Chapter 129
Chapter 129
Madam Margret’s POV
The curtains in my sitting room were drawn tightly, blocking out the midday sun. I had no desire for warmth, for light, or for anything that might ease this raw bitterness clawing its way up my spine. My son, my only son, Alex…had left the country on some frivolous vacation with her, of all people, while I sat here, alone, waiting, like a fool.
My lips tightened, and I slammed my teacup onto the table. The delicate porcelain cracked under the force, but I couldn’t bring myself to care. One of the maids flinched from the doorway, her wide, fearful eyes peering out as if I were some wild creature ready to pounce.
“Clean it up,” I snapped, waving her away with a careless flick of my wrist. She scampered in, her head bowed, her hands trembling as she gathered the shards. Pathetic, really. If only people could learn to hold themselves with dignity, rather than always shrinking away.
As she scurried out, my mind returned to the real source of my frustration… Christiana. Christiana, with her sweet, innocent facade, had wormed her way back into Alex’s life as if the past five years of peace, the divorce, the hard–won freedom, meant absolutely nothing. It was unforgivable.
Oh, of course, the children were another matter. Ethan and Emma were blood, my blood, and they were innocent in all of this. I had no quarrel with them. But Christiana? That woman didn’t deserve to share in our family name, to bask in the life I built after my husband’s death. I raised Alex from the ground up, turned him into the man he is today, and he had the audacity to turn his back on me. For her.
The thought of it twisted in my chest like a knife. I stood, brushing off my skirt, and walked to the window. Through the glass, I watched the groundskeepers trim the hedges, their heads bowed, their movements quick and efficient. At least they knew their place.
One of my guards approached, hands clasped, his face set in a rigid, impassive mask. “Madam Alistair, is there anything you need?” This text is property of Nô/velD/rama.Org.
“No. What I need is for people to understand loyalty.” My voice came out colder than I’d intended, even to my own ears, but it couldn’t be helped. I dismissed him with a wave, and he backed away, clearly relieved to escape my sight.
As I turned back into the room, my thoughts darkened. Alex may have taken those children and flown off with her, but this wasn’t over. It couldn’t be. Christiana’s smile, her easy, manipulative charm, it infuriated me. I saw right through her. She was no innocent, no meek woman wronged by circumstance. She was a parasite, a woman who had dared to crawl back after all the damage she had caused.
“Madam?” One of the maids hovered at the doorway, her eyes averted.
“What is it?” I demanded, not bothering to mask my irritation.
“Your tea,” she stammered, holding the tray with shaking hands.
But as I took the cup, I could feel my fingers
I took a deep breath, reminding myself that I was not some reckless woman, that I could be calm. But trembling with the force of my anger. “Get out,” I hissed, not even looking at her. She darted away, her footsteps fading down the hall.
I would not let Christiana destroy everything I’d built. She would not ruin my relationship with Alex, my legacy, or my family. She could have her little reunion now, bask in her temporary victory. But I would find a way to pull my son back, to make him see the truth. One way or another, Christiana would pay.
I moved to my armchair by the window, settling into it with a rigid posture, my fingers gripping the armrests tightly. The room was silent, save for the occasional tick of the grandfather clock by the doorway. Each tick felt like a countdown, a reminder that while they played house in some far- off paradise, I was here, waiting, calculating my next move.
It had been five years. Five blessed years of peace, of finally seeing Alex unshackled from that woman’s influence. She had always been beneath him, a charity case at best. And when he’d finally come to his senses, when he left her and that wretched life she brought, I’d thought he was finally free, finally ready to become the man he was meant to be. But somehow, she’d clawed her way back, as resilient as a weed choking the life from a beautiful garden.
The maids and staff knew to stay out of my way today. I’d heard the whispers, seen their pitying glances when they thought I wasn’t looking. They assumed I was lonely, that I was bitter simply because I was alone. Fools. It wasn’t loneliness that ate at me; it was the insult, the utter betrayal of my son turning against me for someone like her.
I’d built this life for him, sacrificed everything after his father’s death to ensure he had the finest education, the best connections, every advantage life could offer. When his father passed, I was left to raise Alex alone, bearing the weight of both parent and guide, my every decision calculated to lead him to greatness. I saw him as my legacy, my greatest work. And now he was throwing it all away on the very woman who had tried to drag
him down.
I poured myself another cup of tea, the hot liquid filling the room with a faint, floral aroma. It did little to ease my tension. My mind raced, weaving through the past, reliving every slight and insult that woman had dealt our family. I remembered the years before the divorce, the silent tension between us whenever she entered a room. How she would plaster on that soft, saccharine smile, as though I couldn’t see through her, as though I couldn’t see her true motives. It was infuriating.
Just then, I heard a slight rustle at the door. My maid, Anna, peered in nervously. She had been with me for years, and of all my staff, she was perhaps the only one brave enough to bring news she knew would unsettle me.
“Madam Alistair,” she began, her voice quivering, “I have a message from Mr. Alistair. It arrived this morning.”
7 24 PM
I held out my hand, trying to keep my voice calm. “Give it here.”
She placed the note in my hand and quickly excused herself, disappearing from the room like a ghost. I unfolded the paper, my gaze narrowing as I read Alex’s words. He spoke of the children, how happy they were, how Christiana was “good for them,” and how he hoped I could “come to accept” her for the sake of the family. My fingers tightened around the letter, crumpling the paper in my grip.
“Come to accept her?” I whispered, my voice barely more than a hiss. “As if I could ever…”
The thought of her, smug and content, basking in her little victory, was enough to make my blood boil. She thought she’d won, that she had everything she’d ever wanted, my son, the children, a family she could parade around. But she underestimated me, as they all did. I would not sit back and let her erase me from Alex’s life, not after everything I’d done for him.
I rose from my chair, pacing the length of the room. Every step fueled my determination, my resolve hardening like steel. If Alex couldn’t see the truth, then I would have to show him. I would make him understand, make him see what a mistake he was making before it was too late. Christiana may have wormed her way back into his life, but I still had influence, still had allies. And I would use every tool, every connection, every ounce of power I had to put her back in her place.
She may have thought that divorce was the end of my influence, that she had taken everything from me. But she was mistaken. I still had resources, people who owed me favors. I could make her life difficult, subtly, of course, enough to send a message. Enough to remind her of where she truly belonged.
I walked back to my chair and sat down, a slow, satisfied smile spreading across my face. She wouldn’t know what hit her.
“Christiana,” I murmured to mysel
f, “you may think you’ve won. But this is far from over.”