Youโre bleeding,โ I told Jameson.
He showed his teeth in a wicked smile. โIโm also dangerously close to getting mud onโฆ everything.โ
There was mud on his face, in his hair. His clothes were drenched in it, his shirt clinging to his abdomen, letting me see every line of the muscles underneath.
โBefore you ask,โ Jameson murmured. โIโm fine, and so is Gray.โ
I wondered if Grayson Hawthorne had even a fleck of mud on him.
โOren said things got Hawthorne ugly.โ I gave Jameson a look.
He shrugged. โSkye has a way of messing with our heads.โ Jameson did not elaborate on the mud, the blood, or what exactly he and Grayson had gotten up to. โAt the end of the day, we all learned what we needed to know. Skyeโs not involved in the kidnapping.โ
Iโd learned a lot more than that since. The words tumbling out, I told Jameson everything: the picture of Toby, the message the kidnapper had hidden in it, Eveโs comment about dark and dangerous secrets, what Oren had told me about the attempts to hire my security team away.
The more I talked, the closer Jameson moved toward me, the closer I needed to be to him.
โNo matter what I do,โ I said, our bodies brushing, โI donโt feel like Iโm getting anywhere.โ
โMaybe thatโs the point, Heiress.โ
I recognized the tone in his voice, knew it as well as I knew each of his scars. โWhat are you thinking, Hawthorne?โ
โThis second message changes things.โ Jamesonโs arms curved around me. I could feel mud soaking into my shirt, feel the heat of his body from underneath his. โWe were wrong.โ
โAbout what?โ I asked.
โThe person weโre dealing withโtheyโre not playing a Hawthorne game. In the old manโs games, the clues are always sequential. One clue leads you to the next, if only you can solve it.โ
โBut this time,โ I said, picking up his train of thought, โthe first message didnโt lead us anywhere. The second message just came.โ
Jameson reached one hand up to touch my face, smearing my jawline with mud. โErgo, the clues in this game arenโt sequential. Working one isnโt going to magically lead you to the next, Heiress, no matter what you do. Either Tobyโs captor just wants you scared, in which case, these are vague warnings with no greater design.โ
I stared at him. โOr?โ Heโd saidย either.
โOr,โ Jameson murmured, โitโs all part of the same riddle: one answer, multiple clues.โ
His hip bones pressed lightly into my stomach. โA riddle,โ I repeated, my voice rough. โWho took Tobyโand why?โ
Avenge. Revenge. Vengeance. Avenger. I always win in the end.
โAn incomplete riddle,โ Jameson elaborated. โDelivered piece by piece. Or a storyโand weโre at the mercy of the storyteller.โ
The person doling out hints, clues that went nowhere in isolation. โWe donโt have what we need to solve this,โ I said, hating what I was saying and how defeated I sounded saying it. โDo we?โ
โNot yet.โ
I wanted to scream, but I looked up at him instead. I saw a jagged cut on the underside of his jaw and reached for his chin. โThis looks bad.โ
โOn the contrary, Heiress, bleeding is a devastatingly good look for me.โ
Xander wasnโt the only Hawthorne who specialized in distractions.
Needing this and not liking the look of that cut on his jaw, I allowed myself to be distracted. โLetโs make this a game,โ I told Jameson. โI bet that you canโt shower and wash off all that mud before I find what we need from the first aid kit.โ
โI have a better idea.โ Jameson lowered his lips to mine. My neck arched. More mud on my face, my clothes. โI bet,โ he countered, โthatย youย canโt wash all this mud off before Iโฆโ
โBefore you what?โ I murmured.
Jameson Winchester Hawthorne smiled. โGuess.โ