
After My Alpha Took My Daughter to His Mistress
Chapter 3
The sound of sirens cut through the chaos like a blade. Everyone froze, including the guards who were still pummeling Elliot. The wail of approaching vehicles grew louder, and then suddenly, six identical black SUVs screeched to a halt outside the academy entrance, forming an imposing barrier.
"What the hell is this?" Jackson muttered, his confidence faltering for the first time.
The doors opened in perfect synchronization. A dozen men in pristine black suits emerged, moving with military precision. They weren't just bodyguards—they were an army.
And then he appeared.
My father.
Wells Bradley stepped out of the central vehicle, his tall frame radiating the kind of authority that made presidents and prime ministers tremble. His silver hair caught the afternoon light as he surveyed the scene, his eyes—so like mine—taking in every detail with surgical precision.
"Father?" The word escaped my lips before I could stop it.
He turned toward me, and for a moment, his formidable facade cracked, revealing something raw and vulnerable. Then he was moving, cutting through the crowd with the natural grace of a man who owned half of Manhattan.
"Adelaide." He reached me in three long strides, his hands gentle as they helped me to my feet. The touch of his fingers against my bruised wrist made me wince, and his expression darkened. "Who did this to you?"
Before I could answer, he turned slowly, deliberately, toward Jackson. The temperature in the room seemed to drop ten degrees.
"You," he said, his voice soft but carrying the weight of a thousand boardroom executions. "You have assaulted the heiress of the Bradley Corporation. My daughter."
Jackson's face drained of color so quickly I thought he might faint. "Your... daughter?"
"Allow me to clarify," my father said, his tone glacial. "This is Adele Bradley, sole heir to the Bradley fortune and chairwoman of the Bradley Foundation. Not whoever you claim she is."
The crowd collectively gasped. Even Headmistress Hayes took a step back, her eyes widening as she reassessed the situation.
"Mr. Bradley," she stammered, "I had no idea—"
"Clearly," he interrupted, not taking his eyes off Jackson. "Which is why my legal team will be speaking with you shortly."
Jackson's mouth opened and closed like a fish out of water. "There's been a misunderstanding," he finally managed, attempting to summon his Alpha charm. "Adele and I are mated—"
"Save it for the deposition," my father cut him off, signaling to one of the suited men who stepped forward with a leather portfolio. "You're being served with a restraining order effective immediately, along with preliminary paperwork for fraud, bigamy, and assault charges totaling eight million dollars."
Jackson's eyes darted frantically around the room, searching for an escape route. "Alexia," he called, "get the car!"
But Alexia was already trying to slip away through a side door, only to find her path blocked by two of my father's security team.
"Going somewhere?" Elliot asked, wiping blood from his split lip as he joined our growing group. "You're not thinking of leaving your daughter behind, are you?"
---
The private suite at Mount Sinai Hospital was larger than my entire apartment, with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Central Park and medical equipment that probably cost more than Jackson's annual salary.
A doctor had just finished examining my wrist—sprained, not broken—when the room emptied, leaving just me, my father, and Elliot.
The silence stretched between us, heavy with years of unspoken words.
"I'm sorry," I whispered finally, tears spilling down my cheeks. "I'm so sorry for everything."
My father sat beside me on the edge of the bed, his hand covering mine. For the first time since I was a child, I saw him cry.
"I'm the one who should apologize," he said, his voice rough with emotion. "I was so determined to protect you that I drove you away. I should have trusted you to make your own choices, even the wrong ones."
Elliot sat on my other side, his arm around my shoulders. "We're family," he said simply. "Families fight, they make mistakes, but they always come back to each other."
I looked between them—these men who had dropped everything to come to my rescue—and felt something stir deep within me. A warmth I hadn't felt in years spread through my chest, and with it came a subtle shift in my awareness.
My Luna aura. The part of me I'd suppressed for so long was beginning to wake up.
"I can feel it," I whispered, placing a hand over my heart. "It's coming back."
My father smiled, squeezing my hand. "Welcome home, Adelaide."
As I leaned into his embrace, I realized that Jackson had taken everything from me—my dignity, my security, even my identity. But he had failed to take the one thing that mattered most: who I truly was.
A Bradley. And Bradleys don't break.
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