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Chapter no 40

The Inheritance Games (The Inheritance Games, 1)

Iย told Jameson what his mother had told me.

He stared at me. โ€œThe old man chose our names.โ€ I could see the gears in Jamesonโ€™s head turning, and thenโ€”nothing.ย โ€œHe picked our names,โ€ Jameson repeated, pacing the long hall like an animal caged. โ€œHe picked them, and then he highlighted them in the Red Will.โ€ Jameson stopped again. โ€œHe disinherited the family twenty years ago and chose our middle namesโ€”all of them but Nashโ€™sโ€”shortly thereafter. Graysonโ€™s nineteen. Iโ€™m eighteen. Xan will be seventeen next month.โ€

I couldย feelย him trying to make this make sense. Trying to see what we were missing.

โ€œThe old man was playing a long game,โ€ Jameson said, every muscle in his body tightening. โ€œOur whole lives.โ€

โ€œThe names have to mean something,โ€ I stated.

โ€œHe might have known who our fathers were.โ€ Jameson considered that possibility. โ€œEven if Skye thought sheโ€™d kept it a secretโ€”there were no secrets from him.โ€ I heard an undertone in Jamesonโ€™s voice when he said those wordsโ€”something deep and cutting and awful.

Which of your secrets did he know?

โ€œWe can do a search,โ€ I said, trying to focus on the riddle and not the boy. โ€œOr have Alisa hire a private investigator on my behalf to look for men with those last names.โ€

โ€œOr,โ€ Jameson countered, โ€œyou can give me about six hours to utterly sober up, and Iโ€™ll show you what I do when Iโ€™m working a puzzle and I hit a wall.โ€

 

 

Seven hours later, Jameson snuck me out through the fireplace passageway

and led me to the far wing of the houseโ€”past the kitchen, past the Great Room, into what turned out to be the largest garage Iโ€™d ever seen. It was closer to a showroom, really. There were a dozen motorcycles stacked on a mammoth shelf on the wall, and twice that many cars parked in a semicircle. Jameson paced by them, one by one. He stopped in front of a car that looked like something straight out of science fiction.

โ€œThe Aston Martin Valkyrie,โ€ Jameson said. โ€œA hybrid hypercar with a top speed of more than two hundred miles per hour.โ€ He gestured down the line. โ€œThose three are Bugattis. The Chironโ€™s my favorite. Nearly fifteen hundred horsepower and not bad on the track.โ€

โ€œTrack,โ€ I repeated. โ€œAs inย racetrack?โ€

โ€œThey were my grandfatherโ€™s babies,โ€ Jameson said. โ€œAnd nowโ€ฆโ€ A slow smile spread across his face. โ€œTheyโ€™re yours.โ€

That smile was devilish. It was dangerous.

โ€œNo way,โ€ I told Jameson. โ€œIโ€™m not even allowed to leave the estate without Oren. And I canโ€™t drive a car like these!โ€

โ€œLuckily,โ€ Jameson replied, ambling toward a box on the wall, โ€œI can.โ€ There was a puzzle built into the box, like a Rubikโ€™s Cube, but silver, with strange shapes carved onto the squares. Jameson immediately began spinning the tiles, twisting them, arranging them just so. The box popped open. He ran his fingers over a plethora of keys, then selected one. โ€œThereโ€™s nothing like speed for getting out of your own headโ€”and out of your own way.โ€ He started walking toward the Aston Martin. โ€œSome puzzles make more sense at two hundred miles an hour.โ€

โ€œIs there even room for two people in that?โ€ I asked.

โ€œWhy, Heiress,โ€ Jameson murmured, โ€œI thought youโ€™d never ask.โ€

 

 

Jameson drove the car onto a pad that lowered us down below the ground level of the House. We shot through a tunnel, and before I knew it, we were going out a back exit that I hadnโ€™t even known existed.

Jameson didnโ€™t speed. He didnโ€™t take his eyes off the road. He just drove, silently. In the seat next to him, every nerve ending in my body was alive with anticipation.

This is a very bad idea.

He must have called ahead, because the track was ready for us when we got there.

โ€œThe Martinโ€™s not technically a race car,โ€ Jameson told me. โ€œTechnically, it wasnโ€™t even for sale when my grandfather bought it.โ€

And technically, I shouldnโ€™t have left the estate. We shouldnโ€™t have taken the car. We shouldnโ€™t have been here.

But somewhere around a hundred and fifty miles an hour, I stopped thinking aboutย should.

Adrenaline. Euphoria. Fear. There wasnโ€™t room in my head for anything else. Speed was the only thing that mattered.

That, and the boy beside me.

I didnโ€™t want him to slow down. I didnโ€™t want the car to stop. For the first time since the reading of the will, I feltย free.ย No questions. No suspicions. No one staring or not staring. Nothing except this moment, right here, right now.

Nothing except Jameson Winchester Hawthorne and me.

โ€Œ

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