Her mother, Diane Turner, didn't move. Her jaw was locked tight, her lips pressed into a thin white line. She pointed a manicured finger at the document on the mahogany coffee table. "That 'nothing' is our only way out."
The paper's header gleamed under the chandelier: Carlisle-Turner Family Merger and Marriage Agreement. The Carlisle Group's gold logo seemed to mock them.
"You will marry him," Diane said, her voice flat. "In return, the Turner Group's debts get wiped clean. And we get five percent of Carlisle's shares."
She tapped the paper. The number hung in the air-five percent. Enough to drown every problem they had.
Karyn's sobs hitched. For a second, she saw a life without threatening letters, without hushed phone calls. But then came the image of being chained to a man who'd never see her face.
She stumbled to her mother and grabbed her arm. Her fingers dug in. "Mom, please," she whispered. "You love me. There has to be another way."
Diane's eyes flickered. For a moment, she seemed to be searching too.
Then Karyn's face lit up. A cruel spark lit her tear-streaked cheeks. She leaned in closer, her voice barely audible.
"Mom... we have Chloe."
The name landed like a stone in still water. Diane's expression froze, then slowly shifted into something calculating.
From the corner sofa, Warren Turner shot to his feet. "No!" His voice was a roar, raw and protective. "Absolutely not."
He was a man worn down by failure, his shoulders always slumped. But at the mention of his adopted daughter, something old and strong flickered in his eyes. "Chloe is my daughter. She has... issues. We can't do that to her. It's cruel."
"It's because she's 'simple' that it'll work," Diane shot back. "No one will question it. They'll think it's just another one of her episodes."
Karyn latched on, her voice gaining strength. "Exactly! The Carlisles have only ever seen me at events. They don't know what Chloe looks like. The contract just says 'a daughter of the Turner family.'"
Diane turned to her husband, her words sharp as broken glass. "Warren, do you want to see everything we've built turn to dust? Do you want to be on the street? Karyn's future-ruined." She gestured around the opulent room. "Is your sentimentality for a girl who isn't even our blood worth more than all this?"
On cue, Karyn sank to her knees before her father. She clutched his trousers, her face a perfect portrait of a heartbroken daughter. "Daddy, please," she wept. "Do it for me. For the family. Sacrifice Chloe. Please."
Warren's defenses crumbled. The weight of their stares, the reality of overdue bills piled on his desk, pressed down on him. He covered his face with his hands. A strangled sound escaped his throat.
"Besides," Diane added, delivering the final blow, "Donovan is blind. He won't be able to tell the difference." The groom's supposed weakness became the cornerstone of their plan. "We'll give Chloe a trust fund. She'll be compensated."
Warren looked from his crying biological daughter to his cold, determined wife. He remembered the small, quiet girl he'd brought home from the orphanage. The promise he'd made to protect her. Guilt washed over him, so strong his stomach clenched.
But then Karyn started painting a picture-how, once she was connected to the Carlisles through her sister's sacrifice, she could rebuild the Turner empire.
The lure of that future, contrasted with the terror of ruin, was too much. His last bit of moral resolve evaporated.
He let his hands fall. His voice came out a hoarse whisper. "... Leave me alone."
It wasn't a no.
Diane and Karyn exchanged a look of triumphant understanding. The deal was done. They began whispering, hashing out details. They'd use Chloe's deep trust in Warren, her reliance on him, to coax her into agreement.
"We can tell everyone her condition has worsened," Diane murmured, already crafting the story. "It'll explain any unusual behavior."
Warren closed his eyes. He shut out the sound of their cold-blooded plotting. He was a coward, and he knew it. In the gilded cage of his living room, a conspiracy born of greed and desperation had found its silent approval.