Blair POV:
The chill of the morning air bit at my exposed skin as I stepped onto the deck of my yacht, "The Siren's Call." The name felt ironic now. I was the one being called away, not the one doing the calling. The sun was barely kissing the horizon, painting the sky in hues of bruised purple and angry red. It mirrored the storm brewing inside me.
I watched the city shrink behind us, a glittering monument to the life I was about to dismantle. Keaton believed I was simply retreating, licking my wounds. He had no idea what was coming.
My first order of business was to visit Father Michael. Not for absolution, but for appearance's sake. The Clayton family was steeped in tradition, and a visit to our ancestral church before a major family sailing trip was expected. It would solidify my narrative of a grieving wife seeking solace.
The heavy oak doors of St. Michael's creaked open, revealing the hushed sanctity within. Incense hung heavy in the air, a stark contrast to the sterile, calculated world I inhabited. Father Michael, his silver hair a halo around his kind face, greeted me with a solemn nod.
"Blair, my child," he said, his voice soft, "I was so sorry to hear the rumors."
Rumors. The carefully curated whispers Keaton had allowed to circulate, painting me as the barren, career-obsessed wife who couldn't give him what he truly needed.
"Thank you, Father," I said, clasping my hands together, a picture of quiet suffering. "It's been... difficult."
He led me to a quiet pew, his hand gently on my back. "God works in mysterious ways, my dear. Sometimes, from the ashes of despair, new life emerges."
I almost choked on a bitter laugh. New life was precisely the problem.
We spoke for a while, his words a balm I didn't need, but played along with. He offered prayers, blessings. I accepted them with feigned gratitude, all the while thinking of the next chess move. He didn' t realize he was merely a prop in my meticulously planned charade. My phone, discreetly vibrating in my pocket, confirmed Keaton's location: the exclusive Hamptons retreat, where he had squirrelled Kaylene away. The fools. They thought they were safe.
After leaving the church, I drove directly to my private office, a place even Keaton rarely entered. I pulled out a small, velvet-lined box from a hidden safe. Inside lay a delicate diamond necklace, a wedding gift from Keaton. It symbolized everything I was leaving behind. With a steady hand, I opened the window overlooking the East River and, without a moment's hesitation, dropped the necklace into the churning, murky waters below. It sank without a ripple, just like my feelings for Keaton.
"Such a tragedy," my assistant, Sarah, had murmured that morning, seeing me off. "Mrs. Murphy, going through so much. But she's so strong."
She thought I was grieving a lost marriage. She didn't know I was orchestrating a quiet war.
Keaton, in his arrogance, thought he was clever. He believed I would be too emotional, too heartbroken to fight back. He underestimated the cold, strategic mind that had built Clayton Shipping into a global powerhouse. He saw a wife; I saw a rival.
My network of contacts ran deep, far deeper than Keaton could ever imagine. A few discreet calls, a few veiled threats, and I had eyes and ears everywhere. I knew the exact address of the Hamptons estate, the security codes, the staff roster. I knew Kaylene's favorite brand of herbal tea, the specific prenatal vitamins she was taking, and the precise due date of her baby. They were living in a gilded cage, but a cage nonetheless.
I leaned back in my chair, a map of the Hamptons estate spread before me. My finger traced the winding path to the secluded guesthouse. That's where she was. My sister. My betrayer.
"Prepare the jet," I instructed my pilot over the phone, my voice calm and steady. "We' re flying to the Hamptons. And make sure the local authorities are on standby. I don' t want any... complications."
My confrontation with Keaton was inevitable, and it would be on my terms. I left a message with his personal assistant, a curt demand for a meeting. Not a request, a demand. He would come. He always did. He was addicted to control, and he would never pass up an opportunity to assert it.
Later that evening, I stood in the opulent living room of the Hamptons estate, the scent of fresh ocean air mixing with the faint aroma of Kaylene' s lavender essential oils. Keaton walked in, his face a mask of carefully controlled annoyance.
"Blair," he said, his voice flat. "What are you doing here? I thought you were sailing."
"And miss all the fun?" I raised an eyebrow, a sardonic smile playing on my lips. "Hardly."
He clenched his jaw, his eyes darting around the room as if searching for Kaylene. "This isn't appropriate."
"Appropriate?" I laughed, a hollow, humorless sound. "You think you can hide your pregnant mistress in my Hamptons estate and talk about what's 'appropriate'?"
"She's not my mistress," he snapped, his eyes flashing. "She's carrying my child."
"Which makes her what, Keaton? Your second wife? Your broodmare?" I challenged, enjoying the flicker of anger in his eyes.
He stepped closer, his voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "What do you want, Blair? Money? The company? Name your price."
"My price?" I looked around the lavish room, a symbol of their betrayal. "You think everything can be bought, Keaton? Is that what you learned from my family? How to put a price on love, on loyalty, on decency?"
My eyes burned, but I refused to shed a single tear. Not for him. Not for them.
"Our marriage was a sham, wasn't it?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper. "All those years, all those declarations of love... just a means to an end for you."
He remained silent, his gaze unwavering. His silence was deafening. It confirmed everything. Every doubt, every insecurity I had ever pushed aside, now screamed at me from the depths of his cold, calculating eyes.
"You disgust me," I said, the words heavy with contempt. "You and your pathetic little doll."
I turned my back to him, walking towards the grand piano in the corner of the room. My fingers grazed the polished keys, a silent lament. He thought I was heartbroken. He thought I was weak. He was wrong.
"You will regret this, Blair," he said, his voice laced with a subtle threat. "You will regret pushing me away."
I turned to face him, a chilling smile on my lips. "Oh, Keaton. I regret wasting even a single moment with you. And as for pushing you away? Consider it a favor. You were always far too clingy for my taste."
With that, I turned on my heel and walked out, leaving him standing alone in the opulent room, a testament to his deceit. The game had just begun.