Chapter 1268
This Time, I Will Get My Divorce, Mr
Chapter 1268 Poor Woman
If sheâs still in jail, how did Cynthia know all that? Somethingâs off. âDid you visit Melody in jail?â Sonia narrowed her eyes. Cynthia shook her head. âNo. I didnât even go out for months, so how was I supposed to visit her? Besides, we arenât even friends, to begin with. She thinks sheâs too good to be my friend, and Iâm not going to talk to someone who looks down on my family. I only happened to meet her by chance when I was out shopping a few days ago.â
âWait, you saw her when you were shopping?â The look on Soniaâs face changed. âShe wasnât in jail?â Cynthia nodded in affirmative. âYeah, she has been released.â
âImpossible.â Sonia didnât believe it. A frown creased her forehead. âShe was sentenced to years of jail time. How did she get out of it?â
âBut that was the truth.â Cynthia looked at her timidly. âI was surprised to see her, too. The public doesnât know she got slammed behind bars, but the upper society does. I even asked her how she got out, but she said nothing. She only asked me if Tina had come to see me. I was bewildered by her question at that time. I mean, Tina was dead, so how could she come to see me? Unless she became a ghost. That was exactly what I said to Melody, but guess what she told me? Tinaâs still alive. And she even said part of that was thanks to her.â
Cynthia carefully studied the changes in Soniaâs expression. However, other than seeing her face was rather dark, Cynthia couldnât discern what she was thinking at the moment. Quickly, she added, âMelody told me Tina wanted to see her when she was in the asylum. She even used Peter as an excuse to make Melody talk to her. Iâm pretty sure you know how Melody is when it comes to love. She might not care about anyone, but sheâs head over heels for Peter. Peter doesnât like her and wants to divorce her with all his heart, but he canât do anything about it since the Stryder Family isnât one to be messed with. As long as Melody doesnât want to get a divorce, he canât break up with her.â
Sonia nodded in acknowledgment. âI know.â
The marriage of Peter and Melody was a joke for the upper society, just like her marriage with Toby. She had heard a lot of rumors regarding Melody and Peterâs relationship.
âPeter and Melody have been living separately throughout these years. He slept around with a lot of women just so Melody would get a divorce, but she still wonât give up on him. Sheâs deeply in love with him, after all.â
Cynthia stole a glance at Sonia and lowered her voice to a whisper as she continued, âIt was not until the incident that happened a few months ago that everything changed. She meddled with another townâs administration, and you found evidence of it. You joined forces with the Colemans and tripped the Stryders.
âMost of the Stryders who were involved with politics were subjected to investigations. They might not have fallen yet, but they certainly were in decline. Peter seized the chance to divorce Melody. But even so, she still loves him very much. She wanted him to take her back, and Tina used that.â
âShe promised Melody she could help her to get back with Peter and requested a meetup, didnât she?â Sonia inquired.
Cynthia nodded. âExactly. Melody told me that Tina said she had dirt on Peter and asked Melody to meet up with her. Then, she promised if Melody helped her in faking her death, she would hand the evidence to her. Then, Melody could use that to force Peter into remarrying her.â
âI see.â Soniaâs eyes twinkled, and her lips pursed.
So, thatâs what happened, huh? Back when they realized the body wasnât Tinaâs, they kept investigating and realized Melody helped fake Tinaâs death. They had arrested Melody right then. She claimed that Tina threatened her, but they never found out what Tinaâs threat was, as Melody wouldnât talk about it. Now that Sonia knew the truth, she knew why Melody wouldnât talk. Evidence of Peterâs crimes. If she came clean, sheâd have to watch her lover languish in prison. No way sheâd do it. Not when she loves him so much.
âMelody believed her and promised to help Tina right away. Tina asked Melody to pick a girl about her age and size, and then the girl would be forced to commit suicide in her stead. Melody spent almost a week trying to find the girl that fit Tinaâs bill. The girl was a patient in another asylum. Melody got her out of the asylum and switched her with Tina. Tina was taken away while that woman stayed back at the asylum. Melody and her familyâs power might be in decline, but she still had some connections. It wasnât hard for her to fool all the asylum staff and take Tina away. More importantly, one of the officers who supervised Tina was Melodyâs admirer. He bought them enough time to escape by causing distractions for the other cops.â
Sonia knew the last part. Once Melody was caught, she sold out the officer who assisted her, and he was arrested. Not only did he lose his job, but he also embarrassed his family. He was slammed behind bars. Once an ally of justice, now a prisoner. All for a dream that would never be fulfilled.
Was it worth it? Sonia didnât pity the officer at all. He was a grown-up. He had to take responsibility for his actions. He must know the consequences of helping a criminal more than anyone, but he did it anyway. That can only mean one thing: Melody was more important than his job. Sonia saw no need to pity someone like that.
The one she pitied was the woman who died in Tinaâs place. She was a patient who had a mental illness. She saw the world differently from most people. Probably didnât even know how or why she died. Melody took her to the building and made her kill herself. All for Tinaâs plan. Everyone has the right to live, even insane people. Yet, Tina and Melody took an innocent life all for their plan. Theyâre nothing but demons. I canât believe Melody got out of jail before she got incarcerated.
âMiss Reed?â Cynthia was a little scared when she saw the angry look on Soniaâs face. Whatâs wrong? What is she getting so mad about?
Sonia balled her fists and took a few deep breaths. Only then did her fury calm down slightly. Icily, she asked, âDoes that womanâs family know? Do they know what Melody did to their daughter?â
Oh, the mad lady. Scorn filled Cynthiaâs eyes. âYes, of course. If they didnât, theyâd have been out for Melodyâs blood for what she did to their daughter. I know what youâre trying to say. I asked the same questions, and Melody told me what she did. Initially, they didnât want to hand over the woman to Melody since the woman was part of their family. But then, Melody gave them a hundred and fifty grand, and they finally complied. That womanâs family used to love her, but their patience ran out halfway through her treatment. It had been years since she succumbed to her madness, and eventually, her familyâs sorrow turned into resentment, and thenâ¦â