
I think Suzanne will ultimately go to Sonny, Ric, and Michael and reveal everything she knows — that Willow has been blackmailing Alexis, and that Alexis is fully aware Willow shot Drew. And I don’t think Suzanne will do this out of revenge or moral outrage. She’ll do it because, unlike Alexis, she does not have the lawyer–client dynamic that keeps secrets locked behind professional loyalty.
That distinction matters more than anything.
Alexis is constrained. She is bound by ethics, confidentiality, and the impossible position of protecting a client who also happens to be entangled in a criminal truth that could destroy multiple lives. Suzanne, however, operates outside that structure. She isn’t obligated to protect Willow. She isn’t required to shield Alexis. And crucially, she doesn’t see silence as a duty — she sees it as a risk.
From Suzanne’s point of view, this isn’t about legal nuance. It’s about leverage, danger, and inevitability. She understands that Willow’s blackmail only works as long as everyone else stays in the dark. The moment Sonny, Ric, and Michael learn that Willow has been manipulating Alexis — and that Alexis knows the truth about Drew — the balance of power collapses instantly. Suzanne knows this, and she also knows that waiting helps no one.
What separates Suzanne from Alexis is not intelligence, but distance. Alexis is emotionally and professionally entangled. Suzanne is not. That emotional distance allows Suzanne to act where Alexis cannot. She doesn’t see this as betrayal; she sees it as containment. In her mind, telling Sonny, Ric, and Michael isn’t lighting a fuse — it’s defusing a bomb before Willow decides to detonate it herself.
There’s also a deeper layer here. Suzanne doesn’t believe Willow can be controlled indefinitely. Blackmailers always escalate. Secrets always leak. And Suzanne, ever the pragmatist, understands that the first person to control the narrative is the one who survives the fallout. By going to Sonny, Ric, and Michael, she ensures that Willow no longer owns the truth.
If this theory plays out, Suzanne won’t frame it as an accusation. She’ll frame it as information — dangerous information that others deserve to have before it’s weaponized again. And once that truth is out, Alexis’ silence becomes irrelevant, Willow’s leverage evaporates, and Drew’s shooting stops being a buried sin and becomes an unavoidable reckoning.
In short, Suzanne won’t act because she’s reckless.
She’ll act because she’s not bound — and in General Hospital, that freedom is often the most dangerous thing of all.