A few days later, the fragile truce in the apartment was shattered. Arley, frantic as he prepared for his meeting at the McCarthy tower, knocked Hope's jewelry box off a console table in the foyer.
Its contents scattered across the marble floor. A single, heavy platinum cufflink with a unique, unfamiliar crest rolled to a stop by his shoe.
It wasn't his.
The "lover" Hope had taunted him with. The rage came roaring back.
He stormed into her study and slapped the cufflink down on her desk.
"Whose is this?" he demanded.
Hope froze. Her heart gave a sickening lurch; she had forgotten all about it, a foolish, dangerous oversight in her scorched-earth campaign to erase him. It was Drake's. He'd left it here once. She couldn't tell Arley it belonged to a high-class escort. So she played the hand he'd dealt her.
She calmly picked up the cufflink and closed her hand around it. "That's none of your business."
Her calmness was gasoline on his fire. "None of my business? You are my fiancée! You bring another man's things into our home?"
He raised a hand, then remembered the knee, the prenup, the non-existent recording. He dropped it, shaking with impotent fury.
Hope saw his fear and knew she had him.
"Are you sure you want to make a scene about this, Arley?" she asked softly.
"Damn right I do!"
"Okay," she said with a shrug. "Let's. Take this cufflink to your father. Tell everyone your fiancée has a lover. The press will have a field day."
She took a step closer, her voice dropping. "And they won't just write about me. They'll dig. They'll find out who this mystery man is. And in the process, they'll find everything there is to know about you and Kenia Spencer."
Arley went pale.
"Imagine the headlines, Arley. The mistress, exposed. Her name, her family, her reputation, dragged through the mud for the entire world to see." She leaned in, her voice a whisper. "Are you willing to sacrifice Kenia on the altar of your own wounded pride?"
She had found his one true weakness. It wasn't his company, or his father, or his own reputation. It was Kenia.
He looked at her, his eyes filled with a new kind of fear. A fear of her. He was defeated.
"You're a bitch," he spat, before turning and leaving the room.
Hope let out a shaky breath. She had won. But as she looked at the cufflink in her palm, a strange annoyance pricked at her. A loose end she had failed to tie up.
She had no way of knowing that the crest engraved on it was the private emblem of the McCarthy family's inner circle.
And that Arley Simmons was, at that very moment, on his way to meet its owner.
In a minimalist, brutally modern conference room on the 100th floor of the McCarthy Tower, Algernon waited. He adjusted the cuffs of his plain, unadorned shirt, having deliberately left any identifying jewelry or accessories in his private safe. He had instructed his assistant to set the meeting with one small change.
He would not be introduced as Algernon McCarthy.
He would be introduced as the Director of Project Acquisitions. A man named Mr. Alistair.
Arley came home from the McCarthy meeting looking like he'd seen a ghost. The man he'd met, this "Mr. Alistair," had eviscerated his proposal with a quiet, surgical precision that left him feeling like an idiot child. He'd been dismissed and told to come back when he had something worthy of their time. He locked himself in his study without a word.
Hope savored the silence.
Later that evening, Arley emerged, looking marginally more composed. He was on a video call with Kenia, pacing in the living room. Hope, in her bedroom, could hear Kenia's whining, pleading voice.
A wicked idea sparked in Hope's mind.
She slipped into Arley's walk-in closet and pulled one of his white dress shirts from its hanger. In her bathroom, she stripped off her own clothes, pulling on the shirt. It fell to her mid-thigh, the sleeves dangling past her hands. She messed up her hair and used a touch of red lipstick to create a few, faint, bruise-like marks on her neck.
Then, barefoot, she padded silently toward the living room.
Arley had his back to her, cooing into his phone. "Baby, I promise, there's nothing going on. It's just for show, you're the only one I care about."
Hope chose that exact moment to walk past the sofa, directly in the phone's line of sight.
She rubbed her eyes sleepily. "Arley, honey," she said, her voice a drowsy murmur. "Have you seen my phone? I think I left it on the couch."
On the screen, Kenia's face went from tear-streaked to a mask of horror. She saw Hope, wearing Arley's shirt, hair a mess, love bites on her neck.
A shrill, piercing scream erupted from the phone's speaker, and the screen went black. The call was over.
Arley spun around, his eyes landing on Hope's performance art. Understanding, followed by pure, apoplectic rage, dawned on his face.
"HOPE PERRY!"
She blinked at him, all innocence. "What? I'm just looking for my phone."
His phone began ringing, a frantic, incessant buzz. Kenia. He didn't have time for this. He had to go put out the fire.
He grabbed his keys, shot her a look that promised murder, and slammed the apartment door behind him.
Another quiet night, she thought with a satisfied smile.
She went to bed and fell into a deep, dreamless sleep.
In the quiet stillness of the early morning, a soft, unfamiliar chime sliced through the air. It was elegant, resonant, and utterly out of place.
It was coming from her nightstand.
Hope's eyes snapped open. Sitting beside her lamp, where nothing had been before, was a phone. It was impossibly thin, crafted from black, seamless metal, with a single, pulsing silver 'M' on the back. It was not her phone. It was not the burner she had destroyed. It was an artifact, delivered by a ghost.
The chime sounded again, insistent.
Just then, the bedroom door creaked open. It was Arley, back from his night of damage control with Kenia. He heard the strange, melodic tone. His eyes, bloodshot and filled with resentment, landed on the gleaming, unfamiliar device on her nightstand.
He didn't know what it was, but he knew it wasn't hers. A cold, vengeful thought seized him. This must be it. The line to her secret lover.
Fueled by a desire for revenge, he crossed the room while Hope was still pushing herself up, a moment before she could react.
He snatched the phone from the nightstand.
And he answered the call.
Arley pressed the sleek black phone to his ear. The screen was dark, the call already connected.
Silence stretched for a second. Then, a voice came through the speaker. Low. Magnetic. Laced with a lazy, just-woke-up kind of warmth.
"Kitten. Are you awake? I dreamed about you last night."
The word "Kitten" hit Arley like a physical blow. It was a term of intimacy so casual, so deeply personal, that it felt like a poison dart slipping right past his ribs and into his ego.
His grip on the phone tightened until his knuckles turned bone-white. His breathing grew heavy, ragged. Jealousy, hot and acidic, burned a hole in his gut. But he didn't speak. He forced himself to stay silent, desperate to hear more, to find a clue about the man who dared to touch his fiancée.
On the other end of the line, the silence stretched. Algernon's smile faded. The warmth in his eyes evaporated, replaced by a sharp, predatory stillness. He didn't hear her breathing. He didn't hear her soft, sleepy sigh.
His voice dropped. The lazy warmth vanished entirely, replaced by a cold, absolute authority that demanded an answer.
"Who is this? Why do you have her phone?"
The shift was violent. It was the voice of a man who owned the room, the building, the city. It was the tone of a king addressing an intruder in his throne room.
That tone—that sheer, unapologetic dominance—snapped whatever restraint Arley had left. Nobody spoke to him like that. Nobody owned Hope Perry but him.
"Who the fuck are you?!" Arley roared into the receiver. The sound exploded in the quiet bedroom, bouncing off the walls.
Hope jolted awake. The scream ripped through her sleep like a chainsaw. She blinked against the morning light, her heart already hammering against her ribs.
Arley was standing by her bed, his face a mask of furious red, holding the black metal phone she had never seen before tonight, its back pulsing with the soft, rhythmic glow of a silver 'M' logo, like a metallic heart.
A jolt of pure, icy panic shot through her veins. That phone. Where did it come from? How could it be ringing in her room?
On the other end of the line, Algernon heard the roar. He heard the male voice, thick with rage, and he heard the sharp gasp of a woman waking up.
He didn't say another word.
The line went dead. The call disconnected. Every trace of the connection was wiped in a millisecond.
Hope scrambled out of the sheets. "Arley, what are you doing!" She lunged for the phone, her fingers clawing at his arm.
Arley shoved her hard. She stumbled backward, her knees hitting the edge of the mattress, and she fell back onto the bed.
He loomed over her, his eyes bloodshot and wild. "Kitten?" he spat the word like venom. "Is this the lover you were talking about at the party? The one who calls you Kitten?"
Hope's mind raced. Admitting it would be suicide. Denying it would only make him dig deeper. There was only one way to play this—attack.
She forced a cold, mocking laugh past her dry throat. She sat up, meeting his furious gaze with a sneer.
"So what if it is?" she said, her voice dripping with disdain. "At least he's gentle."
The words hit Arley like a freight train. His face contorted. His self-esteem, already fragile, shattered into dust.
He looked at the M-Phone in his hand. He wanted to smash it, to grind it into the carpet. But he stopped himself. He needed to know who this man was. He needed to trace the call, to find the source.
Instead, his eyes darted to the nightstand. To Hope's personal iPhone, sitting in its charging cradle.
"Every secret you have," he snarled, his voice shaking with rage, "I'm going to dig them out!"
He snatched the iPhone from the charger. Hope's eyes widened. "No!"
Before she could move, he hurled the phone across the room. It struck the far wall with a sickening crack. The screen shattered. Plastic and glass fragments exploded outward, skittering across the hardwood floor.
Hope stared at the destroyed device. The panic in her chest hardened into a block of ice.
Arley pointed a trembling finger at her. "Until we break this engagement, you better behave yourself!"
He turned and stormed out of the bedroom, the M-Phone clutched tightly in his fist. The door slammed behind him, the sound echoing in the sudden silence.
Hope sat on the edge of the bed, surrounded by the rumpled sheets. The silence pressed in on her. For the first time, a sliver of genuine fear crept into her mind regarding the man she knew as Drake.
Who was he? How could a dead phone ring? How could he make her feel so completely out of control?
Across the city, in his office, Algernon set down his own phone. His face was utterly blank.
Through the micro-bug embedded in the M-Phone, he had heard everything. He heard Arley's roar. He heard the crash of Hope's phone against the wall. He heard Arley's heavy footsteps retreating, then the bone-jarring slam of the door, followed by an unnerving silence.
And he heard her. He heard her say, "At least he's gentle."
She had provoked Arley. She had thrown fuel on the fire to protect the identity of her "lover." A twisted, dark satisfaction curled in his chest, mixing violently with the cold rage of Arley's intrusion.
He reached for his other phone, the one connected to his real world. He typed out a message to his assistant.
"Initiate contact with the Simmons Group project. Now."
He was done playing nice. The game was accelerating.