ
Eve reached out to stop me before I could. โCould I do this part alone?โ
I hadnโt been expecting that, and my knee-jerk reaction wasย no.
โI know you have just as much right to be here as I do, Averyโor more. Itโs your house, right? But I justโฆโ Eve
shook her head, then looked down. โI donโt look like my mom.โ She fingered the ends of her hair. โWhen I was a kid, she kept my hair shortโthese ugly, uneven bowl cuts sheโd do herself. She said it was because she didnโt want to have to mess with it, but when I got older, when I started taking care of my hair myself and grew it out, she let it slip that sheโd kept it short because no one else in our family had hair like mine.โ Eve took a breath. โNo one had eyes like mine. Or a single one of my features. No one thought the way I did or liked the things I liked or felt things the same way.โ She swallowed. โI moved out the day I hit eighteen. They probably would have kicked me out if I hadnโt. A few months later, I convinced myself that maybe I had family out there. I did one of those mail-in DNA tests. Butโฆ no matches.โ
No one even remotely Hawthorne-adjacent would have handed over their DNA to one of those databases. โToby found you,โ I reminded Eve gently.
She nodded. โHe doesnโt really look like me, either. And heโs a hard person to get to know. Butย that poemโฆโ
I didnโt make her say anything else. โI get it,โ I told her. โItโs fine.โ
On my way out the door, I thought about my mom and all the ways we were alike. Sheโd given me my resilience. My smile. The color of my hair. The tendency to guard my heart
โand the ability, once those guards were down, to love fiercely, deeply, unapologetically.
Unafraid.