Chapter2
Late at night. My soul drifted in mid-air, watching all the light and warmth revolve around Dylan.
Father looked at Dylan. "This farm will be under your name in the future. Come stay here whenever you're unhappy. No one will dare give you attitude." The words were like rusty nails, piercing my numb soul. Before I turned ten, Father had held my hand walking on the farm, pointing to that very pasture, saying the exact same words to me.
But when Dylan fell seriously ill at seven, everything changed. Everyone thought he was fragile, needed more love. Anything Dylan wanted, I had to yield.
Mother was holding up a tablet. "Dylan, how about this globally limited edition watch?"
"Too expensive..." Dylan gritted his teeth, "And it requires a purchase history to get."
"Then buy two," Mother said without hesitation. "The basic model for Vincent, and the one you like, you keep for yourself."
It was always like this—always Dylan's leftovers for me.
Dylan pretended to be hesitant. "But... will brother be upset..."
"He wouldn't dare!" Natalie snorted coldly beside him. "He's been given so many resources by the family since he was a kid, what more does he want? A grown man jealous of his younger brother all the time, it's disgusting."
Grace sat in a single armchair, her head lowered as she checked emails on her tablet, as if the family drama was beneath her notice.
Dylan leaned closer, his voice soft. "Sister Grace... actually, did Vincent... misunderstand us? Last time, you just gave me a ride home, and he had a big fight with you over it..."
Grace's gaze finally shifted from the screen. She pinched the bridge of her nose, a flash of lofty annoyance in her eyes. "It's his own insecurity. I have to handle so much business for Sterling Group every day; I can't waste time coddling a sensitive, suspicious man."
She took a sip of coffee, her tone icy to the extreme. "He needs to learn how to be a qualified partner, not a grown man-child who constantly needs my reassurance."
I drifted in mid-air, listening to this woman's judgment.
I once stayed up late studying finance to be worthy of her, shielded her from hidden daggers within the family. In the first year of our engagement, she remembered my birthday, held my hand tightly at parties. But ever since Dylan moved back into the main house, everything changed.
Dylan just needed a wronged look, and Grace would drop all work to accompany him. When I argued about these things, she would coldly throw out, "He's just your brother. How can you be jealous of this, Vincent? You disappoint me so much."
Suddenly, the TV news switched to the entertainment channel.
"... The wedding of Sterling Group's female CEO Grace and the eldest son of the Clarke family, Vincent, has been unexpectedly postponed, allegedly due to the younger brother Dylan's involvement leading to a relationship breakdown..."
The screen flashed with paparazzi photos of Dylan holding Grace's arm entering high-end restaurants.
Mother's face turned livid. "It must be Vincent! Only he would do something like this, deliberately leaking to the media to play the victim!"
Father slammed the table. "Missing for three days, turns out he was doing this underhanded crap! Freeze all his supplementary cards immediately!"
"Notify the PR department. I want all related hashtags taken down within ten minutes." Grace stood up, taking her phone, her profile shadowed with an intimidating chill.
Everyone was angry, everyone was accusing me of being "scheming."
No one asked: Why has Vincent's phone been off for three days? Could something have happened to him?
They would only ever consider the family's face and whether Dylan had been wronged.
Just as the living room was in chaos, no one noticed Dylan quietly heading to the bathroom.
Ten minutes later, a heart-wrenching scream came from the bathroom.
My soul instantly drifted over.
Dylan lay in a pool of blood in the bathroom, a shallow cut on his wrist, a used eyebrow razor blade tossed beside him. His face was pale, eyes closed weakly. A clumsy yet extremely effective pity ploy.
