"It should be you who leaves, not Aunt Winnie. You are just a nanny in my house. You should be the one to go, you old woman!"
Samuel silently agreed with Bryan's words, which broke my heart, but I kept comforting myself,
"It's okay. It's okay..."
He was still young. He didn't know what he was saying. Maybe he would change as he grew up.
But later, Winnie's father died, and I found out that her father was actually an employee of our Williams Group.
Because he was discovered stealing confidential company information, he was afraid of going to jail and jumped off the high-rise building.
Without investigating the reason, Samuel believed only Winnie's one-sided words and blamed my whole family.
He, along with other companies, suppressed Williams Group, and less than a month later, Williams Group declared bankruptcy.
That day, I knelt and cried, begging Samuel to spare Williams Group and my parents.
He looked down on me with disgust and said, "I only made Williams Group bankrupt. It's already lucky that I didn't take your family's lives."