Chapter 63
Married at First Sight
Chapter 63 Serenity responded to her sister, saying that she and Zachary would be there for dinner tonight. After Serenity hung up on Liberty , Zachary asked, âDo you get along with your extended family?â âNo.â
Serenity was frank and honest. She added, âMy parents passed away in a car crash when I was ten.
No one from my paternal or maternal sides of the family wanted to raise my sister and I. âHowever, all of them wanted a piece of the insurance payout. Since my uncles had no right to the money, they instructed my grandparents to get more out of us. My dad was the youngest son, so he didnât get much attention in the family. My grandparents favored my uncles instead.
âThey said that we donât have to pay for family support in exchange for a bigger chunk of the insurance payout. They took six hundred thousand dollars and signed the contract to relinquish care for us and our responsibility to them. My grandparents also moved into the two-story house my parents had built just before passing away. They said the house was theirs since my parents were no longer around.
âMy grandparents mentioned that we donât need a house since we can find a guy to depend on when we grow up. We were young back then, and no one had our backs, so the house was occupied by my grandparents. We used to return for a short stay during our school holidays, but we received judging looks as if we were there to steal the place from them.
âLiberty said that our parentsâ names are on the title deed. Weâll file a suit and reclaim the property when our grandparents are gone. We wonât leave the house to our uncles.â
Zachary uttered, âLet me know if you need our help when you go to court. I know a lot of lawyers.â York Corporation had its own legal team.
Serenity was grateful. âIâll ask if I need help.â
It would be probably a few years before her grandparents kicked the bucket.
Serenity and Zachary would probably be divorced by the time the legal battle came about. âDid your momâs family stick up for you?â
The maternal grandparents tended to have a softer spot for their grandchildren. Serenity said bitterly, âMy mom had a rough life. She had been through the system multiple times before she was adopted.
Since Mom isnât my grandparentsâ own, they only felt the responsibility to raise her without giving her much love. After my mom was gone, they believed they got nothing out of bringing her up.
âSo, they took four hundred thousand dollars out of the pot of insurance money. Liberty and I were left with two hundred thousand. No one looked out for us. No one stuck up for us. All they were looking out for was their own interest. If it werenât for the village officials, Liberty and I would probably be left with nothing.â
Saddened by the past, Serenity turned her head away and looked out the window. Tears streamed down her cheeks.
Time had not been kind. She still could not get over the matter even after fifteen years.
Blood was thicker than water. Never mind her maternal side of the family as Mom was adopted.
However, Dad was the Huntsâ flesh and blood, but the family showed no mercy toward the sisters.
It took a while for Serenity to get ahold of herself. She uttered faintly, âNow my Grandmom is sick. Itâs the early stage of liver cancer. She wants to be treated in a hospital here in the city. My cousin had the nerve to call and get me to organize the whole thing.
âHe also told me to pay the medical fees. Cancer treatment is not cheap. Even if I do have the money, Iâm not going to waste it on her. To think they expect me to pay after what theyâve done to me and Liberty.
âThe best I can give her is a thousand bucks for food.
They wonât get any more out of me.â
Zachary unhurriedly replied, âYou donât have to give them a penny if you donât want to. They wonât thank you for giving the money. Theyâll call you cheap and ungrateful. You wonât feel comfortable giving them more anyway. Itâs pointless to do it since you canât win.
âScrew them. They did you wrong years ago, so donât let them claim the moral high ground.â
Zachary had to be tough to take the helm of York Corporation.
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