Blackstone Code-Chapter 702: The Meeting
After watching Nail leave, Serra turned to Lynch. βThank you for coming back. This was our faultβ¦β
She fell silent. π³ππ²ππ¨ππ―πππ§ππΉ.π°πΌπ
Money really is a powerful thing. If it had been the old Serra, she wouldnβt have had such complex thoughts or spoken this way. Money not only gave her a better life, but also refinement.
She had learned how to express things properlyβlike an apology.
Lynch held her hand and shook his head. βThis was your mutual choice. I respect that. No one owes anyone anything. The fact that you gave me life is already the greatest gift. I have no right to expect an apology from you for your own decisions.β
Serra smiled and didnβt pursue the topic. She changed the subject. βYouβre not in a hurry to leave too, are you?β
βNo. Iβll stay a couple of days.β
βPerfect. I suddenly feel like cooking. I want to make you something.β
She didnβt say the restβthere wouldnβt be many chances like this again.
She had already made breakfast for Nail that morningβtheir last breakfast.
Back home, Serra instructed the maid to prepare ingredients for dinner and declined a few social invitations. Right now, she just wanted some peace.
The seemingly uneventful divorce had still left her shaken.
That afternoon, mother and son watched TV and chatted casually about ordinary things.
At 5 p.m., Serra changed into an apron and entered the kitchen.
Lynch helped her out.
βI havenβt cooked dinner myself in a long time,β she said, skillfully handling the utensils. βSometimes it all feels like a dream, like none of this is real.β
Dinner is the most important and elaborate meal of the day in the Federation. Many people eat toast for breakfast and lunch and spend the whole day waiting for dinner to really enjoy themselves.
From around 5 p.m., women who donβt work begin preparing dinner, often starting with a sauce made from tomatoes and onions.
Once cooked down, part of the sauce is used as a base for steak; the rest is mixed with water and other ingredients to make all kinds of soups.
To a Federal housewife, nothing canβt be fixed with a stew. If it canβtβjust add more tomatoes and onions.
As the familiar yet distant smell filled the air, Lynch was taken back. This was what home used to smell like after school.
A scorched, blackened pot sat on a blackened stove. The color wasnβt dirtβit was permanent.
Inside, tomato soup simmered with onions, carrots, and potatoes.
If it was payday, thereβd be some ground beef and mushrooms, and maybe a bit of seasoning.
Back then, heβd just wait until around 7:30 for Nail to get back from the factory, and then they could eat.
He and Serra usually had fried eggs and scraps of meat. Nail got a full sirloin steakβhe was the head of the house and the breadwinner, so he deserved the best.
As for Lynch and Serra, they would wipe the tomato-onion sauce from the bottom of the pot with rock-hard dinner rolls, eating it with the scraps.
The sauce was a little sour, a little sweetβit softened the rolls. It could choke you if you werenβt careful, but a sip of that sour tomato-onion-potato-carrot soup made everything feel okay.
It felt warm. Maybe thatβs how kids understand the word home.
But only adults knowβitβs really just life.
Just past six, mother and son sat at the table. Dinner was ready. When the steak was brought out, Serra took off her apron, wiped her hands on it out of habit, and set it aside.
βHope my cooking hasnβt gone downhillβ¦β She placed the steak on Lynchβs plate and poured tomato-onion sauce over it.
The sauce wasnβt bright red as people might imagine. After stewing, it turned yellowish, with a rich aroma and a tangy scent.
Sourness meant freshness and health. Thatβs a common belief in the Federation. When people ask if a fruit is fresh, they usually mean: is it sweet enoughβor sour enough?
Lynch said thank you, cut a piece of steak, dipped it in the sauce, and took a bite.
The tomatoes had completely melted. The onions had simmered down to a soft texture that was barely noticeable. The sauce was tangy with a hint of sweetness and some seasoning, but those two main flavors stood out.
They perfectly balanced the faint metallic taste of the rare steak. Whether it was myoglobin or blood, it still had that slight gamey flavorβwhich the tanginess neutralized and made more appetizing.
βNot bad. Just like the old days,β Lynch said genuinely. βVery good.β
βThatβs your grandfatherβs secret recipe,β Serra smiled. Every familyβs sauce had its own βheritage.β She looked at Lynch meaningfully. βI wonder when Iβll get to pass this βsecretβ on to someone else?β
βThatβs a bit personal. Iβm not planning to get married anytime soon.β
βSorryβ¦β Serra apologized for the abrupt question. βHonestly, itβs good to wait a bit. Youβll have more choices that wayβ¦β
They were eating when a visitor cameβan unusual time for a visit.
The maid stood outside the dining room, a bit nervous. βItβs Mr. Cormanβ¦β
Serra looked slightly surprised. The maid looked awkward. Lynch was curious. βMr. Cormanβ¦ do I know him?β
Serra looked a little embarrassed. βHeβs my fitness trainer. Heβs pursuing me.β She glanced at Lynch. βDo you want to meet him?β
Lynch hesitated for a moment, then nodded.
Soon, Corman entered.
He looked decentβfit, with broad shoulders and a narrow waist.
In this era where fitness was in fashion, people had learned the beauty standards of bodybuildingβlike a bearβs back and a waspβs waist.
Corman had the kind of physique that matched the eraβs ideals of physical beauty.
He had ash-blond hair and looked to be in his thirties. His expression was friendly and not unpleasant.
While Lynch was sizing him up, the fitness coach was also examining Lynch. He quickly recognized him. βMy God, is that Mr. Lynch?β
He turned to Serra as he spoke. Her face showed pride and satisfaction. βThis is my son.β
With Corman joining them, dinner ended quickly. The three moved to the living room, and Serra excused herself to make tea, leaving the two men alone.
Corman grew uneasy. The silence felt heavy, and he shifted in his seat. βI didnβt know about your relationship with Serra. She mentioned you, but never your name. Iβm honestly a bit shockedβ¦β
To Corman, it was like buying a random lottery ticket and hitting the jackpot. Serra being Lynchβs motherβthis was the surprise of a lifetime. With this connection, he could reach a whole new level of freedom. He was about to say more, but a look from Lynch shut him up.
In that instant, it felt like ice water had been dumped over his head. He broke into a cold sweat.
βNo lies, no deception. However you treated this relationship beforeβeven if it was just actingβI want you to keep acting. And if you can keep it up for a lifetime, even better.β
Lynchβs tone was calm and cold, but the pressure in his words was immense.
He looked up at Corman. βI donβt care if you lied to her before. But from now on, you donβt. UnderstandβIβm a rich man.β
That one phrase made Corman swallow hard. In the Federation, you could offend the president, gangs, or politiciansβbut not the rich.
Inside or outside the system, the wealthy always had ways to make someoneβs life hell.
Serra seemed to truly like this man, so the story needed a happy ending. This was what Lynch could do for her.
Corman sobered up quickly. He lowered his head, clearly nervous. βI think I understand, Mr. Lynchβ¦β
βYou donβt understand,β Lynch interrupted. βAs long as Serra isnβt tired of you, you will keep playing this role. Say goodbye to your past.β
βIβll find you something to doβenough to maintain a respectable life. All youβll have to give up is a part of your freedom. Got it?β
Corman didnβt just have one ambiguous relationship. Being a personal trainerβespecially to wealthy housewivesβwas a job full of unspoken rules.
The competition was fierce. Every trainer had their own tactics to hold onto clients.
Corman had read somewhere that love was the best way to keep a woman feeling excited about life. It workedβuntil now.
The room fell quiet. Lynch watched TV. Corman sat in silence, thinking hard about his future.







