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Spoiled by Mr. Russell novel Chapter 2168

Summary for Chapter 2168: Spoiled by Mr. Russell

What Happens in Chapter 2168 – From the Book Spoiled by Mr. Russell

Dive into Chapter 2168, a pivotal chapter in Spoiled by Mr. Russell, written by Luminous Night. This section features emotional turning points, key character decisions, and the kind of storytelling that defines great Romance fiction.

It was Austin’s first time meeting Cameron, so the former wondered how Cameron seemed to recognize him.

Cameron noticed his puzzled expression and said, “Dr. Blanc told me you’re a rare talent. “Dr. Blanc said you’re a rare talent. Keep up the good work, and don’t let him down.”

Austin was surprised Dr. Blanc would speak so highly about him to others, especially to someone like Cameron. Austin saluted solemnly, exclaiming, “Yes, sir!”

Alexander’s lips twitched. “This way, Cameron.”

Alexander let Cameron’s aide serve the tea when they sat in the spacious home office. After all, Cameron seldom drank or ate anything outside for safety reasons.

That was why Alexander suspected something was off when Cameron got kidnapped back then. He wondered how Rhea drugged and took Cameron away even though he had been so cautious and carefully guarded.

As it turned out, his suspicion was correct—it was part of Cameron’s plan, which was grander than Alexander had imagined.

“So, is the mastermind behind the organization an individual, a group, or a government?” Cameron cut to the chase as he sat down. His time was precious, and he did not want to waste it on chitchatting.

“Based on our investigation so far, we think it’s the Queen of Yudonia.”

Cameron was not surprised. Instead, he looked grim.

‘If it is the queen, things will get tricky.’

Alexander rubbed his eyebrows and pondered in silence before continuing, “From our observation and the clues I’ve gathered, I think the queen is just a puppet while the real mastermind is the duke.”

If the mastermind was the Queen of Yudonia, the situation could escalate into a full-blown war between the two nations unless Hyderland could gather support from other countries to stand against it.

Meanwhile, the situation was more manageable since the queen was just a puppet, and the troublemaker was Duke Frederick. After all, bringing him down and liberating the queen would be morally justifiable.

“Well, that’s just our speculation. We don’t have direct evidence to back this up,” Alexander said objectively.

In other words, acting without evidence would be unwise.

Cameron knew what he was talking about but changed the subject, “Where’s Rhea?”

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