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Chapter no 11

The Hawthorne Legacy (The Inheritance Games, 2)

On the way home from school, I did a search of my own. The fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine was a legal rule that said that evidence obtained illegally was inadmissible in court.

โ€œYouโ€™re thinking.โ€ Jameson was beside me in the car. Some days, he and Xander caught a ride in my bulletproof SUV. Other days, they didnโ€™t. Xander wasnโ€™t there now.

โ€œIโ€™m always thinking,โ€ I replied.

โ€œThatโ€™s what I love about you, Heiress.โ€ Jameson had a habit of tossing out words that should matter like they didnโ€™t at all. โ€œCare to share those thoughts?โ€

โ€œAnd tip my hand?โ€ I shot back. โ€œSo you can get there first and double- cross me?โ€

Jameson smiled. It was his slow, dangerous, heady smile, designed to elicit a reaction. I didnโ€™t give him one.

When we got to Hawthorne House, I retreated to my wing and waited fifteen minutes before I locked my hand around a candlestick on my fireplace mantel and pulled. That motion released a latch, and the back of the stone fireplace popped up just enough that I could fit my hands underneath and lift it upward. Oren had disabled this passageway back when there was a threat on the estate, but after that threat was resolved, it hadnโ€™t stayed disabled for long.

I stepped into the secret passageway to find Jameson waiting for me. โ€œFancy meeting you here, Heiress.โ€

โ€œYou,โ€ I told him, โ€œare the most annoying person on the face of the planet.โ€

His lips quirked upward on one side. โ€œI try. Headed back to Tobyโ€™s wing?โ€

I could have lied, but he would have known I was lying, and I didnโ€™t

want to wait. โ€œJust try not to get caught by the Laughlins,โ€ I told him. โ€œDonโ€™t you know by now, Heiress? I never get caught.โ€

 

 

Taking a deep breath, I stepped past the brick debris and made a beeline for Tobyโ€™s study. I ran my fingers along the edges of the books, going through them shelf by shelf.

Weโ€™d checked every volume in here, but only for hidden compartments. โ€œCare to tell me what youโ€™re looking for?โ€ Jameson asked.

The day before, Iโ€™d noticed the variety of books Toby Hawthorne read. Comic books and pulp horror. Greek philosophy and law volumes. Without a word to Jameson, I pulled one of the legal books off the shelf.

It took Jameson less than a minute to figure out why. โ€œFruit of the poisonous tree,โ€ he murmured behind me. โ€œBrilliant.โ€

I wasnโ€™t sure if he was talking about meโ€”or Toby.

The bookโ€™s index directed me to the entry for the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine. As I reached the page in question, my heart sped up. There it was.

Certain letters in certain words were blacked out. The notations went on for pages. Every once in a while, there would be a punctuation mark that had been struck throughโ€”a comma, a question mark. I didnโ€™t have a pen or paper, so I used my phone to record the letters, painstakingly typing them in one by one.

The result was a string of consonants and vowels with no meaning.ย For now.

โ€œYouโ€™re thinking.โ€ Jameson paused. โ€œYou know something.โ€

I was going to deny it, but I didnโ€™t, for one simple reason. โ€œI found a cipher disk yesterday,โ€ I admitted, โ€œbut it was set at neutral. I donโ€™t know the code.โ€

โ€œNumbers.โ€ Jamesonโ€™s reply was immediate and electric. โ€œWe need numbers, Heiress. Where did you find the cipher?โ€

My breath caught in my throat. I walked over to the clock, the one Iโ€™d taken apart the day before. I turned it over and stared at its face: the hour hand frozen at twelve and the minute hand at five.

โ€œThe fifth letter of the alphabet isย E,โ€ Jameson said behind me. โ€œThe twelfth isย L.โ€

Without another word to him, I ran for the cipher disk in my room.

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