Chapter 38 âIâve covered the debt for you, lan said, âbut if you lay a hand on her again, donât expect me to show any mercy just because weâre blood.â
The major project that Casey was involved in had always been under the supervision of his mother. It wasnât until things went south that lan realized it was all a trap set by her.
Leonora had lured Casey in, then orchestrated a leak of information from him. Her goal was nothing short of driving the Bell family to bankruptcy and putting Casey behind bars. The true reason behind his motherâs machinations was still a mystery to lan. If it was all about some old flame between Victoria and his father, it seemed farâfetched. So, lan dug into his motherâs accounts and uncovered her embezzlement of charity funds.
The Hayes family had always been pillars of philanthropy. If his father, who was abroad, caught wind of this, heâd divorce Leonora without a second thought.
Leveraging this dirt, lan managed to wrest control of the project from his mother, taking charge himself.
Leonora sneered coldly. âFine, then you better keep your people in line. Itâs best if they donât end up in my hands.â
With that, she left the room.
Half an hour later, the shareholdersâ meeting commenced. Leonora, with Heidi in tow, entered the room, introducing her as the new assistant.
Clara, as lanâs chief secretary, naturally sat beside him, diligently taking notes on her laptop. From the moment Heidi walked in, Claraâs expression didnât change, her lips curled in a pleasant smile.
Clara even gave Heidi a slight nodâa cordial greeting as if there was no bad blood between them.
lan, observing Claraâs composure, couldnât help but feel curious. Clara seemed different since her return, enigmatic in a way that eluded his grasp.
Midway through the meeting, it was time to discuss a significant contract. lan turned to Clara and asked in a low voice, âWhereâs the contract?â
Clara calmly met his gaze, âItâs all in these meeting documents.â She flipped through the stack of papers in front of lan, but the contract was nowhere to be found.
âIâll go look for it, Mr. Hayes,â Clara said, standing up.
Before lan could respond, Leonora interjected, âThis contract is the crux of todayâs meeting. Ms. Clara, do you intend to make the shareholders wait while you search?â
Clara, unruffled, replied, âPerhaps you have a suggestion for what to do now, Ms. Leonora?â
Leonoraâs temper flared, âYouâre the chief secretary. Itâs not my job to fix your mistakes. If you canât handle this, maybe youâre not cut out for the position.â
Clara smiled lightly, âIn my three years as Mr. Hayesâ chief secretary, Iâve never had such an oversight. To judge me before we know the facts seems rather unfair, doesnât it?â
The shareholders, who had always admired Clara, spoke up in her defense, âMs. Clara has always been competent. A rare mistake is understandable. Nobodyâs perfect.â
Leonora held back her criticism and watched with a cold gaze, âGo and find it. Donât disappoint me.â
Clara, along with the executive office team, searched high and low to no avail. Just as everyone was at their witsâ end, a janitor approached, holding a document.
âMs. Clara, is this what youâre looking for?â she asked. âI found it in the trash can of the restroom. I think Ms. Heidi threw it away.â
Taking the document from her, a chill flickered across Claraâs eyes.
Heidi, again!