Chapter 189
Chapter 189
After organizing the materials, Cordelia went to Ronan's office to hand in her diary, and incidentally told
him that all the materials had been organized.
"Grant told me already, get back to work," he said.
Cordelia looked at the diary with a hint of worry. It was something she had written after her return from
Proxima Ventures. At the end of the diary, she drew a big pentagram and wrote, "Ronan, you annoying
jerk!" She wrote it three times, hoping that Ronan, as usual, wouldn't read this part.
In the afternoon, Cordelia went to Ronan's office for tutoring. The diary was still in its original place.
Halfway through the class, someone knocked on the door. Emerson went to open it, and a disheveled
kid walked in, his nose running and his eyes fixed on Cordelia.
"Who are you looking for?" Cordelia asked the boy.
The boy grabbed Cordelia's hand. "My mom's really sick. She's not going to make it, and she wants to
see you."
"Mom?" Cordelia was confused at first, but then she remembered something her mom had once said.
Sure enough, Samantha and Deanna were waiting for her. She wasn't going to fall for their tricks!
Ronan was watching the whole situation. Cordelia had told him about this before, so he wasn't
surprised.
Emerson was confused. Cordelia took two hundred bucks from her bag. "Tell me, who told you to say
these things to me? I'll give you this money, okay?" She squatted down and smiled at the boy.
The boy was only seven or eight years old, but he knew that money was important. His eyes were NôvelDrama.Org copyrighted © content.
glued to the money in Cordelia's hand, a sparkle in his eyes. Cordelia knew it wasn't right to tempt kids
with money, but she had nothing else on her.
"A lady told me to say it! She told me to say that your mom was a dancer and that I'm your younger
brother," the boy said quickly, snatching the money from Cordelia's hand.
"Where's your mom?" Cordelia asked him.
"She's already passed away," the boy said before turning around and running off.
In theory, Cordelia saw through the boy's tricks, which meant she also saw through Samantha and
Deanna's plots. But Cordelia couldn't feel happy about it because she, like the boy, was also alone in
the world. If her mom hadn't prepared her in advance, Cordelia might have dismissed the boy's words
or been doubtful, but she definitely wouldn't have stayed so calm.
After class, Cordelia couldn't continue. She said her head hurt and wanted to end class early.
"Should we...?" Emerson asked Ronan.
"You can go home," Ronan signaled to Emerson.
Emerson left the office.
Cordelia sat on the sofa alone, tears slowly rolling down her cheeks. Ronan handed her some tissues.
"Do you think I'm useless?" Cordelia asked, wiping her tears, and mocking her own overreaction.
"Um, I've always thought so," he said.
"You love mocking me!" Cordelia complained.
"Did you meet anyone at Proxima Ventures this morning?" he asked, lighting a cigarette. The smoke
rings he blew out fascinated Cordelia.
Cordelia was still wondering who her biological parents were and didn't catch on right away.
"Meet who?" Cordelia thought for a moment, then remembered Jamie.
Did Ronan know that Jamie had gone to Proxima Ventures this morning? Cordelia felt deceived. He
knew Jamie was going. Maybe he arranged for him to go, and then asked her to get the documents?
What did it mean that Jamie saw Cordelia take the file and couldn't get mad about it?
He let Jamie know that Cordelia and Jamie worked at different companies and that, eventually, they
would choose different paths in the face of interests. Of course, what Ronan expected was not just
different paths in terms of interests. Everything about Jamie and Cordelia had to go in different
directions.
Ronan was really heartless! He was too much!
But right now, Cordelia didn't want to talk. She was immersed in the sadness of being an orphan and
didn't want to mention anything. Ronan was rubbing salt in her wounds. It was that simple.
"Can you not argue with me right now?" Cordelia said with tears in her eyes, and a mist over her face,
looking up at Ronan. "I'm not thinking about him right now, and I dare not think about him in front of
you!"
"You dare to think behind my back?" Ronan sharply retorted.
"When you're not around, of course, I think about you," Cordelia said, looking pitiful but speaking
sweetly.
Ronan softened. "Don't play the victim with me!"
"I'm not, I'm telling the truth," Cordelia said.
"I'll take you out to dinner tonight," Ronan said. "Do you like French food?"
Cordelia nodded, her mood was quite down.
This was the second time Ronan had asked Cordelia to dinner. Suddenly, Cordelia felt like they were a
"couple."
After making a phone call, Ronan drove Cordelia to the most famous French restaurant in Millstone.
Ronan ordered everything on the menu, leaving Cordelia to just eat. The place was high up, the view
great.
"Do you come here often?" Cordelia asked. The waiters all called him "Mr. Evans," so it seemed like
they knew him.
"I used to come here often," Ronan said while looking at the menu.
"What do you mean 'used to'?"
"Do you really need to know? It's best not to be too concerned about a man's past. It can't stand
scrutiny," Ronan said.
Cordelia thought to herself, “Who cares about you?”
"How come your mom suddenly decided to spill the beans about your past?" Ronan asked curiously.
After Cordelia had shared this piece of news with him, the little boy, or rather Samantha, came charging
in.
"My mom was on a call with my aunt and accidentally overheard my uncle mentioning Samantha
working as Deanna's assistant now. She figured Samantha might try to mess with me using that
information, so she gave me a heads up to avoid being caught off guard," Cordelia explained while
munching on her food.
"Your mom's a real piece of work," Ronan commented.
From the incident where she demanded Cordelia to pay back the loan, Ronan realized that maybe she
hadn't intentionally employed the carrot-and-stick approach, but it indeed had the same effect. At least
it melted Ronan's heart, and he started reevaluating Cordelia.
"How is my mom a piece of work? Her achievements are not even one-tenth of yours," Cordelia
retorted, somewhat displeased.
Ronan gave a slight smile, his expression unreadable. "You're still too naive to understand all this."
"Who says I'm naive?" Cordelia shot back.