{Hailey’s Pov}
The Great Room was two-thirds the size of the foyer. An enormous stone fireplace stood at the front. There were gargoyles carved into the sides of the fireplace. Literal gargoyles. Kiara and I sat on the wingback chairs, three older gentlemen in suits stood, talking to Agnes and her husband. The lawyers, I realized. After another few minutes, Clara joined them, and I took stock of the other occupants of the room. A White couple, older, in their sixties at least. A Black man, forties, with a military bearing, who stood with his back to a wall and maintained a clear line of sight to both exits. Aaron with what was clearly another Lachlan brother by his side. This one was in his midtwenties. He needed a haircut and had paired his suit with cowboy boots that, like the motorcycle outside, had seen better days. Luca, I thought, recalling the name that Clara had provided. “Are you all right, Hailey?” Kiara asked beside me. “I’m fine,” I told Kiara. But I wasn’t. Even after two years, missing my mom could hit me like a tsunami. “I’m going to step outside,” I said, forcing a smile. “I just need some air.” Agnes’s husband stopped me on my way out. “Where are you going? We’re about to start.” He locked a hand over my elbow. I wrenched my arm out of his grip. I didn’t care who these people were. No one got to lay hands on me. “I was told there are four Lachlan grandsons,” I said, my voice steely. “By my count, you’re still down by one. I’ll be back in a minute. You won’t even notice I’m gone.” I ended up in the backyard instead of the front, if you could even call it a yard. The grounds were immaculately kept. There was a fountain. A statue garden. A greenhouse. And stretching into the distance, as far as I could see, land. Some of it was treed. Some were open. But it was easy enough, standing there and looking out, to imagine that a person who walked off to the horizon might never make their way back. I looked up and saw a boy sitting on the edge of a balcony overhead, balanced precariously on a wrought-iron railing. Drunk. “You’re going to fall,” I told him. Not like I care. He offered me a lazy grin. He had hair darker than Julian’s and lighter than Aaron’s.. He wasn’t wearing a shirt. His torso was lean, his stomach defined. He had a long, thin scar that ran from his collarbone to his hip. “You must be the mystery girl,” he said. “I’m Hailey,” I corrected. I’d come out here to get away from the Lachlan and their talks. He brought his feet up to the railing and stood. He wobbled. He landed right beside me. “You shouldn’t be out here, M.G.” I wasn’t the shirtless one who’d just jumped off a balcony. “Neither should you.” I stayed out back a few minutes longer. Nothing about this day felt real. And tomorrow, I’d go back to New Orleans, a little richer, hopefully, and with a story to tell, and I’d probably never see any of the Lachlan again. I’d never have a view like this again. By the time I returned to the Great Room, Marcus Lachlan had miraculously managed to find a shirt, and a suit jacket. He smiled in my direction and gave a little salute. Beside him, Julian stiffened, his jaw muscle tensing. “Now that everyone is here,” one of the lawyers said, “Let's get started.” The three lawyers stood in a triangle formation. The one who’d spoken shared Clara’s dark hair, brown skin, and self-assured expression. I assumed he was the Smith in McConnell, and Jones. The other two, presumably Jones and McConnell, stood to either side. Since when does it take three lawyers to read a will? Either George Lachlan had been paranoid, or he’d known his family was going to burn. “You are here,” Mr. Smith said, projecting his voice to the corners of the room, “to hear the last will and testament of George Lachlan. Per Mr. Lachlan’s instructions, my colleagues will now distribute letters he has left for each of you.” The other men began to make the rounds of the room, handing out envelopes one by one. “You may open these letters when the reading is concluded. I was handed an envelope. My full name was written in calligraphy on the front.Beside me, Kiara leaned forward hopefully, but the lawyer passed her by and went on delivering envelopes to the other occupants of the room. “Mr. Lachlan stipulated that all of the following individuals must be physically present for the reading of this will: Agnes Lachlan, Debra Lachlan, Julian Lachlan, Marcus Lachlan, Luca Lachlan,Aaron Lachlan, and Ms. Hailey Vale.” My stomach dropped. Every pair of eyes snapped toward me. My ears buzzed like I’d just been slapped. I’d never felt more naked in my life. “Since you are all here,” Mr. Smith continued, “we may begin.” Beside me, Kiara slipped her hand into mine. “I, George Joe Lachlan,” Mr. Smith read, “Being of sound body and mind, decree that my worldly possessions, including all monetary and physical assets, be disposed of as follows. I braced myself. But it started… tame. “To Mark and Kate Wilson, for years of loyal service, I bequeath a sum of one hundred thousand dollars, with lifelong, rent-free tenancy granted in Wayback Cottage, located on the western border of my New York estate.” The older couple I’d seen earlier leaned into each other. All I could think was: ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS. The Wilson’s presence was not mandatory for the reading of the will, and they’d just been given one hundred thousand dollars. For just being nice employees? I tried very hard to remember how to breathe. “To Williams Brown, head of my security detail, who has saved my life more times and in more ways than I can count, I leave the contents of my toolbox, held currently in the offices of McConnell, and Jones, as well as a sum of three hundred thousand dollars.” I blinked. Three hundred grand and a mystery toolbox? George Lachlan was handing out fortunes like candy. George Lachlan knew these people, I told myself, heart thumping. They worked for him. They mattered to him. I’m nothing. To…” He paused and then tried again. “To my daughters, Agnes Lachlan and Debra Lachlan I leave the funds necessary to pay off all debts accrued as of the date and the time of my death.” Mr. Smith paused again, his lips pushing themselves together. The other two lawyers stared straight ahead, avoiding looking at any member of the Lachlan family directly. The room thickened “Additionally, I leave to Agnes my compass, may she always know true north, and to Debra, I leave my wedding ring, may she love as wholly and steadfastly as I loved her mother.” Another pause, more painful than the last. “Go on.” That came from Agnes’s husband. “To each of my daughters,” Mr. Smith read slowly, “beyond that already stated, I leave a one-time inheritance of fifty thousand dollars.” Fifty thousand dollars? I’d no sooner thought those words that Agnes’s husband echoed out loud. George Lachaln left his daughters less than he left his security detail. Suddenly, Debra’s reference to Julian as the heir apparent took on a whole new meaning. “You did this.” Agnes turned toward Debra. She didn’t raise her voice, but it was deadly all the same. “Me?” Debra scoffed, “Daddy was never the same after Leonard died,” Agnes continued. “Disappeared,” Debra corrected. “God, listen to you!” Agnes lost her hold on her tone. “You got in his head, didn’t you, Debra? Batted your eyelashes and convinced him to bypass us and leave everything to your—” “Sons.” Debra cut in shape as a blade. “The word you’re looking for is sons.” Aaron’s voice rolled in, thick with a New York accent“The word she’s looking for is bastard, Not that we haven't heard it before.”{Hailey’s Pov}I couldn’t stop thinking about the kiss.Julian’s lips on mine. His hands gripping my waist. The heat. The fire. The way he kissed me, like he hated it and wanted it all at once.It messed with my head. I didn’t even like him.Julian Lachlan was cocky, rude, and had a way of making me feel like I didn’t belong, even though I was the one who inherited this place.But still… when he kissed me, my body didn’t care.I needed air. I left the hidden room in the library, climbed the stairs, and didn’t stop walking until I reached the garden doors. I stepped outside barefoot, the cold stone path shocking me back to reality.It was still early. The sky was pink and gold. Quiet.Too quiet. The mansion sat behind me like a beast watching my every move. I looked back at the windows. Some were lit, some dark. I wondered who else was awake. I wondered if Julian was standing behind a curtain, watching me.Or maybe I wanted him to be. I shook the thought away.“No more distractions,” I
{Julian’s Pov} I shouldn’t have kissed her. I leaned against the wall in the hidden room, staring at the photo of my mother with that baby. It wasn’t me. And I had no damn clue who it was. But I couldn’t focus on that. Not right now.Because all I could think about was Hailey. Her mouth on mine. Her body pressed against me like it belonged there. She kissed me back. That was the problem.I told her it changed nothing, but that was a lie. It changed everything. She wasn’t supposed to get under my skin like this. She was supposed to be a problem. A storm to ride out. A thief who took my legacy. Instead, she was fire, and now I couldn’t stop thinking about her.I lit a cigarette. The lighter clicked too loud in the silence.“Idiot,” I muttered to myself.By the time I made it back upstairs, the house was too quiet. Afternoon light poured through the stained-glass windows, painting the hallway in reds and golds. I passed a maid scrubbing glitter off the marble floor, leftover chaos from
Chapter 16 – Fire Beneath the MarbleI didn’t go looking at George Lachlan. I didn’t search the house hoping to “accidentally” run into Julian Lachlan, shirtless and smug with another cigarette tucked between his lips. I wasn’t planning to think about the way he looked at me in the room last night, flicking my bean. But the thing about fire, it finds you.I was heading to the library after Aaron had left me behind. I’d overheard Clara mention there were panels in there that hadn’t been opened in years. And if this house was truly full of riddles, then the library seemed like a good place to start unraveling them.I turned the corner.And there he was.Leaning against the doorframe like some carved sin in human form. Julian. His sleeves were rolled up. His jaw was sharp. And that stare… God, it hit me like a slap and a whisper at the same time.“Well, if it isn’t the heiress with a habit of wandering into trouble,” he said, voice low and rough.I didn’t stop walking. “If you’re planni
{Hailey’s pov}After Marcus slipped through the passage and left, I just lay there in my bed, wide awake. Sleep wasn’t coming.I stared up at the ceiling, the one with the fancy molding and gold edges, and all I could think was how heavy this house felt. Like it was pressing into me. Into my chest. Into my head.There was something strange about this place. Something alive. The walls hummed with energy. Not loud, but it was there, like the house remembered things I hadn’t even lived through.George Lachlan didn’t just leave me money. He dropped me into a maze.And Marcus?He gave me the first clue.At dawn, I gave up on sleep, pulled on an oversized sweater, and padded barefoot into the hallway. The place was freezing and dead silent. Even the air felt different. The halls were too big, too wide, and full of shadows that didn’t belong in the morning.The paintings watched me. The floor creaked like it had something to say. And me? I was just wandering. Not snooping, I told myself. Jus
{Hailey’s POV}I wasn’t sure how long I’d been lying there when I heard it. A voice. “Pull the candlestick.”I was on my feet instantly, whirling to put my back to the wall. On instinct, I grabbed the keys I’d left on the nightstand, in case I needed a weapon. I scanned the room for the person who’d spoken, and came up empty.“Pull the candlestick on the fireplace, Heiress. Unless you want me stuck back here?” Annoyance replaced my initial fight-or-flight response. I narrowed my eyes at the stone fireplace at the back of my room. Sure enough, there was a candelabra on the mantel.“Pretty sure this qualifies as stalking,” I told the fireplace-or, more accurately, the boy on the other side of it. Still, I couldn’t not pull the candlestick. Who could resist something like that? I wrapped my hand around the base of the candelabra. I was met with resistance, and another suggestion came from behind the fireplace.“Don’t just pull forward. Angle it down.”I did as I was instructed. The candel
{Julian’s POV} The PlayStation controller vibrated in my hand, and for once, it wasn’t the most chaotic thing in the room. “Headshot,” Aaron announced smugly, tossing back a handful of pistachios as my character dropped dead for the third time. “You’re slipping, Jules.” “I’m relaxed,” I muttered. “Losing, you mean.” Marcus leaned back into the massive velvet couch, bottle of Peroni on his knee, expression unreadable as always. Luca didn’t even look up, boots on the edge of the coffee table, his long fingers drumming against the controller like he was playing jazz instead of combat mode. We were all here. The dethroned sons of Lachlan, gathered like broken kings around a console, pretending we didn’t just get publicly gutted. “You’re getting your life back,” Marcus said eventually, his voice smooth and razor-edged. “There’s no one left to please, right?” I clenched my jaw. He wasn’t wrong—no more George. No more bending to impossible expectations, chasing approval I was n