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Chapter no 51

The Inheritance Games (The Inheritance Games, 1)

That night, in honor of Theaโ€™s visit, Mrs. Laughlin made a melt-in-your- mouth roast beef. Orgasmic garlic mashed potatoes. Roasted asparagus, broccoli florets, and three different kinds of crรจme brรปlรฉe.

I couldnโ€™t help feeling like it was pretty revealing that Mrs. Laughlin had pulled out all the stops for Theaโ€”but not for me.

Trying not to seem petty, I sat down to a formal dinner in the โ€œdining room,โ€ which probably should have been called a banquet hall instead. The massive table was set for eleven. I cataloged the participants in this little family dinner: four Hawthorne brothers. Skye. Zara and Constantine. Thea. Libby. Nan. And me.

โ€œThea,โ€ Zara said, her voice almost too pleasant, โ€œhow is field hockey?โ€ โ€œWeโ€™re undefeated this season.โ€ Thea turned toward me. โ€œHave you

decided which sport youโ€™ll be playing, Avery?โ€

I managed to resist the urge to snort, but barely. โ€œI donโ€™t do sports.โ€ โ€œEveryone at Country Day does a sport,โ€ Xander informed me, before

stuffing his mouth with roast beef. His eyes rolled upward with pleasure as he chewed. โ€œIt is an actual, real requirement and not a figment of Theaโ€™s delightfully vindictive imagination.โ€

โ€œXander,โ€ Nash said in warning.

โ€œI said she wasย delightfullyย vindictive,โ€ Xander replied innocently.

โ€œIf I were a boy,โ€ Thea told him with a Southern belle smile, โ€œpeople would just call me driven.โ€

โ€œThea.โ€ Constantine frowned at her.

โ€œRight.โ€ Thea dabbed at her lips with her napkin. โ€œNo feminism at the dinner table.โ€

This time, I couldnโ€™t bite back the snort.ย Point, Thea.

โ€œA toast,โ€ Skye declared out of nowhere, holding up her wineglass and slurring the words enough that it was clear sheโ€™d already been imbibing.

โ€œSkye, dear,โ€ Nan said firmly, โ€œhave you considered sleeping it off?โ€ โ€œA toast,โ€ Skye reiterated, glass still held high. โ€œTo Avery.โ€

For once, sheโ€™d gotten my name right. I waited for the guillotine to drop, but Skye said nothing else. Zara raised her glass. One by one, every other glass went up.

Every person in this room had probably gotten the message: No good could come of challenging the will. I might have been the enemyโ€”but I was also the one with the money.

Is that why Zara brought Thea here? To get close to me? Is that why she left me alone at the foundation with Grayson?

โ€œTo you, Heiress,โ€ Jameson murmured to my left. I turned to look at him. I hadnโ€™t seen him since the night before. I was fairly certain heโ€™d skipped school. I wondered if heโ€™d spent the day in the Black Wood, looking for the next clue.ย Without me.

โ€œTo Emily,โ€ Thea added suddenly, her glass still raised, her eyes on Jameson. โ€œMay she rest in peace.โ€

Jamesonโ€™s glass came down. His chair was pushed roughly back from the table. Farther down, Graysonโ€™s fingers tightened around the stem of his own glass, his knuckles going white.

โ€œTheadora,โ€ย Constantine hissed.

Thea took a drink and adopted the worldโ€™s most innocent expression. โ€œWhat?โ€

 

 

Everything in me wanted to follow Jameson, but I waited a few minutes before excusing myself. Like that would keep any of them from knowing exactly where I was going.

In the foyer, I pressed my hand flat against the wall panels, hitting the sequence designed to reveal the coat closet door. I needed my coat if I was going to venture off into the Black Wood. I was sure that was where Jameson had gone.

As my hand hooked around the hanger, a voice spoke from behind me. โ€œIโ€™m not going to ask you what Jameson is up to. What youโ€™re up to.โ€

I turned to face Grayson. โ€œYouโ€™re not going to ask me,โ€ I repeated, taking in the set of his jaw and those canny silver eyes, โ€œbecause you

already know.โ€

โ€œI was there last night. At the bridge.โ€ There were edges in Graysonโ€™s toneโ€”not rough, but sharp. โ€œThis morning, I went to see the Red Will.โ€

โ€œI still have the decoder,โ€ I pointed out, trying not to read anything into the fact that heโ€™d seen his brother and me at the bridgeโ€”and didnโ€™t sound happy about it.

Grayson shrugged, his shoulders pulling against the confines of his suit. โ€œRed acetate is easy enough to come by.โ€

If heโ€™d seen the Red Will, he knew that their middle names were clues. I wondered if his mind had gone immediately to their fathers. I wondered if that hurt him, the way it hurt Jameson.

โ€œYou were there last night,โ€ I said, echoing back what heโ€™d told me. โ€œAt the bridge.โ€ How much had he seen? How much did he know?

What had he thought when Jameson and I had touched?

โ€œWestbrook. Davenport. Winchester. Blackwood.โ€ Grayson took a step toward me. โ€œTheyโ€™re last namesโ€”but they are also locations. I found the clue on the bridge after you and my brother had gone.โ€

Heโ€™d followed us there. Heโ€™d found what weโ€™d found. โ€œWhat do you want, Grayson?โ€

โ€œIf you were smart,โ€ he warned softly, โ€œyouโ€™d stay away from Jameson. From the game.โ€ He looked down. โ€œFrom me.โ€ Emotion slashed across his features, but he masked it before I could tell what, exactly, he was feeling. โ€œTheaโ€™s right,โ€ he said sharply, turning away from meโ€”walkingย away from me. โ€œThis familyโ€”we destroy everything we touch.โ€

โ€Œ

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