Chapter 48
Chapter 48 Are you worthy?
I ryed to my mother the day’s events at the Scott Corporation,
Her brows furrowed in disbelief. “Impossible,” she dered. “Your father would never use a media
company for moneyundering. What would he gain from it? Besides, we haven’t had any significant
ie this year. Your father has always been dedicated to managing the Scott business well. He
wouldn’t make such a mistake and plunge the Scott Corporation into crisis.”
Understanding her emotional turmoil, I took her hand in mine and reassured her. “Mom, I trust Dad too.
That’s why I’ve promised the shareholders that I’ll trace the money within a month and clear Dad’s
name.”
She nodded, her gaze resolute. “Yes, we must find out the truth. We absolutely must.”
While I was determined to uncover the truth about my father’s affairs, the immediate priority was to
arrange his funeral. The following day, my mother and I visited the funeral home. It was not good to
leave the b*dy unattended for too long.
Inside the solemn funeral home, my father’s b*dyy peacefully in a paper casket, adorned with a
multitude of yellow and white chrysanthemums. His face was serene, as if he was merely sleeping.
Perhaps this was the tranquil visage we would all wear in death’s embrace.
“Please, family members, take a moment to grieve, and then wait in the adjoining resting room.”
Belonging ? N?velDram/a.Org.
After casting a final nce at my father, the funeral staff ushered us to the neighboring room, preparing
to guide my father’s b*dy into the cremation furnace.
As I watched him being pushed into the furnace, my mother’s emotions shattered. Her b*dy trembled
uncontrobly as she clung to me, pleading, “Yvette, can we not burn your father? He suffered so much
in life, how can he bear this now?”
A crushing weight seemed to seize my heart, making it hard to breathe. I knew, with a rity that cut
through the pain, that my mother was on the brink of emotional copse. If I did not stay strong, no one
would be left to handle my father’s final affairs.
I wrapped my arms around my mother, patting her shoulder in an attempt to soothe her. “Mom, It won’t
hurt. 1 asked them, and they said it wouldn’t hurt. Dad will be out in just a little while. It won’t hurt.”
My mother’s voice broke, her words barely a whisper. “Really? It won’t hurt? With such high heat, he…”
She could not finish her sentence.
I took a deep breath, steadying myself as I reassured her, “Really, it won’t hurt. The heat is so intense,
Dad won’t feel a thing.
It will be over soon‘
My mother’s heart ached for my father, and mine did too. I dared not dwell on whether he would feel
pain. Some thoughts, once entertained, would unleash a torrent of emotions that threatened to pull me
under. I could not afford to copse like mother.
my
Forty minutester, my father’s ashes were presented to us. As a child, I had naively believed that the
“ashes‘ people spoke of were simply a pile of dust.
The moment I saw my father’s remains being wheeled out, I understood that even cremation could not
reduce a person’s bones to ashes. My father’s skull and limbs were still distinctly there, and the rest of
his b*dy was not ash but fragments of
bone.
His bones, darkened to a sickly yellow from his prolonged illness, were a stark contrast to the usual
white I thought bones would be.
In the funeral home, my mother and I carefully ced each piece of my father’s remains into the urn.
My mother cradled his skull, her gaze tracing the darkened lines, her hands shaking uncontrobly. Her
voice, choked with emotion, whispered, Yvette, can you imagine how much he must have suffered?”
I had no words to offer, only silence.
By the time Moore arrived, my mother and I were ready to take my father to his final resting ce. She
was dressed in ck,
Chapter 48 Are you worthy?
her face painted, her red l*ps a stark contrast that hurt to look at.
Upon seeing her, my mother gave her a cold stare, not uttering a single word.
I held my father’s urn, casting an indifferent nce at Idris, who stood a short distance behind her. He
approached us, his tall figure looming over me as he reached out to take the urn.
I sidestepped him and got straight into the car. Uncle Marcus was driving. He nced at the tardy pair,
his brow furrowed, but he said nothing and started the car.
The cemetery was crowded with people, most of them friends and rtives who had known my father
in life, all there to bid him a final farewell.
There were many customs associated with a burial, and my mother and I knelt before the grave,
offering flowers in the hope that my father would receive them in the afterlife.
When Idris crouched down next to me, I was taken aback. I quickly snatched the flowers he was about
to offer, saying coldly, You have no right to offer this for my father.”
He pressed his l*ps together, his brow furrowed, but after a moment, he stood and walked over to the
tombstone to help Uncle Marcus set it up.
I did not want him touching anything rted to my father. I stood up to make him leave, but as I did, a
wave of dizziness washed over me, and I nearly fell.
He was the first to steady me, his voice a soft murmur. “Are you alright?”
I shrugged him off, my voice tight with suppressed anger. “Mr. Young, I’d appreciate it if you and Moore
would leave.”
His gaze met mine, his dark eyes shadowed and restrained. “Yvette, I am your husband.”
“Husband?” I scoffed, pointing at Moore, who was kneeling with feigned sorrow at my father’s grave,
“You’re the man who drove my own sister to anger my father into an early grave. Do you think you’re
worthy of being my husband?”