Last Descendant of Money
n buy ev
read th
to work harder. If your money can'
f course it will. He was t
Liter
lay. He looked through the window. He could see people movi
smi
t descendant he had the ability to cont
tch? That pauper does nothing but e
came from money, but was calle
s the good-for-nothing son-in-law of the Simpsons and the
d everyday to fend for this family but
s was made by Edgar. When Edgar married Patricia, she was a struggling seamstress who could count the number of dresses she had sown in her lifetime. Patricia sta
the dying wish of Patricia's father w
y while remembering his grandma.
s 10 by the time. Before his eyes, a man in all black
e he was alive, he was known by everyone on earth. Who wouldn't know about a man who controlled Zillions? A man who could spend billions e
he question was, who did? The only person that was rich enough to pay dea
iately Edgar's father was born. By the way,
and somehow he time tr
, the servant whose care his grandma had placed him in, threw
ad taken him far away from home, but somehow he hoped
. He knew he could hear it too. They were about to see a vision. A live vision that was actually happening at the mome
less perfumes, invisible clothes, charms, powers, whatever weird thin
ever heard. Immediately, the scene changed from a crying 10 year old version of himself and
r as day, but weirdly, the mu
obody ever did. It was a vision and he wasn't really there after all. He remembered
with nails struck his grandma back. Her cries dro
went a mindwipe. The mindwipe was for him. Grandm
ged to escape to the cold streets which could have killed her if she had not been saved by a ma
ou son of
ice interrupted the jo
Patricia, she was a 28-year-old single mother of a child whose father had dumped after always beating her up in whatever ways he could. She was broken, unhappy and shamed by society when he met her. One would think that she would be grateful for Edgar not
today however you like," Edgar wanted to say but he could not. Th
Edgar said instead
who talked was Beatrice, the mother of Patricia. If Patricia was bad, she was evil. She had always been evil from d
mine is just so usel
ould never be. As far as I am concerned, you are very much single." Beatrice turned to Edgar an
"How was your night with the CEO? Associatin
ou told him that you're single and have never be
o divorce legally so m
divorcing him would de
nted this marriage,
was going on, the hand had landed on his chin. He heard the r
how he lived in the illusion of being able to help other people when he had nothing. First, he burdened us with that useless old hag who shares
more deep breaths. If he failed to control himself, Beatrice, her daughter and the house and few more houses
't fulfill your father's last wish and two, you'd be doing yourself more harm than goo
you for free. On the other hand, my daughter would be more successful. Plus, get rid of the idea that my daughter is successful
ked. Time