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The days following the party were a blur of silence. Bennett didn't come home. He didn't call. The only communication was a single, terse text: Aria is shaken up. Staying with her to make sure she and the baby are okay. Will handle the mess at home later. He didn't ask if Kelsey was okay. He didn't seem to care.
Kelsey' s physical wounds began to heal. The stitches on her forehead were a tight, angry line. The bruises on her body faded from a violent purple to a sickly yellow-green. But the wounds inside were still raw, festering.
After a few days of numbly drifting through the empty penthouse, she forced herself to go out. She found herself walking to a small, private museum on the Upper East Side, a place she and Bennett had discovered together years ago. It had been their sanctuary, a quiet escape from the demands of their public lives.
She remembered a rainy afternoon they had spent there, huddled together on a bench in front of a Monet. He had kissed her then, a soft, lingering kiss, and whispered, "This is us, Kels. Timeless."
Now, the memory was just another lie.
As she rounded a corner into the Impressionist gallery, she saw them. Bennett and Aria, standing in front of that very same Monet. They weren't in a reverent hush. They were laughing, Aria leaning into Bennett, her head on his shoulder. They looked young, carefree, like a couple of college kids in love, not a powerful CEO and his surrogate.
An elderly couple standing nearby smiled at them. "What a beautiful young couple," the woman murmured to her husband, loud enough for Kelsey to hear.
Aria beamed, her face alight with pride. She turned to the couple. "Thank you! He just spoils me rotten," she said, patting Bennett's chest possessively. She introduced him not as her employer, not as a family friend, but as "my Ben."
Bennett didn' t correct her. He just smiled, a soft, indulgent smile that Kelsey hadn't seen in a lifetime. He leaned down and kissed the top of Aria's head.
"With you, I feel young again," he said to Aria, his voice full of a genuine warmth that made Kelsey's blood run cold. "With you, I feel... real. Not like I'm playing a part."
Each word was a hammer blow to Kelsey's already shattered heart. So that's what their life had been to him: a part to be played. The dutiful husband, the responsible CEO. With Aria, he could be his "real" self-unburdened, passionate, alive.
Kelsey understood then. Aria's appeal wasn't just her youth or her resemblance to Kelsey. It was her simplicity. She was a girl from a different world, unburdened by the weight of the Randolph name, by the trauma of his family's past. She was his escape.
Kelsey turned to leave, her heart a leaden weight in her chest. But as she rounded a sculpture, she ran right into Aria, who was heading to the restroom.
Aria jumped, startled. "Oh! Mrs. Randolph! I... I didn't see you." She looked flustered, guilty. "We were just... Bennett wanted to show me some art."
"You don't have to explain anything to me, Aria," Kelsey said, her voice flat. "It's none of my business."
Just then, a heavy bronze plaque on the wall above them, loosened by recent construction vibrations, suddenly gave way. It tilted and fell.
In a split second of pure instinct, Aria reacted. She didn't scream or run. She shoved Kelsey hard, pushing her out of the way.
The plaque crashed down, striking Aria's shoulder with a sickening thud. She cried out in pain and crumpled to the floor.
Bennett came running, his face a thundercloud of fury. He saw Aria on the ground and Kelsey standing over her, and his face contorted with rage.
"What did you do?" he roared at Kelsey, his voice echoing through the quiet gallery. "Are you following us now? Are you trying to hurt her?"
The accusation was so monstrous, so utterly divorced from reality, that Kelsey could only stare at him in stunned silence. He thought she had done this. He thought she was capable of such violence.
He didn't wait for an answer. He knelt, gathering a sobbing Aria into his arms, his voice dropping to a tender murmur. "It's okay, baby. I've got you. I'm here."
He lifted her as if she weighed nothing and strode past Kelsey, his eyes burning with hatred. "Stay away from us," he hissed.
Kelsey followed them, a numb automaton, back to the same hospital, the same emergency room that was becoming a grim stage for her life's final act.
This time, Aria's injury was more serious. A dislocated shoulder and a possible fracture. The doctors rushed her into a private room. Bennett paced outside like a caged tiger.
The situation became critical when the doctors realized Aria had lost a significant amount of blood from a deep laceration caused by the plaque's edge. They needed to do surgery, but her blood type was rare. O-negative. The hospital's supply was dangerously low.
"I'm O-negative," Bennett announced without hesitation, rolling up his sleeve. "Take mine. Take as much as you need."
"Sir, we can only take one unit safely," a nurse cautioned him. "You'll be weak."
"I don't care," Bennett snapped. "Her life is more important. If she needs more, you take more. Do you understand me?"
He lay on a gurney, his jaw tight, as the nurse drew his blood. Kelsey watched from the hallway, a silent, invisible witness. He was literally giving his life's blood for this girl, a girl he had known for only a few months. A girl who was a lie.
He gave one unit, then demanded they take another, ignoring the doctors' protests. He grew pale, his breathing shallow. After the second unit was drawn, he tried to stand and collapsed, fainting from the blood loss.
The nurses rushed to help him, putting him on an IV drip in a room just across the hall from Aria's.
Aria's surgery was a success. She was safe.
Kelsey made sure Bennett was stable, that the nurses were attending to him. She didn't go into his room. She just stood in the doorway, watching him.
Even in his unconscious state, a name escaped his lips in a faint, desperate whisper.
"Aria..."
Not Kelsey. Never Kelsey.
In that moment, any lingering trace of love, any vestige of their shared history, died. There was nothing left but a vast, cold emptiness.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket. It was a number she didn't recognize.
"Ms. Jensen?" a crisp, professional voice said. "This is Blackwood Privacy Solutions. Your new passport and documents are ready for collection. Your flight to Paris is confirmed for tomorrow morning."
The voice was a lifeline, a promise of a future. A future without him.