The less trouble is, the better. When she meets Andersons" family, she only has one idea: how far can she hide?However, Sophie doesn"t seem to give her the chance to walk away.
Noticing that Katrina is ready to leave, Sophie immediately puts out her arm and stops her. She looks at Katrina with a sarcastic look, "Funny, and my father has only been dead for a few days. You are so eager to see what treasure he has left for you?"
Sophie glances at Katrina"s bag straddling over her shoulder, and the irony on her face deepens: "Ah! No wonder you refuse to give us the key back! Katrina! How much money my father has left to you! "
When she hears Sophie"s nonsense words, Katrina only feels hugely disgusted.
How many times has she told them that Uncle Anderson didn"t leave her anything of value, let alone give her family property secretly!
Why don"t they believe her?
Today, after she takes out the contents of the safe, she does prove it.
There is nothing but a diary and an old newspaper.
Why does Sophie still suspect that she has received a huge a.s.set?
Katrina knows that she can"t communicate with people like them who only have money in their eyes at all.
Even if she says she hasn"t got anything of value and shows the bag to her, Sophie won"t believe her and continues to suspect that she has transferred the money in other ways.
So why does Katrina have to spend more time with her?
Let her keep suspicious on her own.
Anyway, she is not afraid of gossip. She can"t confess anything she hasn"t taken!
Katrina looks at Sophie coldly and demands, "Sophie, leave me alone!"
"Why? Are you frightened? Frightened to be asked to give Anderson"s property back?"
Sophie"s constant talking about "money" and "property" makes Katrina very anger.
It"s like how much property she has taken in secret.
Katrina grits her teeth and says, "Yes, I"m here today to pick up what Uncle Anderson left me! But I didn"t get a penny from him! Uncle Anderson left me nothing of value!"
"Oh! Do you think I will believe you? If it"s not money, is there anything valuable that needs to be locked in the safe of the bank! "
Katrina knows that this will happen.
"Whatever you say! Believe what you think inside your mind,"
Katrina raises her voice directly and reaches out to the security guard who is standing at the bank gate and wandering: "Hey, guard! This woman is blocking my way! I suspect she has ulterior motives! Please help me get rid of her!"
The thing to be the most careful is the occurrence of such disharmony in front of the bank, and security guards are mostly alert.
Hearing Katrina ask for help, two security guards quickly come over and begin questioning Sophie.
Sophie, who was aggressive, becomes a little anxious when she realizes the situation. She quickly starts to explain, "I know her. I just want to talk to her about something."
Katrina says earnestly, "But I don"t know her. Please check her ident.i.ty. I"m still busy. I"ll leave first."
Sophie bursts into a fury as soon as she hears Katrina"s words.
"Katrina! You! Don"t go too far this time!"
Katrina ignores her screaming in the back and walks away without looking back.
Oh, who goes so far?
After Katrina leaves, Sophie is still questioned by two security guards who ask her to take out evidence to prove her ident.i.ty and to prove that she has no intention of doing anything illegal.
Sophie is offended with constant questioning and hates Katrina more than ever.
***
Since Uncle Anderson was so cautious about putting these things in the bank safe for her, it must be really important.
When Katrina finally returns home safely with these things, she takes them out carefully and checks them carefully.
She doesn"t know what Uncle Anderson really wanted to say so carefully.
Katrina first picks up the newspaper and opens it, only to find that it"s an old newspaper more than a decade ago.
Uncle Anderson must have his reasons since he left her this piece of newspaper.
Katrina scans the contents of the newspaper along with the page in an attempt to get some useful information.
When she inadvertently stops at a piece of news, she is stunned.
"The man died to save the diving suicide, leaving an orphan girl only eight years old."
Although her father"s name isn"t referred to in the news, Katrina recognizes it at first sight. The person mentioned above is clearly her father.
The date on it is also the day her father left her forever.
More than a decade ago, her father died in order to save a man trying to commit suicide.
At that time, she was too young to read newspapers at all.
All she remembers is that after her father left, she felt the sky was going to fall, and she didn"t know how to get through that time.
It"s been so many years.
In her twenties, she looked back to the newspaper more than ten years ago...
It brings her sad memories of her father"s death.
Uncle Anderson was able to preserve it so well for over a decade.
She has no idea what Uncle Anderson meant by leaving her a newspaper.
Is it because she lost her father so early that he wanted to leave her last memory of him?
After all, Uncle Anderson said he was an old friend of her father.
Only a friend with deep friends.h.i.+p can take efforts to preserve this kind of thing, right?
Katrina feels moved, and then she closes the newspaper and opens the diary to read it.
The first pages of the diary insert an envelope.
Katrina opens the envelope and takes out the letter, which is written by her Uncle Anderson.
"Katrina, when you see this letter, uncle may not be in the world anymore. Uncle is sorry for you, forgive me for my cowardice. I can only confess to you only after my death about many truths.