The Dying Wife's Secret Baby Bump

The elevator doors opened directly into the penthouse suite. It was a sprawling space of glass and steel, with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Central Park. The furniture was white leather and chrome, cold and expensive.

Harrison was standing by the window, his phone pressed to his ear. He was wearing the same suit from yesterday, his tie loosened, his hair slightly disheveled. He looked stressed. Good.

Kerry Morrow was sitting on the sofa, her sunglasses still on, her arms crossed over her chest. Her perfect hair was slightly frizzed, and her jaw was clenched tight. She looked terrified.

Harrison saw Arlene walk in. He ended the call without saying goodbye and dropped the phone on the bar.

"Finally," he snapped. "You know what to do. Go downstairs, tell them you're here to discuss the charity gala with me. Smile for the cameras. Make it convincing."

Arlene didn't move. She stood in the center of the room, her bag clutched in her hand, her expression unreadable.

She turned her head slowly, her gaze landing on Kerry. "Miss Morrow," she said, her voice cool and polite. "I think we need to have a little chat before I do anything. Just the two of us."

Kerry pulled down her sunglasses, her eyes narrowing. "Excuse me?"

Harrison stepped forward, his eyes flashing. "Arlene, this isn't a social call. Do your job."

"I am," Arlene replied, not looking at him. She kept her eyes locked on Kerry. "My job is damage control. And right now, the damage isn't just to the Boyle name. It's to Miss Morrow's career. Isn't that right, Kerry?"

Kerry flinched. The actress's mask slipped for a second, revealing the raw panic underneath. The upcoming movie deals, the brand endorsements-they were all on the line. A scandal like this could tank her career overnight.

"Get out, Harrison," Arlene said, her voice leaving no room for argument.

Harrison stared at her, his face a mask of disbelief. "What did you just say?"

"I need to speak with your... friend. Alone. Unless you want the whole world to know the details of your arrangement."

Harrison's jaw clenched. He looked from Arlene to Kerry, then back again. For a moment, it looked like he might refuse. Then, with a look of pure, undiluted fury, he turned on his heel and walked into the bedroom, slamming the door behind him.

The sound echoed in the silent suite. Kerry jumped.

Arlene walked over to the bar and poured herself a glass of water. She took a slow sip, letting the silence stretch. Let the actress sweat.

"Look, Mrs. Boyle-" Kerry started, her voice trembling.

"Call me Arlene," she interrupted, setting the glass down. "And let's cut the crap. You're in trouble. I'm not. I can walk out of here right now, and the story writes itself. 'Scorned Wife Abandoned.' The tabloids will eat it up. But you? You'll be the homewrecker. Your brand deals will vanish. Your movie offers will dry up."

Kerry's face paled. "I didn't-this wasn't supposed to-"

"I don't care what it was supposed to be," Arlene said, her voice hard. "I care about what it is. And right now, it's a problem. A problem I can fix."

Kerry stared at her, a glimmer of hope in her eyes. "How?"

"I can make this go away," Arlene said. "I can go downstairs, smile for the cameras, and spin a story about a charity partnership that makes you look like a saint instead of a sinner. But that kind of service doesn't come cheap."

Kerry's eyes narrowed, the fear replaced by suspicion. "You want money? You're his wife. You already have everything."

"I want hush money," Arlene said bluntly. "A confidentiality fee. For everything I've seen today. And a PR fee. For my services."

She pulled out her phone and showed Kerry the number. It was a lot. It was more than Kerry made on a single movie, but less than she would lose if the scandal broke her.

Kerry's mouth fell open. "You're insane."

"Probably," Arlene agreed. "But I'm also your only way out of this. You have sixty seconds to decide."

Kerry looked at the door, then back at Arlene. She thought about the headlines, the lost contracts, the ruined reputation. She thought about the money.

"Fine," she spat. "But I'm paying in crypto. Untraceable."

"Done," Arlene said, holding out her phone. "Send it now."

Kerry fumbled with her own phone, her fingers shaking. A minute later, Arlene's screen lit up with a notification. Transfer complete.

Arlene smiled. It wasn't a nice smile. "Pleasure doing business with you."

She turned and walked to the bedroom door. She knocked once, then opened it.

Harrison was standing by the bed, his arms crossed, his face like thunder. "What the hell was that?"

"That," Arlene said, walking past him back into the living room, "was business."

She turned to face him, her eyes bright, her posture relaxed. She was enjoying this. She was enjoying the way he was looking at her, like she had just grown a second head.

"Now," she said, "it's your turn."

"My turn?" he repeated, his voice dangerously low.

"You hired me to fix your mess," she said. "I've secured the talent. Now I need to secure the boss. And my rates are non-negotiable."

She named her price. It was double what she had charged Kerry. And she wanted it in a different form.

"I want it transferred to an anonymous, offshore crypto wallet," she said, her voice firm. "The kind that disappears without a trace."

Harrison stared at her for a long moment. Then, he laughed. It was a harsh, incredulous sound. "You're shaking me down? In my own hotel?"

"I'm charging you for my services," Arlene corrected. "You want the Boyle name clean? You want the stock price to recover? You pay. I'm not your free employee, Harrison. I'm your wife. And right now, your wife is very, very expensive."

He pushed himself off the doorframe and walked toward her. He stopped inches away, looking down at her. He was trying to intimidate her, to reassert his dominance. But Arlene didn't flinch. She looked right back at him, her eyes unyielding.

He searched her face for some sign of weakness, some crack in the armor. He found none. This wasn't the Arlene he knew. This was someone else. Someone cold. Someone calculating.

The corner of his mouth twitched. It wasn't a smile. It was a look of dark, twisted interest.

"Fine," he said, the word clipped.

He walked over to the writing desk in the corner. He pulled out a tablet and tapped the screen a few times, his movements sharp and angry. A moment later, Arlene's phone chimed. A secure message containing a long string of characters. The transaction ID.

He tossed the tablet onto the desk. It clattered against the wood.

"Done," he clipped out.

Arlene checked the transaction on a block explorer app. The amount was correct. The transfer was irreversible. She tucked her phone back into her bag, next to the small fortune she had just acquired.

"Thank you for your patronage," she said, her voice sweet as poison. "Now, let's get to work."

She turned to Kerry, who was watching the exchange with her mouth hanging open.

"Take off the jewelry," Arlene commanded. "The sunglasses too. You look like you're hiding something. We're going for 'concerned friend,' not 'guilty mistress.'"

Kerry scrambled to comply, pulling off her earrings and handing them to a hovering assistant.

Arlene looked at Harrison. "Tell your PR team to draft a release about a new arts education initiative. The Boyle Foundation is partnering with Miss Morrow to bring art supplies to underprivileged kids. It's wholesome, it's photogenic, and it gives you a reason to be in the same room."

Harrison didn't argue. He just picked up his phone and started barking orders.

Arlene felt a rush of power. It was intoxicating. For the first time in three years, she was in control. She was calling the shots. And she was getting paid to do it.

She had bought herself some time. Some security. Some coffin fund.

The thought made her smile. A real smile this time. One that reached her eyes.

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