Chapter 11 The Little Girl, That Very Year
Chapter 11 The Little Girl, That Very Year
He sent Isaac to investigate Clara's past. According to Isaac's reports, she should be a superficial
money worshipper who could pursue a little money at any cost.
It was precisely because of this reason that he chose her.
A woman who could be sent away with a little money was much better and tamer than those so-called
debutantes who coveted all his money.
Of course, he also admitted that another reason for choosing her was that she didn't vex him. And her
stubborn look implied that there might be something unknown about her.
But unexpectedly, after these two days, she seemed to have no desire for his money.
She refused him to buy a car for her before.
Was she actually more brilliant than he thought or did she know how to play hard-to-get?
Being silent for a while, Horace finally took back his gaze.
"Let's go."
On the top floor of Solrace Corporation, Horace was at his desk with his fingers tapping on the
keyboard, and the figures and charts on the screen changed accordingly.
The phone on the desk suddenly rang. Horace answered the phone, and Isaac's voice was heard.
"Mr. Kirkland, your friend is here."
"Let him in."
The office door opened quickly, and a handsome showman in a pink shirt flashed in.
"Horace, are you still working?" seeing Horace, the man exaggerated and shouted. "I thought that
since you finally got married, at least, you should go on a honeymoon trip even if you didn't hold a
wedding."
Horace still stared at the computer screen, and he briefly said, "No time."
The visitor had already sat down at Horace's table. He was not angry about Horace's indifference. He
just narrowed his amorous eyes and laughed again. "Your wife was really unlucky to marry a man who
knows nothing about romance."
Horace finally settled his eyes on the man, but still poker-faced. "What are you trying to say?"
The man smiled so much that his eyes became crescent moon. "I'm just bored. I want to see your This material belongs to NôvelDrama.Org.
wife."
"Forget it," Horace refused without hesitation. "You should also know why I married her."
"Of course, I know," The man curled his lips, and the smile at the corners of his mouth slowly
disappeared. "But anyway, you finally got married. You can let go of what happened back then."
Hearing this, Horace's hand on the keyboard paused.
"It's not a matter of letting it go nor not," replied Horace. After a moment of silence, he slowly said, "The
deceased cannot come back to life."
The man looked at Horace and intended to open his mouth to say something, but he bit the words
back.
"What about the little girl?" The man could not help asking. "Are there any clues?"
"There are already some clues," Horace said simply.
"That's great," The man laughed again. "I've been thinking about how you would repay her. I was
expecting you to pledge to marry her, but I didn't expect you had sold yourself."
Horace ignored the man's brazen teasing.
Bringing contempt upon himself, the man looked embarrassed. But when his eyes fell on Horace's
wheelchair, he couldn't help asking, "Well... Horace, did you tell your wife about your leg?"
Horace had already started browsing the statements just submitted by the finance department. Hearing
this problem, his hand sliding the mouse paused.
"No," A moment later, he whispered.
The man frowned slightly, "Horace, I didn't mean to blame you. No matter what the purpose of your
marriage is, since you two are married now, are you going to hide it all the time? Maybe..."
Speaking of this, this man paused, but still he gritted his teeth and continued, "Maybe you should also
try to see if you can accept this new wife. You can't live in the shadow of the past all your life."
He knew Horace's personality too well. Although Horace said that his marriage was to give his
grandfather an answer, however, if Horace didn't really like the girl, he wouldn't agree to marry and live
with her.
In silence, Horace didn't answer. After browsing the financial statements at full speed, he whispered
something.
"My love died already."
The man was stunned.
He looked at Horace's impassive face, and sympathy flashed across his eyes.
The car accident ten years ago was a nightmare for all of them.
Everyone thought it was his legs that Horace lost in the car accident.
But they were all wrong.
In the car accident, Horace lost his heart, not his legs.