Rafael’s grip tightened, his sarcastic mask slipping to reveal deep scars of his own family’s treachery. "They did, love. Just like mine tried with . Greed turns blood to poison."
Jas nodded grimly. "H’s been planning this for years. Listen—it’s heartbreaking."
Kenneth went on, and this ti his voice faltered—not from age, but from sothing far heavier. The room watched as one of the world’s richest n did sothing far rarer than writing checks.
He bled.
"It all started as whispers," he said quietly. "Late-night calls that went dead when I answered. etings I was never ant to know about." He paused, swallowing. "Three and a half years ago, none of my children lived with anymore. They’d all left—built their own lives far away from the old man who paid for them." A sad smile touched his lips. "But I was still their father. I still worried. I still wondered how they were faring."
A soft exhale rippled through the crowd.
"So I did what any concerned, slightly paranoid billionaire would do," he added dryly. "I hired people to watch over them. Quietly. Discreetly." His eyes hardened. "That decision saved my life."
The humor drained from his face.
"What they’d beco... it shocked . The children I raised with every advantage—every opportunity, every luxury—had grown into sothing else entirely. Entitled. Hollow. Dangerous." His gaze found Williams, locking on with painful precision. "My eldest. The boy whose eyes once shone with pride when he looked at ."
Kenneth’s voice lowered. "Those sa eyes now watched from the shadows."
A murmur rolled through the hall.
"Williams coordinated it all, of course with the backing of his siblings," Kenneth continued. "He hired a driver. A disposable man. Ordered him to ram my car off the road that stormy night." He let the words sit, heavy and unescapable. "The plan was simple. Kill . Call it an accident. Then forge my will."
Several people gasped.
"Split my empire among themselves," Kenneth said, the pain now edged with steel. "Properties across continents. Tech giants. Real estate. Pharmaceuticals. A lifeti of work—scrubbed clean of my na as if I’d never existed."
Williams shook his head vehently, his voice a desperate croak. "Lies! Father, this is delusion! You hit your head in that crash—"
Kenneth’s eyes hardened, cutting him off. "Delusion? I have evidence, son. Recordings, docunts—safeguarded by trusted allies."
Margaret interjected, her voice quavering, her expensive dress now a shroud of sha as she shook uncontrollably. "Dad, please... it wasn’t like that. We were protecting the family business. You were getting old, making mistakes—"
"Protecting?" Kenneth’s laugh was bitter, hollow, echoing his years of isolation before Eliana’s light entered his life. "You an plundering, Margaret?And Evelyn, with your permanent disapproval—you doctored the will, didn’t you? Forged my signature while I lay in that hospital bed, fighting for life unknown to you all. And Thomas, my youngest, always smirking like life’s a ga—you handled the payoffs, bribed the investigators to rule it a hit-and-run. You all thought I’d die quietly, leaving you to squander what I built from nothing—a lonely man who poured his soul into empires to fill the void of a loveless family."
Thomas, tears streaming down his face now, his an streak broken, sobbed openly. "We... we didn’t an for it to go that far. It was just talk at first—"
"Just talk?" Kenneth’s voice rose, trembling with the weight of heartbreak, his wise eyes glistening with unshed tears. "I trusted you! I cut ties years ago because of your greed, but I still hoped—prayed—you’d change. Instead, you orchestrated my murder. But fate, or perhaps divine intervention, spared . I awoke in that wreckage, broken but alive, my driver dead beside —collateral in your sche. I saw the rigged brakes, the tampered steering. In that mont, as sirens wailed and rain poured, I knew. My own blood had betrayed ."
The crowd was deathly still, horror etching every face—so covering mouths, others weeping silently, the emotional gravity pulling at heartstrings. A billionaire in the front row muttered, "Monstrous..." while a CEO wiped tears, whispering to her companion, "How could children do that to their father?"
Eliana’s tears flowed freely now, her kind-hearted soul aching for her grandfather. "It’s so horrible... all that pain, hidden for years. He must have been so alone."
Rafael pulled her close, his own emotional detachnt cracking, voice thick. "He had us, in secret. But yeah, it’s gut-wrenching. Those kids deserve what’s coming." Then he added softly, "The forging part—pure evil. H told bits, but hearing it like this... devastating."
Kenneth pressed on, his narrative weaving a tapestry of drama and despair, captivating the hall like a tragic opera. "I escaped the hospital that night, slipping away with the help of loyal friends—shadowy figures who smuggled to a safe house. For months, I hid in obscurity, a ghost watching my own funeral on TV, seeing you all—my children—feign grief while divvying up my assets. Williams, you took the tech firms, spinning tales of ’honoring Dad’s vision’ while gutting them for profit. Margaret, the real estate—selling off family hos like they were trinkets. Evelyn, pharmaceuticals, cutting corners on life-saving drugs for bigger margins. Thomas, the properties abroad, turning them into playgrounds for your spoiled whims."
Evelyn bowed her head in sha, silent sobs wracking her fra, her blonde bob disheveled. "We... we thought you were gone. It was for the best—"
"For the best?" Kenneth’s voice broke, raw emotion spilling forth, his lonely past flashing in his eyes—the years of cutting ties with these self-centered heirs, only to find warmth in Eliana’s family. "I planned in the shadows, rebuilding quietly. New identities, secret alliances—like with Rafael Vexley, my very good friend who helped heal even without knowing it himself." He gestured to Rafael, who nodded solemnly from his seat.
"I gathered proof: emails, bank trails, witness testimonies. And now, here we are. I’ve recovered it all—legally, through courts you never saw coming. The companies are mine again, the will nullified. You’re left with nothing but the sha you’ve earned."
Thomas collapsed to his knees on stage, crying openly, his flickering smirk extinguished. "Dad, forgive us... please..."
Margaret, still shaking, clutched Evelyn’s arm, tears streaming. "We were wrong... so wrong."
Williams, restrained by security, hung his head, muttering, "It’s over..."
The hall remained in stunned silence, the weight of Kenneth’s heartbreaking tale hanging heavy, a dramatic crescendo of betrayal and redemption that left no eye dry, no heart untouched. Kenneth stood tall, his revelation complete, the storm of justice finally breaking.
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