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Chapter no 27

The Final Gambit (The Inheritance Games, 3)

Iย told Grayson that he could take Eve to Tobyโ€™s wing, and he informed me that that wasnโ€™t the deal. Iโ€™d said thatย Iย would show Eve Tobyโ€™s 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.

Eveโ€™s pace slowed as Tobyโ€™s wing came into view. There was still rubble visible from the brick wall that the old man had erected decades ago.

โ€œTobias Hawthorne closed off this wing the summer that Toby disappeared,โ€ I told Eve. โ€œWhen we found out that Toby was still alive, we came here looking for clues.โ€

โ€œWhat did you find?โ€ Eve asked, something like awe in her tone as we stepped through the remains of bricks and into Tobyโ€™s foyer.

โ€œSeveral things.โ€ I couldnโ€™t blame Eve for wanting to know. โ€œFor 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. โ€œโ€˜A Poison Tree,โ€™โ€ I said. โ€œAn 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.

โ€œLong story short,โ€ I said, โ€œteenaged Toby seemed to identify with the feeling of wrathโ€”and what it cost to hide it.โ€

Eve didnโ€™t respond. She just stayed there, her fingers on

the poem, her eyes unblinking. It was like Iโ€™d ceased to exist for her, like the entire world had.

It was at least a minute before she looked up. โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ she said, her voice wavering. โ€œItโ€™s just, what you just said about Toby identifying with this poemโ€”you could have been describing me. I didnโ€™t even know he liked poetry.โ€ She stood and turned three-sixty, taking in the rest of the wing. โ€œWhat else?โ€

โ€œThe title of the poem led us to a legal text on Tobyโ€™s bookshelf,โ€ I said, the air thick with memories. โ€œIn 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€

โ€œWhat did it say?โ€ Eve asked, her tone almost urgent. โ€œTobyโ€™s poem?โ€

Iโ€™d been over the words often enough that I knew them by heart. โ€œSecrets, lies, all I despise. The tree is poison, donโ€™t 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 theโ€ฆโ€

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 didnโ€™t. โ€œWhat does he mean, the evidence he stole?โ€ Eveโ€™s voice rang through Tobyโ€™s empty suite. โ€œEvidence of what?โ€

โ€œHis adoption, Iโ€™m guessing,โ€ I said. โ€œHe kept a journal on his walls, written in invisible ink. There are still some black lights in this room from when we read them. Iโ€™ll turn them on and kill the lights.โ€

Eve reached out to stop me before I could. โ€œCould I do this part alone?โ€

I hadnโ€™t been expecting that, and my knee-jerk reaction wasย no.

โ€œI know you have just as much right to be here as I do, Averyโ€”or more. Itโ€™s your house, right? But I justโ€ฆโ€ Eve

shook her head, then looked down. โ€œI donโ€™t look like my mom.โ€ She fingered the ends of her hair. โ€œWhen I was a kid, she kept my hair shortโ€”these ugly, uneven bowl cuts sheโ€™d do herself. She said it was because she didnโ€™t 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 sheโ€™d kept it short because no one else in our family had hair like mine.โ€ Eve took a breath. โ€œNo 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. โ€œI moved out the day I hit eighteen. They probably would have kicked me out if I hadnโ€™t. A few months later, I convinced myself that maybe I had family out there. I did one of those mail-in DNA tests. Butโ€ฆ no matches.โ€

No one even remotely Hawthorne-adjacent would have handed over their DNA to one of those databases. โ€œToby found you,โ€ I reminded Eve gently.

She nodded. โ€œHe doesnโ€™t really look like me, either. And heโ€™s a hard person to get to know. Butย that poemโ€ฆโ€

I didnโ€™t make her say anything else. โ€œI get it,โ€ I told her. โ€œItโ€™s fine.โ€

On my way out the door, I thought about my mom and all the ways we were alike. Sheโ€™d given me my resilience. My smile. The color of my hair. The tendency to guard my heart

โ€”and the ability, once those guards were down, to love fiercely, deeply, unapologetically.

Unafraid.

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