Fake Empire: Chapter 17
Fake Empire (Kensingtons Book 1)
âScarlett? Scarlett?â
I blink and glance at Leah, whoâs giving me a strange look.
âYes?â
âI was just asking if you had any comments on the October issue before we end the meeting.â
I glance down at the pages of notes in front of me. Rub my forehead in an attempt to alleviate the headache building. âNo. This all looks great. Good work, everyone.â
Silence follows. Silence with a shocked undertone. I always have notes. Suggestions. Input. Iâm too distracted to come up with any right now.
I stand, needing out of this room. Iâm exhausted. I want to snuggle up on the couch in sweatpants with a bottle of wine and Crew.
Except the wine might not be an option. I realized my period was lateâtwo weeks lateâfour days ago. Iâve been so busy I didnât realize how quickly time is passing.
Iâm pregnant.
I think.
Iâve thrown up every morning for the past few days. Iâve been emotional. Tired. And Iâm late, which has never happened before. But I donât know if Iâm pregnant for certain because Iâm afraid to find out. I never thought Iâd call myself a coward, but thatâs exactly who I am right now. Iâm terrified to know for sure. Terrified to tell Crew. If Iâm this far along, he knocked me up in Italy, possibly the first time we slept together.
Heâll probably be proud. Our families will be thrilled.
And Iâmâ¦freaking out.
Also, I feel like Iâm going to be sick. Again. Lately, my âmorning sicknessâ has felt a lot like all-day nausea. Talk about false advertising. I donât know anything about babies or pregnancy. I thought I would have time. I wanted time. Crewâs swimmers clearly had other ideas. Statistically speaking, weâve had plenty of sex to make pregnancy a possibility. Protected sex. If Iâm really six weeks along, we conceived back when he was still wearing condoms. Ninety-nine percent effective? I guess weâre part of the one percent in more ways than one.
Iâm not against having kids. I knew we would, eventually. Crew wants kids, although I know part of that urge is fueled by his father. It just feels fast. Soon. We werenât a couple before we got married. It took us a month to have sex. Weâve finally found an equilibrium that this will shake. Sharing responsibility for a dog was an adjustment. Having a child is a huge change for any couple. For us, it will come with a whole host of complications I was happy to put off for a while.
I hobble down the hall in my heels, wishing I could take them off and chuck them at the wall. Iâm sleep-deprived. And possibly hormonal. As soon as we have sex, Crew is out like a light. Iâve laid awake the past few nights, worrying about all the ways this will change our lives.
My office is a sanctuary. When I bought this magazine, I spent hours deciding how every inch would be decorated. I hold all my meetings here. It makes a statement, the colors bold but not garish. Abstract paintings line the wall above the white leather sofa. Framed issues of Haute are displayed on the opposite wall, above a table that always boasts a fresh arrangement of flowers. Theyâre peonies today. The floral scent usually makes me happy. Right now, it makes me want to hurl.
I take a seat at my desk, firing off a few rapid replies to the emails that came in during the meeting I just left. I have a thousand things to do: photo shoot approvals, communications with advertisers, and arrangements with different vendors. A few months ago, Iâd be ordering takeout and settling in for a few more hours here.
All I want to do right now is go home.
My eyes fall to the framed photograph to the right of my computer. I placed it there as a prop, a testament to the women can have it all mentality: a happy home life and a successful career. I already had the successful career, and Iâve always known I have the capability to accomplish whatever project I want to. For the past nine years, Iâve also known I would probably marry Crew Kensington. I just didnât know what it would be like being married to him. Confusing and thrilling and fun. Heâs become someone I rely upon and trust and look forward to seeing.
How the hell did that happen?
I thought heâd have no interest in making this marriage work as anything more than a two-hundred-page document spelling out the consequences if it didnât. I banked upon that. Relied upon it. The way weâve become something so different is both reassuring and worrisome.
The black-and-white photograph of us on our wedding day sitting on my desk doesnât look like a prop anymore. It looks real. I can even pinpoint the moment it was snapped, when Crew told me we should have practiced dancing before we got married the same way we kissed before speaking our vows. Iâm smiling, and so is he.
I try to picture a little kid with Crewâs blue eyes and my dark hair. I canât. Iâve never held a baby before; I canât even remember the last time I saw one in person.
Rather than stop at a pharmacy and put all the second-guessing to rest, I go straight home. Coward. I seek out the solace only Crew can provide. It usually includes snuggling on the couch and then sex.
My body has become accustomed to the scheduleâto crave it. Crave him.
The elevator doors open, revealing Crew leaning against the wall beside the Monet. âFinally! I was about to call you.â
I take him in: the combed hair, the tux, and the anxious, letâs get going expression.
He does the same to me. âYou forgot.â The two words are flat. Annoyed. Any hopes of talking him into staying home, spooning on the couch, and admitting I might be pregnant flee like leaves on a windy fall day.
âNo,â I lie. âMy meeting just ran long. I came home as soon as I could.â The last part, at least, is true. I rushed home because I wanted to see him. âIâll go change.â
I canât believe I forgot. Tonight is Kensington Consolidatedâs company party. I know itâs a big deal for Crew, filled with important networking for cementing his status as future CEO.
Crew grabs my hand as I try to pass him. His annoyed expression falters, something softer appearing. âAre you okay?â
I paste a smile on my face. âOf course. Just give me a few minutes, okay?â I canât tell him. Not now, right before we have to go make small talk with important people all night. A part of me is relieved, even. Thereâs no choice but to not utter the words.
Itâs not until Iâm inside my closet that I let the smile fall. I read somewhere, once, that smiling tricks your brain. The mere motion triggers happy chemicals into releasing, whether your smile is fake or real. Since I canât drinkâpossibly for nine months, but at least until I take a pregnancy testâI could really use any drugs my body can produce naturally. And Iâll be forcing lots of smiles tonight.
I swap the pencil skirt and blouse Iâve been wearing all day for a floor-length silk gown. The emerald fabric whispers against my skin as I head into the bathroom to freshen my hair and makeup. Once Iâm satisfied with both, I grab a matching clutch and a strappy pair of stilettos. My feet cringe at the thought, but the fabric will drag on the floor if I donât wear heels.
Crew is in the same spot I left him in, scrolling through emails on his phone.
âReady,â I chirp.
âYou look beautiful,â he tells me, before we walk into the elevator.
I bite down on my tongue until the pain turns sharp, battling the urge to tell him what Iâve been preoccupied by all day. âThanks.â
âDid work go okay?â
âYep.â I hesitate. âI might need to go to Paris next week for some meetings.â
Crew doesnât look up from his phone. âYeah. Sure.â
âOkay.â I rest my head back against the hard panels of the elevator, following Crew out into the underground garage when we reach the bottom floor. Roman is waiting beside the car. He gives me a respectful nod. âMrs. Kensington.â
I smile at him before climbing into the SUV.
The ride to the Met is silent. I know Crew is nervous about tonight. Heâs been handling a big acquisition lately, and Iâm sure heâs bracing for questions from investors. Iâm preoccupied by the possibility a tiny person might be growing inside me.
Walking from the car and up the steps is all it takes for my feet to start screaming at me. The climate controlled and smooth lobby floors of the museum are a slight relief. Weâre immediately escorted into the Great Hall. Polite chatter echoes off the soaring ceiling and stone walls. I barely have the time to take in any of the candles or flower arrangements decorating the space before people start approaching us. Swarming us.
Crew is the golden boy of Kensington Consolidatedâof all of Manhattan. The heir to the throne. Emperor-in-waiting.
Iâve never gotten the impression Arthur Kensington is well-liked. Business savvy, but not approachable. Heâs the guy you invite because you have to, not because you want to.
Oliver is more of an enigma. I spot him standing in the corner, talking to two other men in tuxedos. He seems like his fatherâs lackey, willing to do whatever it takes to impress and hold his position. But I didnât think he was the type to screw his fatherâs wife behind his back. No matter his intentions, he doesnât have the effortless charisma Crew possesses. The ability to make you feel special just for holding his attention. I noticed it when I was sixteen and told my father the only Kensington I would marry was Crew, and I see it now as he talks to the Spencers.
It feels like every single one of the thousand plus attendees have spoken to Crew by the time we reach our tableâin the very center of the hall. Arthur and Candace are already seated, but thereâs no sign of Oliver.
Arthur rises to kiss my cheek, playing the perfect father-in-law. âScarlett. Stunning, as always.â
âThank you.â I smile at Candace, who looks completely at ease by her husbandâs side. Maybe I underestimated her and Oliver both. She certainly doesnât seem like the type to step out on her marriage. Cheating may be socially acceptable for men, but sheâd become a pariah if it came out she had.
âYou spoke to Justin Marks?â Arthur shifts his attention to Crew, whoâs pulling my chair out.
I shoot him a small smile as I sink down, immediately kicking my heels off under the cover of the tablecloth.
âYes.â Crew beckons a waiter over and orders a scotch. He looks to me. âYou want champagne?â
For some reason, the possibility of this happening didnât occur to me. âNo thanks. I have a headache.â
His forehead wrinkles. âYou do? You didnât say anything.â
âIâm fine. I just had a long day. Alcohol will probably put me to sleep.â
The line between his eyes doesnât smooth. He knows me well enough to hear the false note in my voice. But before he can ask any more questions, Arthur interrupts, obviously not sharing the same concern for my welfare his son does. I imagine heâd feel differently if he knew my âheadacheâ was the future of his carefully constructed empire.
I tune out as Crew and Arthur discuss business. Oliver appears as dinner is being served, taking one of the two empty seats. He ignores Candace and joins the discussion on some investor. I people watch and pick at my food. Iâm hungry, but not for anything on my plate. The steak is so rare it looks raw, and the potatoes taste too rich.
âYouâre not hungry?â Crew asks me when his father is distracted by a member of the museum staff whoâs asking him about some logistics.
âNot really.â
âDo you want to leave? I can see ifââ
For some reason, the offer makes tears pool in my eyes. Some reason probably involving hormones. I know Crew sees when his eyes widen. âNo. We should stay. Iâm justâ¦going to use the restroom. Iâll be back in a bit.â
âOkay.â Crewâs voice is hesitant, but his father is asking him something again. Heâs distracted.
I slip my heels back on and head toward the exit, following the signs that point to the womensâ room. The sinks are all empty. I walk straight into one of the stalls and lean back against the tile wall, relishing the feel of the cold stone against my skin. Deep breaths help with the nausea some.
All night, Iâve played the role of Crewâs arm candy. No one here is interested in my opinions on Kensington Consolidated. I donât owe any of them anything. But I want to support Crew, the way he did when he backed me up with my dad or when he asks about my meetings and listens to my answers. For him, I can suffer through a night of stuffy conversation and overpriced food.
I pee, and then leave the sanctuary of the stall to wash my hands. Iâm soaping them when the restroom door opens, and Hannah Garner strolls inside. Sheâs wearing a midnight blue gown that offsets her tan and blonde cascade of curls. I never pressed Crew for details about their past. Honestly, I donât want them. But it puts me at a disadvantageâone Hannah intends to use, if the leer on her face is any indication.
âScarlett. What a surprise.â
âWhatâs surprising?â I rinse and shut off the tap. âThe fact that I wash my hands, or that Iâm here supporting my husband?â
She giggles, and itâs malicious. Grating. âYour husband? He doesnât belong to you. He was forced to marry you. Itâs obvious he doesnât even like you.â
âYou donât know anything about my marriage.â
âI know more than you think. I know Crew hasnât been heading straight home from work.â She takes a step closer. Her heel taps the floor like a warning shot. âWant to know how I know that?â
âHeâs done with you.â I repeat what he told me.
Hannah tsks and shakes her head. âIs that what you tell yourself? Heâs Crew Kensington. Youâre a bore so obsessed with working your daddy had to sell you off to the highest bidder. All youâre good for is your money. He pretends youâre me to get off during sex.â
My palm twitches, tempted to slap her. But I wonât give her the satisfaction. A reaction is exactly what she wants.
âAlways so stoic, Scarlett. Acting like you donât care about anything or anyone. But I saw you with Crew earlier. You care about him. You think heâs being faithful? I never thought the Princess of Park Avenue would be so naïve.â
âYou sound awfully jealous, Hannah. Did I marry the guy you want?â
Her eyes narrow. âTwo weeks ago, he fucked me in the bathroom of Proof. Said heâd never come harder. I donât want him. I have him.â
For the first time, I feel a small flicker of uncertainty, and I hate myself for it. Crew was at Proof two weeks ago, when I told him to hang out with Asher. Would he have screwed Hannah instead? It was before he knew Iâd been fully faithful. Thereâs nothing but triumph on Hannahâs face, confidence with no trace of deceit. But I donât trust her. She has every reason to lie. To sow doubt into my head.
Thereâs nothing I hate more than being played a fool. My whole life, people have seen me as a spoiled princess. Theyâve never considered how much harder excessive wealth can make your life. Everything becomes fake. The pleasantries, the platitudes. Pointed reminders and presumptions. How lonely it can be to always second-guess othersâ intentions.
Iâm lucky in lots of ways, but my life is a long way from perfect.
I trust Crew. I believe heâs being faithful.
And if heâs notâif Iâm wrongâit will shatter me.
I look Hannah straight in the eye. âI donât believe you.â
I walk out of the restroom without another word. The muffled music and voices coming from the hall sound loud after the quiet confrontation in the bathroom.
When I reenter the party, my gaze is drawn straight to Crew. Heâs standing near our empty table, looking sinfully sexy in his tuxedo as he clutches a glass of amber liquid and talks with a large crowd of men. Holding court.
I sigh and head for the open bar. Joseph Huntington, a good friend of my fatherâs, is standing alongside it, watching the bartender mix a martini. He smiles when he sees me. âScarlett! How are you, dear?â
âIâm well, Mr. Huntington. How are you?â
âGood, good.â
âQuite the family you married into, eh?â He waves a hand around at the opulence surrounding us. âHanson has never thrown this sort of affair.â
I shrug. âMy father isnât one for pomp.â
âWouldnât have known that, seeing the wedding he paid for.â
I smile. âBlame my mother for that.â
âMaybe youâll shake things up when Hanson steps down.â Joseph peers at me closely. Iâve mostly ignored the speculation about the future of Ellsworth Enterprises, even as itâs grown louder. My father is nearing retirement age. I didnât take a job at the company, the way everyone expected me to. I married Crew, who has an empire of his own to run.
âMaybe.â
Joseph smiles at my vague response and picks up his drink. âHave a lovely evening.â
âYou too.â
I turn to the bartender once he disappears. âHi. Can you make me something without alcohol, please?â
The bartender grins. Heâs cute, close to my age. With a lanky build and shaggy hair. âFirst request Iâve gotten of those tonight.â
âIâll bet. Businessmen love their fancy liquor.â
âNo kidding. If I pawned one of these bottles, Iâd be able to pay rent for months.â He backtracks quickly. âIâm not going to, obviously. Just a bad joke.â
I laugh. âDonât worry about it. And I doubt anyone would even notice.â
âDo you like ginger?â
âYes.â
He nods and starts pouring.
âHave you bartended long?â
âA couple of years. Iâm getting my masterâs at NYU. Itâs good money and works with my class schedule.â
âWhat are you getting your masterâs in?â
He looks sheepish. âAnthropology. You can laugh. Iâll be eating Ramen my whole life.â
âGood for you,â I say, and mean it. âMoney is overrated.â
âEasy to say when you have it.â
âYouâre right,â I agree. âBut I bet most of these people arenât very happy with their lives.â
âAre you?â
I sigh. âThatâs a complicated question.â
âIt is.â He studies me for a minute, then holds out a hand. âIâm Charlie.â
I shake his offered hand. âScarlett.â
âDo you work for Kensington Consolidated?â
âNot exactly. Iâm married to a Kensington.â
âI thought I recognized you,â Charlie replies. âYou had that big, fancy wedding this summer, didnât you?â
âYep.â
âMy little sister loves your magazine.â
I smile. âReally?â
âUh-huh. Last time I went home, my bed was covered with old Haute issues.â
âSeriously?â
âI swear.â
âWow. Thatâs flattering.â
Charlie slides a glass with a pink tinge in front of me. âSort of a Shirley Temple, but I added a few special ingredients. No alcohol.â
âThank you.â I take a sip. It tastes like ginger, grapefruit, and rosemary. âItâs really good.â
âGood.â
I keep chatting with Charlie. Occasionally someone comes up for a refill, and he has to work. I often end up in conversation with whoever it is, hearing over and over again about what a fantastic job Crew is doing and how theyâre so excited for the future.
By the time Crew himself appears, Iâm on my third mocktail, chasing ice around in circles with a straw as Charlie makes someone a gin and tonic.
âHey.â He stops beside me, close enough I can feel the heat radiating from his body.
âHey.â Ice clinks against my glass as I keep chasing it round and round. Hannahâs annoying lilt bounces around my head.
I donât want him. I have him.
Crew looks me over. I know, because I can feel each spot his gaze grazes. âAre you drunk?â
I laugh. âNope.â I pop the P for emphasis. âI wish.â
His brow furrows as he tries to decode my words. âAre you ready to go?â
âAre you?â
âI wouldnât be asking if I werenât.â
I snort. âRight. We only do what you want. Since Iâm just Crew Kensingtonâs wife. Nothing more. Nothing meaningful.â
Hurt, then anger flash across his face. âI thought we were past this shit.â
âYeah, me too. Then I spent all night getting treated like a prop, while you were nowhere to be found.â
Charlie finishes making the drink. Now heâs pretending like he canât hear our conversation, although Iâm sure every word is audible.
âYou knew what tonight was,â Crew replies. âWhat this world is like.â
âI want us to be different.â
âWe are different.â
âIt doesnât feel like it right now.â I drain the rest of my drink and wave goodbye to Charlie. âThanks for keeping me company.â
He smiles and nods. I stuff a couple of hundreds into his tip jar.
Crew follows my attention, and a muscle jumps in his jaw. I wobble as I step, yanking my elbow away when he tries to steady me. âIâm fine.â
âYouâre drunk.â
I laugh. âNo, Iâm not. Stone cold fucking sober, thanks to you.â
Confusion mars his handsome features. âWhat? I didnât tell you not to drink.â
I begin to walk toward the exit, leaving him to trail after me. The staccato of my heels pounds the marble like an angry march. Iâm mad. At Crew, at myself. Mad I might ruin everything. Mad I care if I ruin everything.
Heâs following me. I can sense it, and Iâm mad about that too.
I barely register the feel of his hand gripping my elbow before he pulls me into one of the empty galleries that line the hallway leading to the lobby. In one smooth motion, Iâm up against the wall.
âScarlett. Whatâs wrong?â
Itâs dark in here. Only the barest hint of light from the hallway creeps in. âNothing.â
âDonât lie to me.â
I kiss him. He groans as I tug his bottom lip between my teeth. Suddenly, Iâm desperate. Clawing at the jacket of his tux and then fumbling with his pants.
âScarlett. Scarlett.â He says my name again, but Iâm focused on one thing. I need a distraction. Intimacy. Him.
âI need you.â
Another groan as I tug his cock out. I canât see anything. But I can feel the soft skin harden in my hand as I grip him in my palm.
He kisses me the way I want him to fuck me. Skilled and hungry and rough. I started this, but Crewâs mouth makes it clear I wonât control it. His lips are fierce and dominant as one palm slides underneath my dress and up my thigh. I arch against him as his fingers discover how wet I am, barely aware of the hard press of the wall against my spine.
The silky material of my dress is bunched up around my waist and my thong is pulled to the side and then heâs inside of me. I hiss at the intrusion that sates one need and feeds another.
âIâm not wearing anything,â he whispers as he starts moving. âIâll make a mess.â
âI know.â I wrap a leg around his waist, opening myself up further. âItâs okay. I want you to.â
His lips are back on mine, hard and demanding. All Iâm aware of is Crew and how heâs making me feel. No matter how many times we do thisâand itâs a high number at this pointâit always feels this way. Like the first time, and the best time.
Heâs setting a brutal pace. Nothing about this is languid. Itâs raw and primal and hard and deep.
I close my eyes because I can barely see anything, anyway. It heightens the sensations. The sound of his harsh breathing. The smell of his cologne. The feel of him sliding in and out of me.
His greedy lips swallow my moans.
Distantly, Iâm aware of the voices and commotion that remind me where we are. How scandalous this would be. How few of the people milling about down the hall have probably had sex in a semi-public space because they were utterly consumed by the other half of their marriage.
Iâm so close. Each thrust pushes me closer to the edge. I can feel the pressure building, the heat forming and my muscles tensing.
Crewâs mouth moves to my neck, nibbling and sucking at the sensitive skin. âYouâre always so wet for me, Red,â he murmurs. âSo responsive. So eager. Are you ready to come for me, baby?â
Everywhere burns. I use his tie to tug him closer, forcing more friction between our bodies as I grind against him, chasing my release. Pleasure builds and expands, chasing everything else away. Iâm so close to the precipice; Iâll do anything to reach that point. âYes.â
One more thrust, and I shatter. Break apart into a million pieces that act as the sweetest oblivion. Iâm still experiencing the orgasmic high when I feel Crewâs release fill me.
He pulls out a few seconds later, leaving sticky warmth behind that leaks down my inner thigh. Weâre both breathing heavily. He tucks his half-hard dick back into his Armani tux. I straighten. The silk skirt of my dress falls to the floor, covering my legs and the wetness between them.
The only sound in the large gallery is our breathing.
âWe should go,â Crew says finally. âPeople came for dinner, not a show.â
I donât smile at the lame joke. He canât really see my face, anyway. I just walk out of the gallery and back into the hallway, heading in the direction of the lobby. By some small miracle, we donât encounter anyone. Crewâs hair is mussed and his shirt is wrinkled. Iâm sure it would be obvious to anyone what just took place between us.
The hot air waiting outside smacks me in the face like a sauna, seeping away the cold, dry air conditioning and saturating my dress and hair with humidity instead.
Roman isnât waiting outside. The car that gets pulled up outside in front of the fountains is Crewâs black Lamborghini.
âWhereâs Roman?â I ask as we climb into the car. I was kind of counting on his presence on the drive home.
âI gave him the rest of the night off,â Crew responds.
âOh.â Thatâs all I can come up with. I stare out at the city lights instead, right until we pull up to a gas station.
A quick glance at the gauge tells me thereâs more than half a tank. We didnât need to stop. But I say nothing as Crew climbs out. Neither does he. Thereâs no knowing smile. No joking words. He climbs out and shuts his door with an ominous thud.
Tears burn my eyes as regret simmers in my stomach. Iâm braver than this. Stronger than this. My moodâmy emotionsâused to be my own. Itâs concerning how reliant Iâve become on how Crew acts to inform my own feelings.
I step out of the car, not caring the silk hem of my dress is dragging on the dirty ground. âIâm getting a water.â
A nod is Crewâs only response. The sharp scent of gasoline swirls in the damp air as I cross the parking lot and head into the convenience store. Some pop song streams through the speakers.
âEvening.â The woman behind the counter gives me a tired, perfunctory smile.
I nod in response as I pass the register and head for the coolers in the back. I grab a bottle of Fiji and spin to seeâ¦pregnancy tests. A whole shelf of them. Different brands and colors promising quick results. I hesitate. Come up with excuses. I scan the shelves, surprised by the number of different options promising accuracy and quick results.
Whatâs the difference? Itâs just a stick you pee on, right?
With a heavy sigh, I grab three boxes at random and walk to the register, setting the water and the tests down on the scratched plastic counter. The cashier looks at my left hand between ringing the first and second box up. I roll my eyes when sheâs not looking.
Marriage doesnât make you worthy of becoming a mother.
I pay for everything and take the plastic bag, heading back into the humid night air. Crew has finished fueling, but heâs still standing outside the car. His hands are in his tux pockets and his eyes are on the sky. I slow my steps as I approach, drinking the sight of him in.
Watching him, I accept that some part of me wants to hope I am pregnant. Wishes that the test will be positive and that Crew and I have the type of marriage where Iâd give him a onesie that said something nauseatingly adorable, like I love my dad. Where Iâd know he wanted a kid because it was a piece of me and him, not an heir to pass an empire of fortune and responsibilities along to.
âDid you get food?â Crew lowers his gaze from the sky and looks at me. Or more specifically, at the bag Iâm carrying.
âNo.â I reach the passenger door and climb inside.
âDammit.â Crew settles beside me and closes the door. âIâm starving. The food is always shit at those things.â
Try possibly being pregnant, I think. I say nothing.
âWhat did you get?â
âWater.â I reach down and grab the plastic bottle out of the bag. The boxes of pregnancy tests audibly shift in a scrape of stiff paper. Crew raises his eyebrows but doesnât comment.
I take a long sip as we speed along the street. The cold water hits my empty stomach, causing a loud gurgle. I suffer through an uncomfortable few seconds as the water warms in my belly before taking a few more, smaller sips. We drive in silence for another ten minutes until Crew unexpectedly pulls over.
âWhat are you doing?â
âI told you, Iâm hungry. So are you, it sounds like.â He flicks on the hazards. âThis place has the best fried chicken in the city.â
âThereâs food at home.â
âNothing prepared. Iâm not dragging Phillipe out of bed at this hour to make me something.â
âItâs his job.â
âWhatâs the real issue? You canât spend ten extra minutes in a car with me?â
I donât answer, just look out the window.
He sighs, heavy and exhausted. âDo you want some chicken?â
âYes. And a chocolate milkshake.â This sounds like the sort of place that would have milkshakes.
He looks at me. âI donât think theyâll have a dairy-free version.â
I almost smile. âI know.â
He drops the keys in the cupholder. âOkay. Iâll be right back.â
I stare out at the passing cars as his door opens and shuts. Plastic crinkles as my foot brushes the bag in the footwell, taunting me. Iâm ninety-eight percent certain Iâm pregnant. Now that I have the tests, it seems silly to say anything until I know for sure. On the two percent chance Iâm not, it will complicate things between us unnecessarily. Complicate things more than the mess my confusing behavior has already caused.
Crewâs return comes with the mouth-watering aroma of fried chicken. He hands me a container and sets a to-go cup in the cupholder. âI got it with maple butter. I hope thatâsâ¦â He trails off when he realizes Iâm already devouring it. ââ¦okay.â
I donât know if itâs because Iâm starving or because Iâm probably pregnant or because Iâm craving comfort food, but the fried chicken tastes like the best thing Iâve ever eaten. The coating is salty and crisp, and the maple butter is sweet and smoky. I inhale three pieces without breathing and then wash it down with a sip of chocolatey heaven.
âGood?â
I groan and he smiles.
The drive back to the penthouse is silent. Crew parks in the garage and we walk toward the elevator side by side. It feels like days since we left, not hours.
Once weâre inside the elevator, I step forward to swipe the card for the penthouse. When I glance at Crew, heâs looking down. I follow his gaze. The thin white plastic Iâm holding does nothing to hide the purple letters spelling out Pregnancy Test.
âYouâre pregnant?â Crewâs voice is quiet. Calm. Unreadable. I didnât expect excitement, but I expected some emotion. Instead, the question sounds like it was spoken by a robot. Smooth and unfeeling.
âI donât know,â I reply. I overcompensate for his lack of emotion with some snark. âThatâs what the test is for.â
âYou think youâre pregnant?â
âWell, Iâm not taking them for fun,â I snap. His fingers tighten around the car keys heâs holding. I soften my tone, trying to act like apathy and rational questions were the response I was hoping for. âMy period is late and I keep throwing up my breakfast. So yeah, I think Iâm pregnant.â
He releases a long exhale. âWow.â
That word lingers in the air between us for the rest of the ride up. The doors slide open, revealing the familiar entryway. I donât make it more than a few steps inside before he says my name. Itâs followed by a warm palm that wraps around my forearm and pulls me around to face him. All I can see is blue, his gaze is that intense.
âScarlett.â
âWhat?â
He closes his eyes, then opens them, probably praying for patience. I know Iâm being short and unreasonable, but he doesnât get to be the one freaking out about this. Iâm the one whose body will change. âYou canât tell me you might be pregnant and walk off. Thatâs not the way this marriage works.â
âHow does it work then, Crew? If I am pregnant, what do you want me to do? Do you want me to wrap up a stick I peed on like a Christmas present? Wait and see if you notice in a few months? I made nice with all of your fans tonight and youâre getting laid and Iâll probably be popping out an heir for you soon. What else do you want from me?â
The line of his jaw turns taut. âI want you to take the test, Scarlett. And then show me what it says, so I donât spend all night wondering.â
Iâm in the mood for a fight, but heâs being annoyingly easy-going all of a sudden. âFine.â I spin and stalk in the direction of our bedroom, the sharp corners of the boxes swinging against my legs with each step.
The plastic handle digs into my palm. I thought it would be a relief, Crew knowing. Thought it would save me the dilemma of telling him a definitive answer if he knew and asked. I didnât consider it would mean heâd be here when I found out. That there would be no chance to absorb the news myself before seeing his reaction.
The thud of his footsteps stays a steady trail behind me as I reach the stairs and climb to the second floor. The bedroom door is slightly ajar. I push it all the way open, dropping the plastic bag on the floor before kicking my heels off by the chaise lounge and stretching my toes.
Best feeling ever.
My feet sink into the soft rug as I find the zipper of my dress and pull it down. Silk pools around my ankles.
Crewâs footfalls have stopped. I can feel his eyes on me, sweeping my bare skin with silent awareness.
I walk over, barefoot, in my bra and thong. I grab one test from the floor before heading for the bathroom. When I turn to close the door, heâs standing in the doorway.
âNo.â
He looks amused. âIâve seen you naked before, you know.â
âIâm not naked.â
Blue eyes flick down to the sheer lace bra and back up. âSure.â
I act like he said nothing. âIâm peeing alone.â
âHow long does it take?â
âDo you have somewhere to be?â
He heaves a sigh. âIâm just wondering, Scarlett.â
I rip the box open, grab the stick, and hand him the empty box. âRead the directions, then.â I shut the door on him and then walk over to the sink. I pull in long, deep breaths as I stare at my reflection in the mirror for a minute.
Despite the full face of makeup, including my red lips, I look young. Nervous. This feels like a big moment. If I were closer with my mom, Iâd call her. But sheâll tell my dad, who will call his lawyer and start redrafting all the documents that were just finalized following the wedding. Nadia and Sophie would freak out, and any of my other âfriendsâ would probably call the press.
I wash my face and brush my teeth. Iâm stalling. I donât know what I want the result to be. In the past few days, Iâve started to accept that I must be pregnant. If Iâm not, I wonât be disappointed, exactly, but some other emotion adjacent.
This is soon.
Way too soon.
Weâve been married for less than three months. Things between Crew and me are new and volatile. Iâm supposed to debut my clothing line in the spring. If Iâm pregnant now, Iâll be very pregnant then.
âThis one says two minutes,â Crew calls through the door. âBut the other two say five. Does that mean theyâre more accurate? Why did you get three? Are you supposed to take three? Did you take that one?â
I donât answer any of his questions, but I do pee on the first stick. Once I have, I donât know what to do with it. Just hold it, I guess? Wave it around like a Magic Eight ball? I peed on it, so Iâm not setting it down on the counter surrounding the sink.
âScarlett?â
Itâs bothering me less and less that Crew is here. It actually feels nice, not that Iâll tell him that. I open the door and hold out the test. âHere. Hold this one while I take the other two.â
âWhat?â He fumbles with the boxes. âWhy?â
âBecause I didnât want to get pee on the counter.â I give him a duh look.
âWhat does it say?â He squints at the stick.
âNothing yet.â
I take the other two tests from him. I pee on them both at once, which might affect the results. At this point, Iâm past caring. I just want a somewhat definitive answer before I go to bed.
When I open the door again, Crew is staring at the test in his hand like it will disappear if he looks away. âItâs, um, positive.â He clears his throat. âPregnant.â Itâs the first time Iâve heard him sound unsure about anything, and itâs while looking at a black-and-white answer.
After a quick glance down to determine if the two Iâm holding show resultsâthey donâtâI look back up. Heâs looking at me now, and I have no idea what to say or do. I think he was hoping for some direction from my reaction, because he stays just as blank and immobile.
âDo you think this is normal? Do other couples stand here holding these?â
He smiles, and I smile back. âWho cares what other people do?â
I exhale. âYeah. Youâre right. Youâ¦want this, right?â
âA kid?â he clarifies.
I nod.
âYeah. Do you?â
The tests Iâm holding both turn positive. I turn them so he can see. âThree for three. I think weâre past the wanting kids conversation.â
âWe donât have to be.â
âWeâre married and you want a kid and youâre telling me youâd be okay with not keeping this baby?â
âIâm saying itâs your body and if thatâs a conversation you want to have, letâs have it.â
Iâm surprised, and I know it shows on my face. Weâre not a couple of high schoolers who fooled around once. Kidsâheirsâare one of the primary goals of this marriage. âWow. Thatâs shockingly progressive of you. Suzanne Lamonte asked me if I was considering taking time off work to try and get pregnant earlier.â
âShe might feel foolish about that.â
I catch the caveat. âIâm keeping it, Crew. There was never a question. Yeah, I wish it had happened laterâlike maybe when we were actually tryingâbut it didnât. I donât feel ready, but I probably never will. Soâ¦â I lift one shoulder and let it drop.
âSo weâre having a baby.â
A comment about his lack of role in the whole growing and birthing a human process going forward is at the tip of my tongue. His contribution was quick and enjoyable. Iâm having a baby, not him. But I bite it back, considering heâs handling this whole thing far better than I expected.
âYep. I mean, Iâll go to the doctor and confirm, but these all had super accurate plastered on the front, so it going the other way seems unlikely, I think? I donât really know.â
âYouâll tell me? When the appointment is?â
âOh,â I reply, thrown. âUh, you donât have toââ
âI want to go.â
âOkay.â My voice is barely a whisper.
âOkay,â he echoes.
Then, unexpectedly, he kisses me. Itâs urgent and eager. Thereâs no finesse and lots of emotion. The stiff material of his tux rubs against my bare skin, sending moans tumbling out of my mouth. Then something shifts. Slows. Softens. Touches linger and drag. Sink into my skin and sear.
âI should go let Teddy out,â Crew murmurs, pulling back.
âAre you coming back?â
âYeah. Iâm coming back.â
âOkay.â I step away and walk back into the bathroom without looking at him. His footsteps fade as he walks down the hall to the guest room thatâs become Teddyâs domain.
I shed the lace Iâm wearing and step into the shower. Hot water pounds over me as I wash my skin and shampoo my hair. I rest a hand on my flat stomach as suds slide down it.
Iâm pregnant.
Suspecting felt different than knowing. Iâm scared and excited and a million other emotions I canât name.
Iâm relieved Crew knows. I didnât realize how heavily telling him was weighing on me until it lifted. There wasnât any doubt in my mind he would want this baby. Heirsâfor his familyâs company, for my familyâs companyâwere always a pressing goal of this marriage. All the uncertainty stems from how this will affect us.
Crew and Scarlett.
I step out of the shower and towel off. My hair gets a quick brush and my skin a sweep of moisturizer. Iâm too tired to do anything else. I hang up my towel, pull on one of the silk nightgowns I usually sleep in, and slide into bed.
When the door opens, Iâm still awake. I stay curled on my side as I watch Crewâs silhouette remove the tux. I close my eyes when he approaches the bed. But I know the exact second he slips between the sheets. His heat radiates. The mattress dips.
I donât move and he doesnât reach for me.
We usually have sex before bed. Technically we already have. Right now, Iâm craving his closeness more than his cock.
Before I can think it through, I roll over. His eyes hold mine as our bodies brush. One warm palm finds the small of my back and pulls me closer. I snuggle against him, tucking my head beneath his chin and tangling our legs together.
âAre you okay?â
âI was nervous to tell you,â I admit. âIt feels big.â
âIt is big.â
I hesitate before I keep talking. âMy parents didnât choose not to have more kids. When I was born⦠I donât know the details, but my mom couldnât have any more. What if that happens to us?â
âThen weâll have one kid.â
He makes it sound simple. âMy father still resents her for it. Not giving him a son.â
âYou think Iâd care about that?â
âMy parents chose to get married. It wasnât an arrangement. The way they went from that to who they are nowâ¦thatâs not what I want, Crew. I know it took more than just not being able to have more kids. But that was part of it, and IâIâm scared. I like who we are now. I donât want it to change.â
âIf it does, it will change for the better. I promise.â
âYou canât promise that.â
âI just did.â
I close my eyes, but I canât fall asleep.
âWhat else is bothering you?â
Again, I hesitate. âI talked to Hannah Garner tonight.â
âOh?â A lot simmers beneath the single syllable. Iâm not sure if itâs in regard to her, or that Iâm bringing it up. Or because he knows we must have talked about him. But thereâs no panic or guilt.
âShe told me some things. Some lies, I think.â
âLike what?â
âLike that you had sex with her two weeks ago, in the bathroom of Proof.â
âShe was there the night I got a drink with Asher.â
âOkay.â
âI didnât talk to her. And I definitely didnât have sex with her.â
âOkay,â I repeat.
âYou believe me?â
âYes. I told her I didnât believe her and walked away. I trust you. Iâm trusting you. Justâ¦donât make me a fool, okay?â
Crew tightens his grip, so thereâs no space between our bodies at all. âI hope our kid is just like you,â he whispers.
âI hope it has your eyes,â I murmur back.
âWeâll figure all of it out,â he promises.
We. Iâve never been part of a we. It just became my new favorite word in the English language. Iâm in love with the sound.
And the man saying it.