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Chapter no 53

The Final Gambit (The Inheritance Games, 3)

We had two potential clues: the seal and the number. Given that we were no closer to identifying the disk than Jameson and I had been for months, I opted to concentrate on the number.

Divide and conquerย wasnโ€™t a Hawthorne family motto, but it might as well have been. Grayson took financials: bank records, investment accounts, transactions. Xander, Thea, and Rebecca took the date angle:ย December 29, 1982. That left a myriad of possibilities for Jameson and me, among them the phone number. If we really were missing an area code, then filling in the blank would accomplish two things: First, it would give us a number to try calling. Second, it would give us a location.

A hint to where Toby was being held? Or another piece of the riddle?

โ€œThere are more than three hundred area codes in the United States,โ€ Jameson said from memory.

โ€œIโ€™ll print out a list,โ€ I told him, but what I really wanted to say wasย Are we okay?

Thirty minutes into making phone callsโ€”each area code, followed byย 363-1982โ€”I hadnโ€™t had a single call go through. Taking a break, I plugged the number into an internet search and skimmed the results.ย A court case involving discriminatory housing practices. A baseball card valued at over two thousand dollars. A hymn from the 1982 Hymnal in the Episcopal Church.

A phone rang. I looked up. Thea held up her phone. โ€œBlocked number,โ€ she said, and because she was Thea

Calligaris and didnโ€™t know the meaning of the words

hesitationย orย second-guess, she answered.

Two seconds later, she passed the phone to me. I pressed it to my ear. โ€œHello?โ€

โ€œWho am I?โ€ a voiceโ€”thatย voiceโ€”said.

That question didnโ€™t justย getย under my skin; it had been living there for days, and I wondered if heโ€™d called Theaโ€™s phone for the sole purpose of reminding me that heโ€™d gotten to her.

โ€œYou tell me,โ€ I replied. He wasnโ€™t going to get a rise out of me. Not now.

โ€œI already did.โ€ His voice was as smooth as ever, his cadence distinct.

Jameson grabbed the list with the area codes, then scrawled a message on it.ย ASK ABOUT THE DISK.

โ€œThe disk,โ€ I said. โ€œYou knew what it was.โ€ I paused to allow for a response that never came. โ€œWhen you sent it back to me as proof that you had Toby, you knew what it was worth.โ€

โ€œIntimately.โ€

โ€œAnd you want me to guess? What it is, what all of this means?โ€

โ€œGuessing,โ€ Tobyโ€™s captor said silkily, โ€œis for those too weak in mind or spirit toย know.โ€

That sounded like something Tobias Hawthorne would have said.

โ€œI had a program installed on your little friendโ€™s cell phone. Iโ€™ve been tracking you, listening to you. Youโ€™re there, in his inner sanctum, arenโ€™t you?โ€

Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s study.ย That was what he meant by inner sanctum. Heย knewย where we were. The phone in my hand felt dirty, threatening. I wanted to hurl it out a window, but I didnโ€™t.

โ€œWhy does it matter where I am?โ€ I asked.

โ€œI tire of waiting.โ€ Somehow, that sounded more threatening than any words Iโ€™d ever heard this man speak.

โ€œLook up.โ€

The line went dead. I handed the phone to Oren. โ€œHe had someone install a program to let him spy on us.โ€ So why had he given it up?

Because he wants me to know that heโ€™s everywhere.

Oren dropped the phone and stamped his heel down on it, hard. Theaโ€™s outraged squeal was drowned out by the cacophony of thoughts in my head.

โ€œLook up.โ€ I repeated the words. My eyes traveled toward Jamesonโ€™s. โ€œHe asked me if I was in your grandfatherโ€™s inner sanctum, but I think he knew the answer. And he told me toย look up.โ€

I angled my head toward the ceiling. It was high, with mahogany beams and custom moldings. Ifย look upย had been part of one of Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s riddles, I would have been fetching a ladder right now, but we werenโ€™t dealing with Tobias Hawthorne.

โ€œHeโ€™s been listening to us,โ€ I said, feeling that like oil on my skin. โ€œBut even if he hacked Theaโ€™s camera, he wouldnโ€™t have been able to see me. So where would someone picture me in this room if they didnโ€™t know where I was sitting?โ€

I walked toward Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s desk. I knew heโ€™d spent hours sitting there, working, strategizing. Putting myself in his position, I took a seat behind the desk. I looked down at it, like I was working, and then I looked up. When that didnโ€™t work, I thought about the way that neither Jameson nor Xander could think sitting down. Standing, I walked to the other side of the desk.ย Look up.

I did and found myself staring at the wall of trophies and medals that the Hawthorne grandsons had won: national championships in everything from motocross to swimming to pinball; trophies for surfing, for fencing, for riding bulls. These were the talents that Tobias Hawthorneโ€™s grandsons had cultivated. These were the kind of results heโ€™d expected.

There were other things on the wall, too: comic books

written by Hawthornes; a coffee table book of Graysonโ€™s photographs; some patents, most of them in Xanderโ€™s name.

The patents, I realized with a start. Each certificate had a number on it.ย And each number, I thought, the world around me suddenly crisp and in hyperfocus,ย has seven digits.

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