Chapter 99
Accepting My Twin Mates
Accepting My Twin Mates Chapter 99 CHAPTER 96 â HE?
Badru Astennu hadnât ever shut me out like this before. Our anger and hurt were one and the same, but the way my brotherâs detonated while mine retained its composure was alien and foreign territory.
âDivide and conquer.â That was all he would say to me.
How would we divide the interrogation of our father to conquer it, if he was leaving it all to me?
âI donât think it was Isaac he meant, slow poke,â Baniti muttered, while I watched our twin burst through to their midnight wolf as soon as his feet were clear of the prison grounds.
He was heading north?
â¦Finley.
There was no way for me to stop him. He was far faster and more agile than I could ever be, even sleep deprived as we both were. If I gave chase, there wouldnât be much of Finley left by the time I caught up. But did I necessarily want to stop it? Why would I want to deny that asshole the beating he had coming.
If Astennu could get the location of our mate, I was free to discover the motives of the former Alpha so nothing like this would ever happen again. I just hoped he would be ok on his own; another foreign sentiment, worrying over Astennu being the impulsive i***t.
Heading back inside the prison, solo, I was met with the scrutinous gaze of Kate, who noted instantly I was alone, and Tamlyn, who pretended to be minding her own business, but the woman had a knack for smelling the shift in mood.
âHe just needed to cool off,â I stuck to the half-truth and nodded towards the prison door to continue my questioning like everything was fine. f****d up, but fine.
I was an ass for lying, but if I told her, Kate would go running after. She could hate what her son did all the livelong day, it didnât mean that she wouldnât want to protect her son. And Astennu needed whatever time I could afford him to get his answers while I got mine.
She gave me a stiff nod, which I didnât know was from tension or disbelief, and reopened the gate.
Not wishing to go in and fully test the tether of my angerâs restraint, I remained in the frame and proceeded.
âSince you donât know where Evie is, letâs start with what you do know. Janet, what was her role in all this?â I could see my father looking past me, searching for my brotherâs figure alongside mine. Was he disappointed Astennu wasnât coming back?
âShe tampered with Lucyâs water to make sure that she remained unconscious. She used my master code to gain access and was only meant to take the locket from Evieâs room, but she found the patrol schedule as well.â
âAnd you used it to frame Konstantin as the culprit and make us look incompetent?â I stated woodenly, meeting a gaze I knew he wouldnât return. âDo you even realise how much Astennu blamed himself?
He thought he was the reason our mate was taken. You shoved your âevidenceâ in his face when you knew it was all bullshit!â
âIt wasnât as though either of you believed it,â he sniped coldly. âThat damn rogue had his claws in you already with whatever lies he told for sympathy. Even after all the rumours Janet spread at my order-â
âLies?â I repeated through clenched teeth, my jaw spasming with a string of curses I wanted to let loose at him. âThe only lies here were from you, and only you! Your heartbeat didnât flinch, once. How could you look at us and lie so convincingly?â
He turned his back to me, out of what? I didnât know. I wanted to believe it was out of shame, guilt or regret. The small pup in me wanted to see some flicker of the former parent I used to love still living somewhere, but I was growing increasingly aware that the loving parent was the illusion all along.
âWhy is Janet so scared to reveal anything?â I said after a deep breath to keep from losing it.
âI knew she was stealing petty cash and sending it to her daughter. I told her, one phone call from me and the girl would be thrown from the pack, along with the mate, as rogues and she would join them. If she did as I ordered, she would be exonerated and the matter dropped.â
âSo blackmail on top of everything and you still have the balls to act like rogues are the villains?â I scoffed, regretting every bad thought I had silently cursed at rogues because of my upbringing.
If Evie had never come into my life, would I have followed in my fatherâs footsteps? Selling rogues as though it was some necessary evil to cure the world of their blight? The thought sent a wave of sickening self-disgust through my bones that I just might have.
âHow did you know not to use wolfsbane?â The question occurred to me.
Konstantin had only told Astennu, Evie and me about its effects on lycans. It was a go-to substance to use on all wolfkind, cut with whichever tranquilliser of choice to knock out any werewolf. How did he know to avoid its use?
âWhen the extraction was arranged,â Isaac turned, but continued to study the wall at the side of me instead of looking me directly in the eye. âI was told, under no circumstances, was wolfsbane to be used. I didnât know what the drug was that was sent, but I was told it would knock the targets out. All they had to do was consume it. Konstantin was the issue because I knew he wouldnât accept anything I gave him, so I dealt with him personally. I went to his room feigning that I wished to talk and I shot him with plain tranquilliser, then carried him out of the window with some effort to the awaiting vehicle.â
âWho told you about the wolfsbane? That Marceau guy?â
âNo, the intermediary that I went through who arranged the deals.â
The creepy guy that my brother had spoken to.
âYou know him well? Because he sure as s**t gave you away without a second thought.â Call me petty, but it was an immense swell of entertainment to watch his face contort in anger.
âI donât know his name or what he looks like and Iâm thankful for it. The man is infuriating to deal with, but highly skilled, even if he was just a pup when he started,â he bit out. âHe arranges the transport, transfers the payment at my request and forges the documents to make them look bona fide. After that one incident with the rogue, who killed Kateâs son, might I stress, we learned to move faster and have the rogues out the same day they came in.â
I spared Kate a quick glance, the way her face twisted in grief, twisted my guilt with it. My next question would not be an easy one for her to hear.
âThere was another person you contacted, a withheld number⦠that was Finley, wasnât it?â
âYes. Iâm usually able to move theâ¦â
âThe people you sell into slavery,â I filled in his sentence when he trailed off. âYouâve been doing it comfortably for over a decade, I donât see why youâre getting shy about the details now.â
âYouâve made your point,â his teeth and jaw clenched. âI normally work alone, but the circumstances this time were quite different. He needed a cover and his trip across country was it.â
And I bet the carrot of having a place back in the pack and his former mate, Lucy, all to himself, did just the trick into getting the i***t ass-hat on board.
âThat, and heâs probably still salty over those fingers we digested,â Baniti added with a snarling grumble.
âYour mother was never supposed to be hurtâ¦â the first true sound of torment filtered from him. âI dealt with Konstantin, Finley was meant to take the girl. My Qamar was never meant to be caught in any of this⦠she was meant to be protected from it.â
âNo hard feelings about your Luna,â the creepy phone guyâs words became clear. Our mother was never meant to be knocked out that day. That was why Isaacâs reaction was so genuine, because he was truly scared for her.
âYou think you were protecting my mother? What if she was taken?!â I wanted to surge forward and punch the stupid out of him. But Astennu had already punched him unconscious and he was none the smarter for it. âHow was any of this helping her through her issues with rogues?â
âYou have no idea what itâs like!â He yelled, whirling on me and finally looking me in the eye. âYouâve never had to hold your mother through every one of her nightmares, or tried to wake her when she called out for her attackers to stop, or every time she recoiled when she finally woke. You have never had to see the fear in her over those memories. So if I have to see to it that rogues are sent where they belong, so be it.â
I could have killed him all over again. My fists curled and my claws extended, ready to fly through the air and slice him apart. As my arm tensed, about to act, a small voice stopped me.
âIsaac⦠how could you?â My mother appeared by my side, unclenching my hand to be replaced by her grip. âI may have been scared of rogues, but what made you think I would have ever condoned you selling them?â
âI did it for you, to protect you from them, so youâd never feel scared again,â he pleaded like a madman, turning his feral break from reality onto me. âYou and your brother were going to let rogues stomp all over our pack! I thought I raised you better than to trust those kinds of people and you were ready to let them in. You sided with those animals and not the woman that gave you life, your own mother. I knew what I had to do, for her and the pack⦠and for you.â
âFor me?â My lips peeled back in an almighty snarl. âI thought all this time you were teaching us, showing us how to be a good and just Alpha, but it was all a lie. Every good memory we have of you is a lie. And now I see the truth. We werenât your sons⦠we were just another asset, heirs to carry on your warped way of thinking and thatâs it. Whatâs worse is, you donât even realise how f*****g evil you are! You took our mate⦠the only woman we will ever love⦠and our pup,â my voice broke with that final straw.
ââ¦Isaac, did you know about our grandpup before you did this?â
âNo⦠I-â
âYou what?â My motherâs temper fired, standing toe to toe with her mate. âWhat was going to happen to my grandchild?â
His neck bent in shame, unable to keep her gaze. âI made a deal that the pup would be returned to us when it was old enough not to need milk. He would be left on our borders, appearing as though the girl had abandoned it here.â
If I could have thrown up, I would have. When I thought he couldnât sink lower, act more depravedly, he somehow managed to surprise me. My motherâs deep gold skin paled, her hand smothering her gasping whimper and horror.
âYou were going to force a mother and pup apart?â
Without warning and in a blur of movement, her palm connected with the side of Isaacâs face with such force, his feet stumbled under him.
âDo you know what it would have done to me, if someone had taken my boys from me?!â She screamed, tears pouring down her face in fury. âIt would have killed me! And you would have done that to your sonsâ mate? How could you?!â
She ran from the cell, her sobs echoing along the corridor, which left us in the most uncomfortable, tense and disturbing silence.
âIâll go after her, make sure sheâs ok. I canât listen to him anymore,â Kate mind-linked, and I heard her hasty retreat, but she may as well have been speaking underwater for how much I paid attention.
âHe?â I struggled to keep my voice level. The slip Isaac had made had only just registered in my head over my wolfâs frantic snarls.
ââ¦Yes,â he croaked a whisper through the heavy split in his lip that gushed blood. âI was told not that long ago that the pup is a boy.â
I was having a sonâ¦
âWeâre done here, Isaac. And when I tell this to Astennu, I donât know if Iâll be able to stop him from coming down here and killing you. My wolf is begging me to rip your heart out, and I want to let him. As far as Iâm concerned, youâre dead to us. I donât have a father anymore.â
âBadr-â
I turned and slammed the gate closed, unable to breathe the same air as him anymore.
âIf you think I would have believed for a second that Evie would be out there, galavanting around and abandoning our child, as you desperately thought I would buy, you are delusional. I would never have stopped looking for her, even on my deathbed.â
Just as I was about to snap the latch up on the viewing window, his words flittered back into my mind, swirling around and dripping in hypocrisy.
âYou might want personal revenge, but think what that will cost the innocents around you. You remember saying that?â I repeated. âDid the cost ever occur to you? Or did you simply not care?â
The screech of the metal was deafening, its sound feeling like a finite death, as though I was slicing off a part of myself.
Whatever Astennu was doing, he had better have a location for our mate, for our sanity if nothing else.