The fury in that voice, deep and resonant, was a tangible force. It slammed into Brooks, making him flinch, his foot, poised to shove me back into the water, retracting instinctively. I saw it then, a flicker of primal fear in his eyes. He had always been terrified of Jerimiah, ever since he was a boy, even before Jerimiah became the "Shark of Wall Street." There was something about Jerimiah's quiet power, his almost supernatural control, that had always unnerved Brooks.
Then, I heard another sound, a familiar shuffle. My Grandfather Thomas Hess, Brooks's mother's father and a man of considerable influence in his own right, stepped into the ruined doorway, his face a mask of shock. Brooks's eyes lit up with a perverse relief. Grandfather Thomas, who had always doted on Brooks, would protect him. He had to.
"Grandfather!" Brooks cried out, abandoning me, abandoning his attack. He scrambled away from the pool's edge, his clothes still reeking faintly of the alcohol he'd been consuming freely all night. He rushed towards the older man, feigning tears, his voice choked with a false affection. "Grandfather, you're here! Oh, how I've missed you! Alexa... she attacked me! She's gone mad!"
Jazmyne, ever the opportunist, followed suit, though with less conviction. She was less familiar with Grandfather Thomas and lacked Brooks's familial connection, standing awkwardly a few paces behind, attempting to appear distraught. "Mr. Hess, thank goodness you're here! She's been terrible, absolutely unhinged!"
Brooks cut her off, his narrative already solidifying. "She was trying to steal everything! She brought a... a bastard child into the family, Grandfather! She was going to use it to take over Helios, to ruin everything Dad built! I had no choice but to stop her!" He gestured wildly at me, still half-submerged in the pool, my hands and feet bound, blood blooming around me. "I was just protecting our family honor, Grandfather! I cleaned up the mess! I got rid of the stain!"
I lay in the freezing water, my body trembling uncontrollably, the ropes biting into my inflamed skin. Each ragged breath was a struggle, the taste of blood still in my mouth, the agonizing cramps in my abdomen growing steadily worse. My vision was swimming, but through the haze, I saw him. Jerimiah. He stood tall and unyielding, a dark, formidable figure framed by the shattered doorway. His eyes, usually cool and calculating, were ablaze with a terrifying intensity. They swept over the scene, taking in the splintered door, the disarray, the spreading pool of my blood, and finally, me.
His face, normally unreadable, contorted into a mask of pure, visceral agony. A guttural cry, raw and primal, tore from his throat – a sound that ripped through me, more painful than any physical blow.
"Alexa!"
He moved then, a blur of motion, disregarding his expensive suit, his meticulously styled hair. He plunged into the pool, the cold water doing little to stem the heat of his rage. He didn't hesitate, didn't flinch. He just reached me, his strong hands trembling as he fumbled with the ropes binding my wrists and ankles.
"My baby," I whispered, the words barely audible, tears streaming down my face. "Jerimiah... our baby... it's gone."
His head snapped up, his eyes, dark and haunted, locking onto mine. His hands, still working furiously at the knots, froze. He looked down at my abdomen, at the horrific crimson bloom expanding around me. His jaw clenched, a muscle jumping violently in his cheek. He saw the shattered porcelain on the floor, the blood at the corner of my mouth. Another sound, a choked, agonizing roar, escaped him – a sound that promised unimaginable retribution.
Finally, the last knot gave way. He pulled me into his arms, cradling my broken body against his chest, heedless of the blood and water. His touch was both fiercely possessive and incredibly tender. "Hold on, Alexa," he murmured, his voice thick with emotion, his lips brushing against my forehead. "Just hold on. Please. For me."
Brooks, still oblivious, continued his indignant rant to Grandfather Thomas. "She was trying to steal the company, Grandfather! Trying to taint our bloodline with some street urchin's child! I had to protect our family's honor!"
Grandfather Thomas, who had remained silent, his gaze sweeping over the scene, finally spoke. His eyes, usually gentle, were now wide with a dawning horror. He saw the blood, the shattered phone, the ropes, Jerimiah's raw grief. His hand, frail and trembling, slowly rose to cover his mouth.
"Brooks," he whispered, his voice hoarse with shock. "What... what have you done?"
Brooks, still caught in his delusional narrative, puffed out his chest. "I saved us, Grandfather! I purged the impurity! Alexa, she's a disgrace! But I'm willing to overlook it, for the family. In fact," he turned to Jerimiah, who was still holding me, his back to them, "if she's so desperate for a husband, I'll even marry her. We can still present a united front, Jerimiah. Provided, of course, you step down and allow me to take my rightful place as CEO." He smirked, his eyes gleaming with ambition and a sickening arrogance. "After all, I am the true Sullivan. The only one left."
Jerimiah's head lifted slowly. His eyes, when they met Brooks's, were no longer just furious; they were cold, fathomless pits of absolute darkness. He said nothing, but the air around him seemed to crackle with an unspoken threat.
"My security detail," he commanded, his voice unnervingly calm despite the raw emotion radiating from him. "Get my private medical team here. Now. And if they're not here within five minutes, I will personally see to it that you never draw another breath." His eyes, filled with a terrifying promise, then swung to Grandfather Thomas. "Thomas. Tell them. Tell them the truth."
Grandfather Thomas, his face pale and drawn, looked from Jerimiah to Brooks, then back to my bloodied form in Jerimiah's arms. His hand, still trembling, slowly dropped from his mouth. He pulled his arm away from Brooks, a subtle but decisive movement that sent a chill down my spine. The warmth he'd always shown Brooks was gone, replaced by a cold, devastating clarity.
"Brooks," Grandfather Thomas said, his voice barely a whisper, yet it cut through the silence like a knife. "Jazmyne. You fools. You have no idea what you've done." His eyes, filled with a profound sorrow, met Jerimiah's. "The truth... the truth is far worse than you could possibly imagine."
Brooks's face, already pale, drained of all color. Jazmyne gasped, her own carefully constructed facade crumbling into disbelief. "Grandfather? What are you talking about? What truth?" Brooks stammered, his voice laced with a sudden, desperate uncertainty. "She's just a lying slut, Grandfather! She trapped some old man, probably for his money, and now she's trying to claim some illegitimate child is a legitimate heir!" His eyes darted nervously between Jerimiah and me. "Everyone knows Jerimiah Mcpherson hates women! He's always been a recluse, a cold fish! He can't even have children!"
Grandfather Thomas let out a long, heavy sigh, his gaze filled with a profound sorrow. "Brooks, you are a fool. A naive, arrogant fool." He shook his head, a gesture of deep regret. "Do you remember when Alexa declined your marriage proposal, saying she was already committed? Do you remember when she quietly vanished from the social scene for months, citing 'personal health reasons'?"
Brooks frowned, trying to piece together the fragments of memory. "She was always so secretive, Grandfather. Always so cold. She claimed she wasn't interested in marriage, then suddenly she was attached to that... that old man. It made no sense!"
"It made perfect sense, Brooks," Grandfather Thomas countered, his voice steady now, tinged with a bitter finality. "Because after you, in your infinite wisdom, ran off with Jazmyne and defaulted on your engagement to Alexa, effectively severing the strategic alliance my family desperately needed with the Sullivans, your father, God rest his soul, made a new arrangement. A pact. A marriage of convenience, yes, but a true marriage nonetheless. Alexa, in her unwavering loyalty to her father and his company, agreed." He looked at Brooks, his eyes filled with a searing disappointment. "She married Jerimiah Mcpherson. The moment you broke your engagement, she became his wife. The only one not privy to this crucial family development, Brooks, was you. You, and your deluded girlfriend, were too busy chasing fool's gold and dodging creditors to notice the world changing around you."
Brooks's mouth fell open, his face a mask of utter bewilderment. He remembered their frantic escape from the creditors, their self-imposed exile, their blissful ignorance of the outside world, fueled by their own self-importance. They had walked back into this house, into this life, convinced they were reclaiming what was theirs, only to find the very foundations of their perceived reality shifting beneath their feet.
"So you see, Brooks," Grandfather Thomas continued, his voice heavy with revelation, "Alexa is not just some 'lying slut.' She is Lady Sullivan-Mcpherson. The legal wife of Jerimiah Mcpherson. And the mistress of this house." He paused, his gaze hardening as it fell upon Brooks and Jazmyne. "And the child you so cruelly 'purged' for the sake of 'family honor'?" His voice cracked, a sob catching in his throat. "That child, Brooks, was the miracle. The long-awaited heir. The only true descendant of the Mcpherson bloodline, painstakingly conceived after years of failed attempts. That child was the only chance for both the Helios legacy and the vast Mcpherson empire to continue."
Brooks stared, his face ashen, the color draining from his lips. The reality of his actions, the sheer magnitude of his monstrous mistake, began to dawn on him. He looked at his hands, still stained with my blood, then down at his shoes, smeared with the same horrifying crimson. His eyes flickered to Jazmyne, who, seeing the shift in the power dynamics, had already begun to subtly distance herself, inching away from him.
"No," Brooks whispered, shaking his head frantically. "It can't be. Jerimiah... he can't have children! Everyone knows that! He's... he's barren!"
Jerimiah, still cradling me, his face a storm of grief and rage, lifted his head slightly. His eyes, burning with an infernal fire, fixed on Brooks. "Barren?" he roared, his voice shaking the very foundations of the penthouse. "Do you know the lengths we went to, you ignorant fool? The years of treatments, the endless hope, the crushing disappointments? Do you know the pain Alexa endured, the sacrifices she made, to carry our child? Our miracle child, painstakingly brought into being, only for you to snuff out its life with your barbaric ignorance and your pathetic jealousy?" His voice rose, each word a hammer blow. "You stood there, a pathetic excuse for a man, and kicked my pregnant wife, my wife, repeatedly. You forced her to eat glass and blood. You bound her and threw her into a pool, intending to drown her. You did this, Brooks. You. And this is not just an assault. It is murder. The murder of my child, and the attempted murder of my wife."
Jazmyne, seeing her fate sealed, suddenly burst into tears, pointing a trembling finger at Brooks. "He made me do it! He told me to! He said it was the only way to get the inheritance! He showed me fake photos of Alexa with other men, telling me she was cheating on him, that she was trying to steal his future!" Her words were a torrent of self-preservation, a desperate attempt to shift all blame. "I just wanted to protect him! I thought she was using Mr. Mcpherson! I... I didn't know!" She turned to Grandfather Thomas, her eyes wide and pleading. "Please, Mr. Hess! I'm family! I'm just an innocent bystander caught up in his schemes!"
Grandfather Thomas, his face a mask of disgust, cut her off coldly. "Family? You are no family of mine. You are a parasite, a manipulator, and a co-conspirator. You are hereby disowned, Jazmyne. Get out of my sight." He then turned to the security guards, who had entered the shattered doorway, their faces grim. "Arrest them. Both of them. And make sure they regret every single breath they take."
The guards moved swiftly, their movements precise and efficient. Brooks, finally understanding the true depth of his predicament, let out a strangled, desperate shriek. "No! Grandfather! Jerimiah! Please! Don't do this! I'm your family! I'm your brother, Alexa! Please! I didn't know! I didn't know!" He struggled against the guards, his pleas devolving into incoherent wails. "You can't do this! You can't!"
Jerimiah didn't even spare them a glance. He simply held me closer, turning his back on the chaos, his eyes fixed on my face, full of a pain so profound it mirrored my own. He walked away from the crumbling ruins of the penthouse, towards the waiting ambulance, my broken body cradled in his arms. His mind, I knew, was no longer consumed by rage, but by an icy, calculated resolve. A silent vow spoken in the depths of his anguished soul.
The only thing that mattered to him now was me, and the precious life we had lost. And I knew, with a terrifying certainty, that Brooks and Jazmyne, in their ignorance and greed, had just unleashed a force of nature they could never hope to comprehend. A force that would not rest until every single one of their lives' foundations, every single thread of their existence, was systematically and utterly destroyed.