Page 99 of The Final Gambit
He hadGrayson. There was a terrifying symmetry to that. Tobias Hawthorne had stolen Vincent Blake’s grandson—and now he had Tobias Hawthorne’s.
He has Toby. He has Grayson. And I have his son’s remains.All I had to do was give Vincent Blake what he wanted, and this would be over.
Or at least, that was what Blake wanted me to believe.
But Tobias Hawthorne’s final message hadn’t just cautioned me that Blake would be coming for the truth, for proof. No, Tobias Hawthorne had told me that Blake would be coming for me, that he would box me in, hold me down, have no mercy. Tobias Hawthorne had been expecting a full-on assault on his empire. Assuming he’d projected correctly, Vincent Blake wasn’t just after the truth.
He is coming. For the fortune. For my legacy. For you, Avery Kylie Grambs.
But Tobias Hawthorne—manipulative, Machiavellian man that he was—had also thought that I had a sliver of a chance. I just had to outplay Blake.
Take as your consolation this, my very risky gamble: I have watched you. I have come to know you.The words pumped through my body like blood, my heart beating out a brutal, uncompromising rhythm. Tobias Hawthorne had believed that Blake would underestimate me.
On the phone, he’d called melittle girl.
What did that mean?That he expects me to react, not act. That he thinks I’ll never look ahead.
I forced myself to stop, to slow down, to think. All around me, the others were fighting loudly about next moves. But I shut out the sound of Jameson’s voice, of Nash’s and Xander’s, Oren’s, everyone’s. And eventually, I circled back to the Queen’s Gambit. I thought about how it required ceding control of the board. It required a loss.
And it worked best when your opponent thought it was a rookie error, rather than strategy.
A plan took shape in my mind. It ossified. And I made a call.
CHAPTER 75
What did you just do?” Jameson looked at me the way he had the night he’d told me that I was their grandfather’s last puzzle, like after all this time, there were still things about me, about what I was capable of, that could surprise him.
Like he wanted to know them all.
“I called the authorities and reported that human remains had been found at Hawthorne House.” That much had probably been obvious if they’d overheard me. What Jameson was really asking me waswhy.
“Far be it from me to state the obvious,” Thea cut in, “but wasn’t the point of diggingthatup to make a trade?”
I could feel Jameson reading me, feel his brain sorting through the possibilities in mine.
“I have another call to make,” I said.
“To Blake?” Rebecca asked.
“No,” Jameson answered for me.
“I don’t have time to explain,” I told all of them.
“You’re playing him.” Jameson didn’t phrase that as a question.
“Blake said to bring him the body, and it will be returned to him. Eventually. And when it is, I won’t have broken any laws.”
It was easier thinking of this like chess. Trying to see my opponent’s moves coming before he made them. Baiting the moves I wanted, blocking attacks before they happened.
Xander’s eyes widened. “You think that if you’d taken him the remains, he would have held the illegality of that move over you?”
“I can’t afford to hand him any more leverage.”
“Because, of course, this is all about you.” Thea’s voice was dangerously pleasant—never a good sign.
“Thea,” Rebecca said quietly. “Let it go.”
“No. This is yourfamily, Bex. And no matter how hard you try, no matter how angry you manage to get—that’s always going to matter to you.” Thea lifted a hand to the side of Rebecca’s face. “I saw you back there with your mom.”
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