Chapter 191
Nanny and the Alpha Daddy
#Chapter 191: Bullet in the Chamber Edrick We finally located the place where Kelly called us from. It was a run-down abandoned warehouse nestled deeply into the Rogue district, where it was so dark that even the lights of the city from afar couldnât brighten the place. Behind the warehouse were hundreds of stacked storage containers where the shipping boats came up the river and picked up shipments, but other than that there was nothing else; no people, no houses, no cars. Nothing. Long story short, it was the perfect place for a crime like this to be carried out.
The police quietly surrounded the warehouse and got out, drawing their guns. I wanted to feel relieved, but I couldnât yet until we were certain that Moana and my daughter were safe.
When we burst in through the door, however, my heart sank. What I saw inside of that warehouse was my worst nightmare.
Ethan, my evil half brother, was holding a gun to Moanaâs head.
âPut the gun down!â the police yelled, pointing their guns at Ethan as we burst in. âGet down on the ground!â
But Ethan didnât waver. In a swift motion, he swung around and stood behind Moana with his arm around her neck and the gun to her head. I could see the fear in her wide eyes, and I wanted so badly to run to her. That sick f**k had her tied up in a chair, and beside her my daughter was also tied up. Ella appeared to be sleeping. My eyes moved back to Moana, who shook her head ever so slightly; she was indicating that Ella wasnât dead. Not yet, at least. I let out a small sigh of relief, but I couldnât be fully relieved until they were both in my arms.
âIf anyone takes one more step, Iâll shoot her,â Ethan snarled, putting his finger on the trigger and causing the cops to freeze. âIâve already got a bullet in the chamber. Just one wrong move, and Iâll blast her brains out.â
I felt as though my chest was going to explode. Inside of me, Eddy began to rage at the sight of Ethan holding a gun to my mateâs head. I wanted to rip him to shreds, but I knew that I couldnât. I needed to be tactful about this if I wanted to bring Moana and Ella home that night.
âEthan,â I said, holding my hands up in surrender and trying not to show my intense and unwavering fury. âWhy? Why are you doing this?â
Beside me, I heard a police officer click the safety off on his gun. I held my arm out to stop him and shook my head.
âDonât shoot,â I said. âNo one shoot.â
Suddenly, a low and menacing laugh began to rumble in my half brotherâs throat. His eyes, which were usually masked by the fake charm that he used to manipulate people, revealed his true self now. Cold, calculating, and twisted. I always wanted to believe that he wasnât born like that, that it wasnât entirely his fault that he was so messed up, but I couldnât help but think that he was just pure evil from the start;
like he was sent here with the sole purpose of destroying my entire family, from my parents to Moana and Ella now.
âYouâre too good,â he said through his laughter. âYou work fast. Iâll give you that.â
âEthan, why are you doing this?â I asked. âWhat do you want? Whatâs your goal here?â
Ethanâs laugh faded. His gun was pressed so hard up against Moanaâs head that I could see her wincing, and his arm was wrapped too tightly around her neck. âYou know, I wanted to get this over with before you got here so you could just face the pain of losing them,â he said grimly. âBut now that youâre here, and now that Iâm looking at your stupid f*****g face, I do want to tell you exactly why this is going to happen to you⦠Why youâll be miserable and alone forever until the day you die.â
âPlease,â I said, âenlighten me.â
âIâm not sure if you remember, or if you even care, but I was the one who found my motherâs body,â
Ethan began to explain. Of course I remembered that; no matter how much I always hated Ethan, I knew how horrific it was for him to find his mother after she had killed herself. I never thought that anyone should ever have to go through that. âEither way, it doesnât matter. Because that day, I decided that I would make you and your family suffer the same pain that I felt when I lost the only person who ever truly loved me.â
âWhy?â I asked, furrowing my brow. I took a step forward, but then Ethan pushed the gun harder into Moanaâs temple. I watched in horror as she shut her eyes and a tear rolled down her cheek while she trembled, and I held my hands up in surrender again. âWhy, Ethan? Iâm sorry about your mother. I really am. But what does her death have to do with Moana, or any of us for that matter?â
Ethan laughed again. Behind him, in the shadows created by the spotlight, I could see Kellyâs body lying motionless on the concrete floor. I tried not to show any indication that I saw her, but it made my stomach drop. Had he killed her? Was that what I heard at the end of her phone call?
âI know that you and your father werenât innocent in that matter,â Ethan growled. âThe coroner covered it up because your son of a b***h father paid him off, but I can still see my motherâs body, clear as day⦠she didnât kill herself. Those cuts on her arms werenât self-inflicted.â
Now, I was even more confused. âWhat are you talking about, Ethan?â I asked. âHow would you even have known? You were a child.â
âBecause!â Ethan shouted, clearly becoming agitated as he tightened his grip around Moanaâs neck, causing her to gasp for air. âThere was no knife! Your father was smart enough to pay the coroner off, but he took the knife with him when he was finished killing my mother!â
My eyes widened. I didnât know what to say; I wouldnât have been terribly surprised if my father had orchestrated that. When the papers came out about her death, they had only ever said that she died from suicide. Only one paper ever claimed that my father may have had something to do with it, as the news of Ethanâs existence as my fatherâs son had only begun to circulate a few months prior. Ethanâs mother was a prostitute, so it was easy to cover up her death as well as to claim that Ethan was not my fatherâs child. But now, it made sense.
Either way, though, only my father was to blame for this. No one else.
âWhy punish Moana and Ella for something that my father did?â I asked, taking another tentative step forward. âYour gripe should be with him, not them. Just let them go, Ethan.â
But Ethan just stared back at me with a maniacal look on his face, and pressed the gun harder into my mateâs temple.