Chapter 104
room fell into a mix of expressions, each telling its own story.
Sandersonâs gaze on Laurinda was a mix of disbelief and tension. He had thought his request would be met with refusal, but she agreed without hesitation.
That was his mom. How ridiculous!
Lorna, seeing his distress, reached for Sandersonâs hand and found it ice , his fingers clenched tight. It was evident he deeply upset.
Lorna never imagined Laurinda could be so heartless.
Laurinda, oblivious to the tension, pressed urgently, â
, your wordâs your bond?â
Steward found himself speechless, unable to fathom Laurindaâs foolishness, his voice barely above a hoarse whisper, âDo you even understand what youâre agreeing to?â
âOf course,â Laurinda replied, her voice cool and detached, âWeâve severed our relationship, right? Fine by me. What good does keeping ties do me? Might as well make a clean break and get it over with.â
She shot Rachel a glare after her declaration. Kermit and Rachel had been sweetâtalking her, tricking her into giving away twoâthirds of her money. Now it was all gone.
She resented Kermit, but what could she do? Rachel had produced a , the very future of the Delaney family.
Steward stared at her, lost for words. And Sanderson also remained silent.
As numbness spread through his body a clear and cool voice pierced the haze, âWe should get this notarized
first.
Sanderson looked up, his eyes meeting Cordeliaâs serious .
In that moment, warmth flooded his heart. He still had Cordelia and Lorna.
He lifted his head, saying, âRight, letâs draft a notary document. And Kermit, youâll need to write a statement
too,â
Kermit nodded in agreement, âSure thing.â
Stewardâs voice trembled with emotion, âKermit, think this through. What if the cops recover the fifty million? No takeâbacks,â
Kermit hurriedly affirmed, âNo regrets. My word is my bond.â
Because that money was gone for good.
Kermit had consulted experts, and these swindlers had been at this game for years, with elaborate schemes. Once the money hit their accounts, it was sliced and diced into hundreds and thousands of transactions, laundered through countless accounts, the majority withdrawn immediately. The longer the delay, the less likely recovery became.
A week had passed, the funds likely bverseas. Getting even a few million back would be a miracle.
After Kermit finished, he produced a statement as if by magic scribbling his signature and passing it to Sanderson, âSanderson, take a look. Once we get it notarized, itâs a done deal.â
The paperwork was ready, a clear sign of premeditation.
No wonder Laurinda hadnât hesitated.
Steward enraged, realizing they had targeted Sanderson on this day of family reunion.
He put down his fork, appetite lost, feeling something heavy in his chest, making it hard to breathe.
12 48
He had been terribly wrong. By always yielding, he had neglected the family matters, things spiral out of control, beyond the point of return.
The family was falling apart.
Steward aged a decade in that moment, deflated. Without a word, he ascended the stairs.
Sanderson didnât watch him leave. He signed the document, then rose, âWe should head back. Once the notary is done tomorrow, Iâll transfer the funds.â
Leaving the Delaney Manor, the drive home was silent. Sanderson sat in the passenger seat, wordless.
Lorna held Cordeliaâs hand in the backseat.
The three, including the driver, were solemn, the only sound Cordeliaâs soft recitation, âWhen nations fall, itâs not for lack of strength or poor strategy, but the folly of bribing the enemy. To weaken oneself by bribery paves the road to ruinâ¦â
Silence fell again.
Sanderson paused, then realized, a family, like a nation, needed governance. The Delaney familyâs disintegration wasnât his failure, but Laurindaâs blas.
Somehow, his heart felt lighter. He glanced at Cordelia, unsure if her recitation was intentional or not.
Back home, Sanderson tallied their liquid assets, exactly thirty million.
He felt twinge of guilt, âHow will we manage expenses until the next shareholdersâ meeting?â
He had little hope the police would recover the funds, and without immediate control of the perpetrators, the money was easily moved. But spending thirty million to sever ties with the Delaney family seemed worth it.
At least now, Laurinda couldnât use her status to bully Cordelia and Lorna.
Lorna smiled, âIâve got thirty thousand saved up. Donât worry, thereâs just the three of us, and we donât spend much. Might have to pick a less expensive dress for Lia, though.â
Hearing this, Cordelia fell silent, then offered her own bank card, âI have money.â
Aside from the two hundred thousand Sanderson gave for two monthsâ expenses, and the money from Bland, plus her scholarship, she figured it would last a while.
But Sanderson and Lorna laughed off her offer, âYou keep your money for yourself.â
The next day, Sanderson took care of everything and wired the money to Kermitâs account.
Cordelia was unaware of these dealings.
Afternoon came, and after two lessons, Merry suddenly turned to her, âHoly smokes. Lia, check out this post. Is it for real â
Cordelia looked up, confused, only to see Merryâs phone displaying a school forum post,
âStarJuliâ had the whole school buzzing with her latest gossip drop, â
, remember that scam syndicate news from last week? Turns out, the Delaney family got hit too. But hereâs the juicy bit, and itâs Cordeliaâs . In other words, Cordelia is now cashâstrapped and on the verge of bankruptcy.â
Whispers and sidelong glances followed Cordelia as she walked through the halls of the school. Hayley couldnât resist stirring the pot when she saw Juliana, âHeard about the Delaney fortune taking a nosedive. So, itâs Cordeliaâs folks, huh? Not yours? With Hackettâs big birthday bash just around the corner, I wonder if Cordelia will even be able to afford a new dress.â
And there was that one classmate, still hung up on Everard, who chimed in with a mix of curiosity and malice, âCordelia, is it true your familyâs gone belly up? Is your pretty boy beau still sticking around? Hand him over to me, and Iâll make it worth your while. Deal?â
Cordelia lifted her eyes slowly, a detached gaze in a sea of murmurs.