Chapter 53
The Dark Side Of Fate
~Sylvester~
When Theodore interrupted my speech at the northern council conference, I knew something serious
had happened.
I politely excused myself. I went to him.
I could hear people murmuring, but soon, Marcel took over, and they were silent.
That was why it was best I wrote my speeches. He just picked up from where I left off.
Theodore stood when I approached him.
âThey are back,â He said, and I smiled, glad that Tamia had returned.
I was worried she might see Leo or Devin, and they would convince her to leave with them.
The painful part of that fear was that I wouldnât have gone after her if she had willingly followed.
Otherwise, I would have given my mother, Dominic and the entire council the war they had longed for
and burned the south or east to the ground.
âTamia is ill. Linda asked that I send a doctor, which I did, but then she insisted I tell you. I think it is
serious,â He said, and images of her being poisoned by Jake Brighton just to get at me flooded my
mind.
I was out the door before Theodore could finish the sentence.
People were looking at me weirdly.
The moment I stepped out, I hopped into the first car I saw. It wasnât mine, but I was lord, and the driver
was already behind the wheel.
âVolkov estate now!â I ordered him, and he started his vehicle.
I did not know who he worked for; I will have to apologise later.
We arrived at the estate, and I rushed into the building and went straight to my room.
Avery and Linda were with her. She looked pale and sweaty but seemed a bit calm. The doctor was
examining her, and I went to hold her hands. Knight was afraid, so I had to try and control myself.
When the doctor congratulated me that she was pregnant, I was shocked. Knowing that Linda did not
feel the same way made me still worried that Jake did something.
âLinda is pregnant, and she isnât ill?â I asked the doctor.
âPeople experience pregnancy differently, but I will still take her blood sample to test for other things. If
there is anything, she is already recovering from it. I will give her a mild sedative to help her relax and
sleep it off, but there is no cause for alarm here. She will be alright when she wakes up; she just needs
to rest,â he said, administered the sedative, and packed his things to leave.
I watched Tamiaâs eyes close gradually until she fell asleep.
Linda and Avery excused themselves, and I stayed with her.
There was a knock on my door thirty minutes later, and I rushed to open it so the person did not bang
too hard and wake Tamia up. I knew it was my mother. She was the only one that dared to do that.
I opened the door, and she frowned at me. Not wanting her in my room, I stepped outside.
âWhat is wrong with her?â She asked, and I knew she must have heard.
âWhat do you care?â I said, and she sighed and bowed her head.
âI know I misbehaved the last time, and I am sorry. It was just that treason is a serious crime, and I
knew they would want to kill Dominic. Tamia threatened to deal with Dominic if he caused you trouble.
You are a fool for her. I was angry, but I donât hate her. I just went to my family home to calm down and
think things through.â She said, and I knew she was being honest, but Tamia wasnât comfortable with
her anymore, and that was a relationship she would have to fix alone.
âYour words and actions hurt her, mother. Even though she didnât say it, I could see it. You called her a
whore, among other things; words like that donât get forgotten,â I said, and she bowed.
âDo you know she was the only one that believed Dominic didnât do it? She was the one that urged me
to dig instead of passing judgment. Dominic has been a problem for me, so it was easy to think he
would pull off that stunt. It was Tamia that made me question the enforcer. She was the one that made
me look at other factors, yet you were busy antagonising her and making her feel inadequate. I am
disappointed in you, mother. Anyone looking from the outside would say you didnât birth me with how
you acted. You always side with him over me; you never have my back,â I said, tears streaming down
her face.
âDo not say that, Sylvester. I gave birth to both of you. I threatened to disown him if he went for the
hearing. That was why he stayed. I also say hurtful things to Dominic, but I have to feel sorry for him.
He is the older of you two, yet he has nothing, no position, no charge and respect. Things like that get
to people. You have it all, Sylvester; he has nothing. He has to live in your shadow for the rest of his
life. It is not your fault, but I know it gets to him, so he is always eager to prove that you are flawed so
he can feel better. Larry has worked on his insecurities and used them. I was happy you locked the
douchebag up. I gave birth to both of you. Do not ever think otherwise,â She said and bowed her head.
âI am sorry about Tamia, but I am really concerned for her. I knew she went to the west because of you.
It was a brave thing to do on her part, and I commend her, but I am concerned. Jake isnât vindictive, but
I canât say the same for Donald Brighton. He is the next alpha, and he has a grudge against this family.
Just like Devin, his mother was taken by your father,â she said and looked around us.
I realised she wanted to tell me other things people werenât supposed to hear, so I opened the door to
my room and let her in.
I signalled her to keep it down, and she looked at Tamia, where she was sleeping.
âShe is pale,â She said with concern, and I nodded.
âDoctor said she will be fine,â I said, and she looked at me.
âDo you mind if I examine her?â She asked, and I did not know how Tamia would feel about it, but since
I was there, I decided it wouldnât be any harm.
She touched Tamiaâs forehead and palm and checked her nails; Tamia stirred in her sleep but did not
wake up.
âDid the doctor take a blood sample?â She asked, and I nodded.
âI think she ingested a small amount of poison, and I also think she is pregnant,â she said, and I was
panicked because she could be right.
âNo need for alarm; her system is fighting whatever was introduced into it,â She said and patted her
hair gently.
âShe is pregnant,â I confirmed, and she gasped. A wide grin spread across her face.
âCongratulations,â she said softly and looked at Tamia lovingly.
âI hope she will give me another chance.â She said, and I doubted Tamia would be that nice again, but I
kept it to myself.
âYou were going to tell me something about Donald Brighton, mother,â I said, and she nodded. We
moved to the couch area, and she sat.
âYes, Ava Brighton. A bitch â¦â she said scornfully.
âShe and Gretchen were brought as trophies. Gretchen was Jakeâs younger sister. She was stunning
and a looker. Your father eagerly drafted her to join his harem and reluctantly drafted Ava. He favoured
Gretchen of all his bedmates, and Ava got jealous. Gretchen thought she was being nice when she
pleaded with Maurice to send her sister In-law back to her husband, and Maurice considered it. I hated
that bitch because she almost took my husband from me. Ava did not see it as an act of kindness on
her part. She saw it as a way of reducing her competition. The bitch thought Maurice liked her too, and
Gretchen was only trying to get rid of her. So she pleaded with Maurice to remain in his service and
continue to warm his bed,â She said and wiped away her tears.
It was clear that my motherâs selective memory was her coping mechanism.
Sometimes she would say he had to sleep with those women to learn their husbandâs secrets and be
ahead of them, but here she was admitting that his method was fucked up, but I held my tongue.
âAva murdered Gretchen in cold blood, driving a silver blade through her heart in this room,â she said,
looking around.
âShe had come to plead with Maurice to let her say, and instead of finding Maurice, she found Gretchen
in his bed naked, looking freshly fucked, and she snapped. You see, Maurice had stopped touching
Ava, and it bothered her,â she said and bowed her head.
âMaurice had her locked up in the dungeon, and one drunken night, he went to her cell and took her
life,â she said, and I was stunned.
âWhat he did was against the law. Ava was supposed to stand trial for her crime, slave or not. But he
acted on impulse, and we swept it under the carpet. No one knew this, but Donald hates the Volkovs
because of it. He thinks his mother was brought here as a slave and killed unjustly. I doubt Jake knows
the truth,â She said, and I looked at Tamia.
âOur family has many enemies, hence why the rest of the Volkov bloodline are quiet and not bearing
our last name. It was wrong to send her to Brighton. I am sure they wanted to kill her. She just didnât
ingest enough,â she said, and I hoped for Jakeâs sake there was nothing in Tamiaâs blood or I would
destroy Brighton.
âIs there a record of this?â I asked her, and she nodded.
â The recordkeeper kept a record,â She told me, and I nodded, hoping to use it when the time comes.
âThe council have sent enforcers for Dominicâs hearing. They want to move him and Bryce to the
council prison,â Theodore said through the mind link, and I got up immediately.
âWhat is the matter, son?â My mother asked, and I shook my head. I dared not tell her what was
happening.
âCouncil matters,â I said, and she nodded.
âI will take my leave. Tamia likes yoghurt and fruits. She also likes smoked salmon in her salad. I will
have the kitchen staff prepare her favourite so she can eat when she wakes up; she has lost some
weight.â My mother said, and I thanked her.
We both left the room.
Although I knew she meant no harm, I did not want her to be the first person Tamia would see when
she woke up.
I linked Avery and Linda to go to my room and be with Tamia, then headed to the dungeons where the
enforcers were waiting.
Marcel was there, and Dominic stood in chains with fear in his eyes.
âWhat is the meaning of this?â I asked, and the leader bowed his head.
âYour Eminence, Councilwoman Pamela asked us to transfer the suspects to the council prison so they
can stand trial tomorrow,â He said, and I nodded.
âThey will stand trial tomorrow; tell her I will be presiding over the case, and the prisoners will remain in
my custody until then. Now leave,â I said. I knew it wasnât my place, but I was going to bend the rules
for Dominicâs sake. Someone wanted him to be the fall guy, and I wasnât going to allow it.
âWith all due respect, my lord, the council decides on criminal matters,â he said, and I nodded.
âThen tell them I am overriding the decision this time. If they have an issue, they should face me
directly on the matter,â I said, and the man nodded, saluted me with respect and left.
âWhat is with the council? Why are they quick and eager to convict Dominic,â Marcel said, and I looked
at my brother.
âSomeone is desperate to cover their tracks by making him the fall guy,â I said, and there was hope in
Dominicâs eyes.
âWhat?â Marcel said.
âTamia and I have been digging, and we found some really troubling things. They were hoping I
wouldnât investigate because of the friction between Dominic and me. They were right, had Tamia not
insisted, I would have let them deal with him,â I said and looked at Dominic, who looked ashamed of
himself.
âYou did this to yourself, big brother. Always working against me and trying to prove that I am
incompetent. You would have been the fall guy for nothing.â I said, and he remained ashamed.
âDouble Bryce and Dominicâs security. I do not want a mishap,â I linked Marcel and Theodore, and they
nodded.
I returned to my room to be with Tamia.