Beside her, Kelvin's arm turned to solid stone.
He sucked in a sharp, audible breath. His gaze was locked, wide and terrified, on the massive LED screen suspended directly above the stage.
Elsie frowned. She followed his line of sight, turning her head just as the massive screen flared to life.
The harsh, artificial light washed over her meticulously painted face, draining the color from her skin.
A video was playing. The resolution was mercilessly clear.
It was a woman, her face flushed red, her eyes glassy and unfocused.
It was her. Elsie.
The man in the video was nothing but a broad, muscular back. His powerful arms were pinning Elsie down against the mattress of a dimly lit hotel bed.
A collective gasp ripped through the room. Hundreds of New York's Upper East Side elite stared at the screen, their eyes turning into daggers of disgust, aiming straight for her throat.
Elsie's brain flatlined. The oxygen vanished from the room.
Her hands moved on instinct, reaching out to grab the sleeve of Kelvin's tuxedo jacket. She needed to explain. She needed him to look at her.
Kelvin violently ripped his arm away.
He stumbled back two steps. The revulsion in his eyes was so raw it made Elsie's stomach heave.
"Who the hell is that?" Kelvin roared, his voice cracking with fury. "Who is that bastard?"
Elsie shook her head frantically. Tears spilled over her lashes, dragging black mascara down her pale cheeks.
"I don't know," she choked out, her lips trembling so hard she could barely form the words. "Kelvin, please, I don't remember anything from that night three months ago. I swear to you-"
A sharp crack echoed through the sudden silence.
Kelvin's mother, Eleanor, had marched onto the stage in her designer heels. Her palm connected with the side of Elsie's face with bone-jarring force.
Elsie's head snapped to the side. The metallic taste of blood instantly flooded her mouth.
Her diamond earring unclasped from the impact, hitting the red carpet with a pathetic, hollow clink.
Eleanor snatched the microphone from the frozen host.
"The Barr family will never accept a whore into our bloodline," Eleanor announced, her voice echoing off the gilded walls. "This engagement is over. Effective immediately."
Belle, Elsie's cousin, pushed her way through the whispering crowd.
She rushed to Elsie's side, wrapping her arms around her in a show of fake sympathy. But under the fabric of Elsie's gown, Belle's manicured nails dug viciously into the soft flesh of Elsie's arm.
Belle leaned in. Her breath was warm against Elsie's ear.
"You look exactly like the cheap slut you are," Belle whispered, her voice a venomous hiss meant only for Elsie.
Elsie froze. The physical pain in her arm was nothing compared to the sudden, horrifying realization crashing down on her.
Belle. The gentle, sweet cousin. This wasn't an accident. This was a setup.
A surge of adrenaline hit Elsie's bloodstream. She shoved Belle away with both hands.
Belle let out a theatrical shriek and threw herself backward, collapsing onto the floor in a heap of silk.
The crowd erupted. The whispers turned into vicious shouts. They called her a monster. A tramp.
The heavy oak doors of the ballroom burst open.
A swarm of tabloid reporters flooded in, their camera flashes exploding like strobe lights, blinding Elsie in her darkest moment.
A microphone was shoved so hard into her face that the metal grille bruised her chin.
Elsie threw her hands over her face. She couldn't breathe. She couldn't see.
She turned and ran, stumbling blindly through the chaos, pushing past waiters until she hit the swinging doors of the kitchen service hallway.
She slammed her body against the heavy fire exit door and spilled out into the freezing Manhattan rain.
The autumn downpour was merciless. Within seconds, her heavy gown was soaked, dragging her down like wet cement.
Her spine hit the damp brick wall, and she slid down until she hit the wet pavement. She pulled her knees to her chest and let out a raw, agonizing sob that tore at her throat.
From inside her custom clutch, a distinctive, encrypted series of rapid vibrations and a low, unfamiliar beep began to sound.
It was the encrypted backup phone her father had left behind.
Elsie's hands shook violently as she unzipped the clutch. She stared at the unknown number flashing on the cracked screen.
She hesitated for three agonizing seconds before her thumb swiped the answer button.
A mechanical, voice-altered sound filled her ear. It didn't say hello. It just rattled off a set of highway coordinates.
The exact coordinates where her parents had died three years ago.
Elsie stopped breathing.
"Who is this?" she rasped, her voice shredded from crying. "Why are you bringing this up now?"
"It wasn't a wet road," the mechanical voice stated coldly. "It wasn't an accident. The brake system was tampered with. It was murder."
It felt like a sledgehammer had just caved in her ribs.
Elsie shot up from the ground. She didn't feel the sharp gravel slicing into her bare feet.
"Who?" she screamed into the receiver. "Who did it?"
"Look at your favorite uncle. Look at Fenton."
The line went dead. Just an empty, hollow dial tone.
Elsie stood frozen in the torrential rain. The phone slipped from her grip.
Her mind raced, flashing back to Fenton taking over the company, his sudden wealth, his cold eyes tonight.
The crushing despair in her chest evaporated, instantly replaced by a blinding, white-hot rage.
At the end of the dark alley, a black Maybach sat idling in the shadows.
The tinted rear window rolled down just half an inch. In the pitch-black interior, a pair of dark, calculating eyes watched her trembling silhouette in the rain.