"Alexandra." She turned, and her smile was the same one from a thousand brunches, a thousand shopping trips, a thousand confidences shared over wine that had turned to poison in retrospect. "I'm so glad you came. I wasn't sure you would."
"After your uncle's hospitality? I couldn't resist." Alexandra kept her distance, positioning herself near the exit, her hand in her pocket wrapped around her phone. The recording was active. Everything Lilith said would be preserved, analyzed, weaponized if necessary.
Lilith's smile flickered. "Arthur told me you visited. He's-he's not well, Alexandra. The pressure of the practice. He's been imagining things, making accusations-"
"Save it." Alexandra interrupted. "I know about the fund. Aurelian Capital. I know you've been feeding information to them, using Cary, using me, using whatever you could get your hands on to hurt Holt."
Lilith's face transformed. The mask dropped, revealing something harder, hungrier, more desperate than Alexandra had ever seen in their years of friendship.
"Is that what you think?" She laughed, sharp and broken. "That I'm the villain? That I orchestrated all of this?" She stepped closer, her hands gesturing wildly, knocking against an orchid stem. "I was trying to protect you, you stupid, blind, selfish bitch. I was trying to get you out before it was too late."
Alexandra's hand tightened on her phone. "Protect me from what?"
"From him." Lilith's voice dropped to a whisper, intense, intimate, the tone of shared secrets and midnight confidences. "From Holt. From what he really is." She reached out, grabbed Alexandra's arm, her fingers digging in with surprising strength. "He's not what you think, Alexandra. That company he hides, that Sterling Holdings, that-" She stopped, seeming to catch herself. "-there are things he's done. Things he's capable of. I was trying to get you away before you became collateral damage."
Alexandra shook off her grip. Stepped back. "You're lying."
"Am I?" Lilith's eyes were bright, feverish. "Then why did he marry you? A woman he barely knew, from a family with money but no real power? Why did he pursue you so aggressively, so quickly, when he could have had anyone?" She laughed again, softer this time, sadder. "He needed you, Alexandra. Your name. Your connections. Your father's shipping routes and your mother's social influence. He needed them for something he's building, something bigger than Blanchard Group, bigger than anything you can imagine. And when he's done-when he has what he wants-"
"He'll discard me." Alexandra finished. The words felt familiar, rehearsed. The same fears she had voiced in their marriage's early days, the same insecurities Lilith had nurtured and amplified until they became self-fulfilling prophecy.
"Yes." Lilith breathed. "Exactly. I was trying to save you. Cary was-he was supposed to be your escape. Your revenge. A way to hurt Holt before he could hurt you."
Alexandra stared at her oldest friend, this woman who had known her since boarding school, who had held her hand through her father's affairs and her mother's drinking and every insecurity that had ever plagued her.
And she saw it. The pattern. The long game.
Lilith hadn't been protecting her. She had been cultivating her. Nurturing her fears, her resentments, her sense of inadequacy, until Alexandra was ripe for manipulation. Until she would believe that suicide was the only way to be noticed, that destroying her marriage was the only way to be free.
"You knew." She said it quietly, wonderingly. "About the pills. Before I took them. You knew I was planning something."
Lilith's face went still. "What?"
"The night before. At the gala. You told me about Holt's meeting with the divorce lawyers. You made sure I knew he was going to leave me, that I had nothing left to lose." Alexandra stepped closer now, reversing their positions, forcing Lilith back against the orchid display. "You were counting on me to do something desperate. Something that would embarrass him, hurt him, give you leverage."
"That's not-"
"And when I survived?" Alexandra continued, her voice rising, the control she'd maintained finally cracking. "When I changed, when I started fighting back- you panicked. You fed Cary to your mysterious fund, you tried to destroy Holt's company, you-" She stopped. The realization hit her like physical force. "The warehouse. Brooklyn. You knew about that too."
Lilith's eyes widened. Genuine confusion, or masterful performance-Alexandra couldn't tell anymore, couldn't trust her own judgment of a woman she'd thought she knew better than herself.
"What warehouse? Alexandra, you're not making sense-"
"Don't." Alexandra grabbed her shoulders, shaking her, the violence rising from somewhere deep and old and burning. "Don't lie to me. Not anymore. I know what you did. I know what you're capable of. And I swear to God, Lilith, if you ever come near me again, if you ever contact my husband or my family or anyone I love-"
"Alexandra." A voice from the doorway. Deep. Controlled. Familiar.
She turned, still holding Lilith, and saw Holt standing in the greenhouse entrance, his face unreadable, his eyes moving between them with the rapid assessment of a man who had walked into a scene without context.
"Holt." Her hands dropped from Lilith's shoulders. "What are you-how did you-"
"Your emergency protocol triggered." He said it calmly, as if discussing the weather. "The timer. The location sharing." He stepped into the space between them, positioning himself slightly in front of Alexandra, a shield or a captor she couldn't determine. His gaze flickered to her pocket, where her hand was still clenched around her phone. He knew. He didn't know everything, but he knew she had a system. He knew she wasn't helpless. "I thought you might be in danger."
"She's not in danger." Lilith's voice had changed, become smoother, more controlled. "We're old friends, Mr. Blanchard. Having a conversation about loyalty. About trust. About the things we do for the people we love."
Holt's eyes didn't leave Alexandra's face. "Is that what this is?"
"I don't know." Alexandra said honestly. "I thought I knew. I thought I understood what was happening, who was responsible. But now-" She looked at Lilith, at the woman who had been her sister in everything but blood, and felt only the echo of fire, the memory of pain, the certainty of betrayal without proof. "-now I don't know anything."
Holt reached back. Found her hand in the darkness of her pocket and pulled it free, intertwining their fingers with a pressure that was almost painful.
"Then let's find out." He said. "Together."
He turned to Lilith, and his voice was ice, was steel, was the voice of a man who had built empires in shadows and was not afraid to destroy what threatened them.
"Miss Marr. I believe you have a choice. You can tell us everything you know about Aurelian Capital, your involvement with my wife, and whatever game you're playing. Or you can explain it to my attorneys, the SEC, and eventually a federal prosecutor." He smiled, and it was terrible. "I've heard the food at Rikers is quite memorable."
Lilith looked between them, her composure finally cracking, her eyes darting to the exit, the windows, any escape.
"I don't know anything." She whispered. "They contacted me. Used me. I never met them, never-"
"Names." Holt interrupted. "Emails. Account numbers. Anything."
"I don't-" Lilith stopped. Her shoulders slumped. "There's a meeting. Tomorrow night. A fundraiser for the Metropolitan Museum. They're supposed to have a representative there. Someone who can authorize additional funding, now that Cary has-" She glanced at Alexandra. "-now that he's gone."
Holt's thumb traced circles on Alexandra's palm, the same gesture he used on his watch when thinking, when calculating, when preparing for war.
"You'll attend." He said. "With my wife. You'll introduce her as a potential asset. Someone disaffected, angry, ready to betray her husband for the right price."
"Holt-" Alexandra started.
"No." He turned to her, and his eyes were fierce, desperate, full of a determination that terrified her. "No more secrets. No more solo missions. Whatever this is, whoever these people are, we face them together. As a temporary alliance. Or we don't face them at all."
Alexandra looked at him, at this man who had followed her into danger without knowing why, who had offered partnership without demanding explanation, who was willing to risk everything on the possibility that she might finally be telling the truth.
And she made her choice.
"An alliance." She agreed.
Lilith watched them, her face a mask of emotions Alexandra couldn't read-envy, despair, calculation, or something else entirely.
"You're making a mistake." She said softly. "Both of you. You think you understand what you're facing, but you don't. Aurelian isn't just a fund. It's not just money." She laughed, broken. "It's a mirror, Alexandra. It shows you what you want to see. And by the time you realize you're looking at yourself-"
"Tomorrow." Holt interrupted. "The Met. We'll discuss philosophy afterward."
He guided Alexandra toward the door, his hand firm on her back, his presence a wall between her and everything that might harm her.
At the doorway, Alexandra looked back. Lilith stood alone among the orchids, her face in shadow, her hands clasped as if in prayer or supplication.
"One more thing." Alexandra said.
Lilith looked up.
"The fire." Alexandra whispered, too softly for Holt to hear. "The warehouse. If you were there-if you had any part in what happened to me-" She paused. Let the silence stretch. "-then know this. I remember everything. And I don't forgive."
She turned and walked into the light, into the city, into a future she couldn't predict but was finally ready to face.
Behind her, Lilith Marr stood motionless among the flowers, and if she answered, Alexandra never heard.