
From Cast-off To The City's Queen
Chapter 5
Keely Logan examined the model on the laptop screen closely and smiled.
This report is flawless. The headline-"From Park Avenue to the Bottom: The Tragic Fall of a Vase Wife"-perfectly captures the mix of sympathy and schadenfreude. The photograph, taken with a telephoto lens outside City Hall, shows Hadley at her worst: soaking wet, mascara smudged, clinging tightly to a man whose face is subtly blurred, hinting at mystery and infamy. The caption suggests that "sources close to the former couple" revealed their "financial straits" and "suspicious arrangements."
Page Six will certainly give it a rundown. The New York Post's gossip column has ruined countless careers, marriages, and reputations with far more sensational material. Tomorrow morning, every café in Manhattan will be buzzing with talk of Blair Gregory's abandoned wife, who has stooped to selling herself to become the first man willing to marry her.
"Send it over," she told her PR professional, Marissa, a seasoned "shark" who had handled far worse scandals and handled less promising material. "And let them know there's more to this story. If she wants to fight back, we still have her three years of 'emotional instability' to exploit."
"Are you sure?" Marissa asked, her finger hovering above the send button. "Blair-"
"Blair doesn't know what he wants," Keely's voice sharpened. "He's been distracted ever since she left. He keeps checking his phone, spacing out, and asking his assistant about her." She stood up and walked to the window of her apartment-a respectable place in Tribeca, completely different from 15 Central Park West, but comfortable and reassuring. "Marissa, I need her gone. Not just from his life-but from his mind. Completely erase the possibility of her existence from his mind. Do you understand?"
Marissa understood. The email was sent softly, swiftly to the editorial office of The Washington Post, and scheduled for publication during the midnight update. By the next morning, it would be everywhere.
Keely poured herself a glass of wine, waiting for satisfaction to arrive. However, it didn't. Instead, she remembered Blair coming home late the previous night, reeking of whiskey and some other scent she couldn't quite place. He kissed her cheek, mumbled something about work, and then went into his study. He didn't emerge until morning.
She told herself it was all due to stress. The divorce, the transition, and the natural adjustment to merging two lives. She told herself that once Hadley completely broke down, once she could no longer be seen in any form and would only serve as a cautionary tale, Blair would relax. He would remember why he chose her, why he had always loved her, and why they were destined to be together.
Her phone vibrated. Marissa, calling? She glanced at the screen, frowning at the unfamiliar number. "Hello?"
"Ms. Logan." A man's voice, cold and flat, like marble. "I am News Corporation's legal counsel. I am calling to inform you that your submission to Page Six has been rejected and destroyed. Any attempt to disseminate this content through other channels will be immediately subject to legal action."
Keely's glass stopped halfway to her lips, frozen in place. "What? You can't-I have sources, I have evidence-"
"You have nothing." The voice was almost gentle. "As long as you insist on this, you will never have anything regarding Mrs. Roy. Good evening, Ms. Logan."
The telephone line went dead.
Keely stared at her phone. Mrs. Roy. The name was meaningless-yet incredibly significant. Hadley. Hadley had used this man's name, whatever it was, whatever he was. And somehow, she had gained a protection that Keely couldn't recognize, couldn't resist, and couldn't even understand.
She smashed the wine glass against the wall. The glass shattered, and bright red liquid flowed down the white wall like blood, like defeat.
Blair saw the headline at 11:47 p.m.
He remained in his office, still trying to work, still achieving nothing. The email from the unknown address lay silently in his inbox, like a venomous snake, waiting to strike. He had instructed IT to track it down; they reported that the sender's location was "obfuscated through multiple international servers." Another ghost. Another wall.
His phone vibrated with a Google notification he couldn't even remember setting: "Hadley Spencer Gregory." Without thinking, he clicked on it and saw-the Washington Post website, the headline, the photo. In that instant, he felt a wicked thrill. She had embarrassed him; now it was her turn. She had made him feel insignificant; now the whole world would see just how insignificant she truly was.
He refreshed the page.
The article disappeared. There were no updates or corrections-it was as if it had never existed. The URL returned a 404 error. The title on the homepage was gone, replaced by some nonsense about a reality TV star being pregnant.
Blair called Alex. "Go check the Washington Post website. The story about Hadley. Is it there?"
A pause. "No, sir. I saw a cached version in my browser history, but the actual website-has been completely deleted."
"Find out the cause."
"Sir, I've tried. My source at The Washington Post says the order came from the top, the News Corp. board. It's something about 'protecting important advertising relationships.'" Alex's tone remained carefully neutral. "He won't say anything. Sir, he's scared. I've never heard him so scared before."
Blair hung up the phone. He finally opened the unread email, the one from the anonymous inbox, the one that warned him not to continue the investigation.
The message was simple: "Don't look for her anymore, she's under protection."
He didn't sleep a wink that night. He sat in his office, watching the sun rise over the city he had conquered, and for the first time felt that this city held secrets he could never know, power he could never reach, and protection he could never break through.
Hadley discovered something. Someone. A force that could silence the Post with a single phone call, erase digital records as if they never existed, and warn Blair Gregory to leave as if he were a curious child.
He told himself that what he felt was anger. It was concern for her safety, suspicion of this strange protector, and the natural protective instinct of a man who had once been her husband.
He dared not consider the other possibility. That possibility tasted like jealousy, like loss, like gradually realizing that he had lost something precious, and might never get it back.
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