As I made my way back to the others, I thought about the fact that Vincent Blake had addressed every one of his missives to me. And he’d made it clear on the phone that he wouldn’t speak to anyone but “the heiress.”
You’re the one playing the piano now, girl.… Nan’s words were still echoing in my mind when I stepped into the foyer and heard a hushed conversation, bouncing off the walls of the Great Room.
“Don’t do this.” That was Thea, her voice low and intense. “Don’t fold in on yourself.”
“I’m not.” Rebecca.
“Don’t be sad, Bex.”
Rebecca read meaning in that emphasis. “Be angry.”
“Hate your mom, hate Emily and Eve, hate me if you have to, but don’t you dare disappear.”
The second he saw me, Jameson crossed the foyer. “Anything?”
I swallowed. “Vincent Blake brought your grandfather into his inner circle. Treated him like family—or his version of family, anyway.”
“The prodigal son.” Jameson’s eyes lit on mine.
“Eve?” That was Grayson—and he was yelling. I scanned the foyer. Oren, Xander, Thea and Rebecca stepping in from the Great Room. But no Eve.
Grayson burst into view. “Eve’s gone. She left a note. She’s going after Blake.”
“What about her guard?” I asked Oren.
Grayson was the one who answered. “She went to the bathroom, gave him the slip.”
“Should we be worried?” Xander threw that question out there.
Men like Vincent Blake and Tobias, I could hear Nan warning me, they’re always dangerous.
“I’m going after her.” Grayson viciously cuffed his sleeves, like he was preparing for a fight.
“Grayson, stop,” I said urgently. “Think.” Eve bolting made no sense. Did she think she could just show up on Vincent Blake’s door and demand Toby back?
Jameson stepped between Grayson and me. He held my gaze for a second or two, then turned to his brother. “Stand down, Gray.”
Grayson looked like someone who didn’t know the meaning of the words. He was stone: unmovable, the muscles in his jaw rock hard. “I can’t fail her again, Jamie.”
Again. My heart twisted. Jameson placed a hand on his brother’s shoulder. “I invoke On Spake.”
Grayson swore. “I don’t have time—”
“Make. Time.” Jameson leaned forward and said something—I couldn’t hear what—directly into Grayson’s ear. On Spake was a Hawthorne rite; it meant that Grayson couldn’t speak until Jameson was done.
As Jameson finished whispering furiously in his ear, Grayson stood very still. I waited for him to call for a fight, to exercise his right to respond to what Jameson had said in a physical way. But instead, Grayson Davenport Hawthorne parted with two and only two words. “I waive.”
“Waive what?” Rebecca asked.
Thea snorted derisively. “Hawthornes.”
“Heiress?” Jameson turned back to me. “I need to speak to you. Alone.”