The screen of Kaleigh's phone dimmed, then went black. The number vanished, but the digits were already seared into Beverley's brain.
Zane Archer stepped up beside her. He didn't try to take the phone; he just looked at the dark glass reflecting the chaotic room. "Investigating that number could drag you into something you can't crawl out of."
Beverley bent down. She picked up the phone, her thumb pressing the power button. The screen lit up again. The unsaved number sat there, taunting her. She pulled her own phone from her clutch and snapped a picture of the screen. The click was loud in the quiet room.
"I'm already in hell," she said, her voice flat. "A few more miles down won't make a difference."
She walked over to the club manager, who was hovering near the door, pale and sweating. She held out Kaleigh's phone. "Make sure this gets back to its owner."
The manager took it with a nod, his hands trembling.
Zane's assistant burst through the door. He was a young guy, usually unflappable, but right now his face was ashen. He shoved a tablet into Zane's hands. "You need to see this. Now."
Zane frowned. He took the tablet, his eyes scanning the screen. The color drained from his face. He turned the tablet around so Beverley could see it.
It was the digital cover of Vanity Fair. A high-resolution, perfectly lit photo took up the entire screen. Ellwood, looking devastatingly handsome in a dark suit, was pressing a kiss to Kaleigh's forehead. She looked up at him with tears in her eyes, an angel in distress.
The headline was bold, red, and vicious: The Billionaire's Inheritance Crisis & His True Muse.
Beverley's stomach clenched. A wave of acid burned the back of her throat. She scrolled down, reading the subtext. It painted Ellwood as a tragic hero trapped in a loveless marriage, and Kaleigh as the selfless saint who saved his life in Colombia. And Beverley? She was the greedy, jealous wife. The obstacle. The roadblock.
But it wasn't the words that made her vision blur. It was the background of the photo.
The carousel. The Central Park carousel. Aiden's favorite place in the entire world. Every Sunday, rain or shine, they would ride the painted horses until Aiden's laughter echoed across the park. Ellwood had taken Kaleigh there. He had kissed her on hallowed ground.
Beverley's phone buzzed. Then it rang. The screen flashed a name she hadn't seen in days. Evelyn Reed. Ellwood's executive assistant. The gatekeeper.
She answered, pressing the phone to her ear.
"Mrs. Stevenson." Evelyn's voice was crisp, professional, and utterly devoid of warmth. "Mr. Stevenson requires you to return to the estate within the hour. You are to prepare to attend the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital charity gala tomorrow evening."
Beverley let out a short, hollow laugh. "Is that so?"
"Mr. Stevenson requires your presence as his wife," Evelyn continued, ignoring the laugh. "You will present a united front to dispel the rumors in the magazine. The Stevenson Group's stock is volatile. Your cooperation is necessary to stabilize the market."
He had just humiliated her on the cover of a global magazine. He had kissed his mistress at their son's sanctuary. And now he wanted her to play dress-up to save his stock price.
"Tell Stevenson I refuse," Beverley said.
Silence. Then, a sharp intake of breath. "Mrs. Stevenson, please consider the consequences of-"
"The consequences are mine to bear," Beverley cut in. Her voice was low, but it vibrated with a new kind of power. It wasn't anger. It was purpose. "And Evelyn? Tell him this: I am done playing his games. I am done being his prop."
She paused, her eyes fixed on the tablet, on the carousel in the background. Aiden's laughter echoed in her memory.
"From this day forward," Beverley said, each word clear and distinct, "my only goal is to establish the Aiden Vaughn-Stevenson Foundation for Pediatric Cardiology. I will make sure his name lives on. I will save other children. Innocent children. Children who actually have a chance."
It wasn't just a statement. It was a vow. A prayer. A lifeline thrown into the dark.
The line was dead silent. Evelyn Reed, the woman who had seen and heard everything, was speechless.
Beverley ended the call. She opened her contacts, found Evelyn's name, and hit delete. Then she blocked the number.
She looked at Zane. "Archer. Our collaboration needs a pivot. I need money. A lot of it. Seed funding for the foundation."
Zane studied her face. The spoiled socialite he had expected was gone. In her place stood a woman forged by fire. He nodded slowly. "I might know an opportunity."
Miles away, in a VIP suite at New York Presbyterian Hospital, Ellwood Stevenson sat in a chair next to Kaleigh's bed. She was sleeping, an oxygen cannula resting lightly under her nose, her face pale but peaceful.
Evelyn Reed stood by the door, her tablet clutched to her chest. She had just finished relaying Beverley's words.
Ellwood's hand tightened around the armrest of the chair. The leather creaked under the pressure. His jaw was clenched so tight a muscle jumped in his cheek.
"The foundation?" he repeated, his voice a low, dangerous rumble.
"Yes, sir. She said-"
"A foundation," Ellwood spat, a cruel smirk twisting his lips. "In the name of a boy who is alive and well, hiding God knows where?"
He stood up, pacing the small space. The monitor beeped faster as Kaleigh stirred, but he didn't notice.
"She's insane," Ellwood muttered. "She's using my son's name to run a scam. A charity? It's a money laundering scheme. It has to be."
He stopped pacing, his eyes burning into the wall. "She wants to play dirty? Fine. We play dirty. Find out everything about this 'foundation.' I'll freeze every asset she has. I'll sue her into the ground for fraud."
He looked at Evelyn. "And get my lawyers on the phone. I want a restraining order. If she uses Aiden's name one more time, I want her arrested."

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