itâs clear, based on the evidence tonightâwhich, I might add, is recorded on CCTVâthat you are intent on re-igniting this feud. No doubt you have something to gain from itâmost people would have moved on from the drama of the Parnassus family coming home.â
He sat forward then too, his eyes flashing sparks. Angelwanted to cower back, but held strong and cursed herself for provoking him. For a moment sheâd forgotten all about why she was here in the first place. He scrambled her brain that much.
His tone was withering. âAnd do you really want to play the game of apportioning blame?â
Angel felt something cold trickle down her spine when Leoâs eyes turned dark and deadly.
âWe have done nothing to affect your family directly. Your fatherâs greed and ineptitude has seen to the demise of the Kassianides shipping fleet. All we had to do was merge with Levakis Enterprises, and that in itself highlighted the inherent weakness of your fatherâs position.â
Angel swallowed. Everything he said was true. She couldnât really blame him or his father for having done anything concrete. Her father had done it all by himself.
âHowever,â Leo continued, sitting back like a lord surveying his subject, âit leaves me with an interesting dilemma.â
Angel said nothing. Sheâd no doubt that Leo was about to enlighten her.
âWhile weâve managed to get our due revenge in seeing the Kassianides fortune reduced to nothing, lower than even we were ourselves seventy years ago, I must admit that it feels somehowâ¦empty. Since seeing the extent of your sheer boldness, I find myself desiring something of a moreâ¦tangible nature.â
Panic struck Angel. She felt as if an invisible noose was tightening around her neck. Desperation tinged her voice. âIâd call going bankrupt pretty tangible.â
Leo leant forward again, utterly cold, utterly ruthless. âThe bankruptcy is for your father, not you. No, Iâm talking about something as tangible as my great-uncle being accused ofraping and then murdering a pregnant woman from one of the wealthiest families in Athens. As tangible as an entire family forced into exile from their homeland because of the threat of a criminal investigation they couldnât afford, and the possibility of my great-uncle facing the death penalty. Not to mention the scandal that would linger for years.â
âStop,â begged Angel weakly. She knew the story and it always sickened her.
But he didnât. Leo just looked at her. âDid you know that my great-uncle never got over the slur of being accused of that murder and eventually killed himself?â
Angel shook her head. She felt sick. This went far deeper than sheâd ever imagined. âI didnât know.â
âMy great-uncle loved your great-aunt.â Leoâs mouth twisted. âMore fool him. And because your family couldnât bear to see one of their own darlings slum it with a mere ship worker, they did their best to thwart the romance.â
âI know what happened,â Angel said quietly, her insides roiling.
Leo laughed harshly, âYes, everyone does nowâthanks to a drunken old fool who couldnât live with the guilt any more, because heâd been the one who committed the crime and covered it up, had it paid for by your great-grandfather.â
Her own family had murdered one of their own and covered it up like cowards .
Angel forced herself to meet the censure in Leoâs eyes even though she wanted to curl up with the shame. âIâm not to blame for what they did.â
âNeither am I. Yet I paid for it all my life, I was born on another continent, into a community in exile, learning English as my first language when it should have been Greek. I sawmy grandmother wither away a little more each year, knowing that sheâd never return to her home.â
Angel wanted to
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