©WebNovelPub
My Lust System: I Inherited The Sin Of Lust And His Three Wives-Chapter 83: Councilman Delaney
The conference room reserved for high-profile client meetings sat on the thirty-second floor of the Blacksheep firm building, its tall glass windows overlooking the restless skyline of Chicago. Steel towers pierced the gray afternoon sky while the distant river reflected streaks of fading sunlight.
Damian stepped inside first, his briefcase in one hand and a thick case file tucked beneath his arm. Clara followed closely behind with her tablet and notepad already open, prepared to document every word.
At the far end of the table sat Alderman Louie Delaney.
The man looked calm. Too calm for someone facing federal corruption charges that could end his career and send him to prison for decades. He was in his late fifties, silver threading through his dark hair, his posture relaxed in the practiced manner of a politician who had spent years controlling rooms filled with cameras and reporters.
But Damian noticed something else immediately.
Confidence.
Not the nervous confidence of an innocent man hoping for salvation.
The steady confidence of someone who had lived inside corruption long enough to treat it as routine.
As Damian approached the table, Delaney slowly stood.
"So you’re Damian Hill." The councilman extended his hand across the table. "I’ve heard quite a lot about you these past few weeks."
Damian shook his hand firmly.
"I hope most of it was good."
Delaney chuckled quietly.
"Let’s just say the entire political class in this city watched that trial of yours very closely."
Damian nodded as he pulled out a chair and sat down. Clara settled beside him, fingers already poised above her tablet.
He placed the case file on the table and opened it halfway before lifting his gaze back to the councilman.
"You requested me specifically," Damian said calmly. "That means you believe I can help you. But before we discuss strategy, I need to hear everything directly from you."
Delaney studied him for several seconds before leaning back in his chair.
"You get straight to the point."
"That’s the only way these things work."
The councilman nodded slowly.
"Alright then, Mr. Hill. Let’s start with the obvious question." His eyes sharpened slightly. "Do you believe I’m innocent?"
Clara glanced up curiously.
Damian did not hesitate.
"Innocence is irrelevant," he said calmly. "The only thing that matters is whether the prosecution can prove their story beyond reasonable doubt."
For a moment, silence settled over the room, then Delaney smiled. Not a relieved smile but an amused one.
"I see why the firm values you," he said.
Damian folded his hands together on the table. He had other appointments today and had no intention of allowing this man to waste his time.
"So let’s talk about Liam Halberg," he said directly.
The moment the name left his mouth, Delaney’s expression hardened slightly.
"That man is a rat."
"Most cooperating witnesses are," Damian replied calmly. "But the court will still listen to him."
Clara quietly began typing notes as Delaney leaned forward slightly.
"Halberg is a developer who has spent twenty years bribing city officials across multiple districts. Everyone in Chicago knows it, but nobody could ever prove it. When federal investigators finally cornered him, he did what every cornered criminal does."
"He traded someone else for his own freedom," Damian cut him off.
"Exactly." Delaney did not seem bothered.
Damian opened the case file and flipped through several pages.
"The prosecution claims he paid you 2.4 million dollars through shell companies in exchange for pushing a zoning change for the riverfront development project."
"That’s correct."
Clara paused typing while Damian looked up, surprised.
"You’re admitting the payments?" Clara blurted out in disbelief.
Delaney shrugged slightly.
"Of course there were payments. Halberg doesn’t get zoning approvals out of kindness."
The room fell silent and Clara slowly resumed typing. Damian leaned back slightly in his chair, a strange smile creeping across his lips.
"And the nonprofits?" 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂
"Useful vehicles."
"The political action committees?"
"Necessary intermediaries."
"And the consulting firm owned by your brother?"
Delaney smirked faintly.
"A convenient final destination."
Clara glanced up briefly, uncertain whether she should continue writing. Damian studied the councilman carefully before speaking again.
"So the money trail exists. The question is whether prosecutors can prove it was intended as a bribe."
"That’s their problem," Delaney replied with a dismissive shrug, a response that drew a faint frown from Damian.
Isn’t this councilman far too indifferent about his own case?
"They claim the funds eventually reached offshore investment accounts connected to you," Damian said.
"They did." Delaney met Damian’s gaze evenly as he spoke. "But they cannot prove those accounts belong to me directly."
Buzzz!
Damian’s expression did not change, but at that moment he finally understood why the man seemed so unconcerned. There was still a sliver of light somewhere in the darkness. This man was insane.
"You’re assuming the prosecution has no financial records linking you to those accounts," Damian pressed.
"I’m assuming they would have already used them if they did," Delaney retorted almost instantly.
For a moment the room fell silent as the two men stared at each other. This man truly was brilliant, possessing the strategic mind of an attorney. The difference was that while Damian had chosen to master the law, Delaney had chosen to master the art of stealing from the masses.
In many ways, the man was living his dream life.
Damian tapped his finger lightly against the case file.
"Now let’s discuss the real problem."
"Elena Vargas," Delaney cut in.
"Yes."
Damian drew a slow breath as Delaney leaned back slightly, his expression more serious now.
"Vargas was a zoning analyst working under the city planning department. She discovered the approvals were being fast tracked in exchange for financial incentives."
"And she reported it?" Damian asked.
"Yes."
"And she planned to testify before a grand jury," Damian continued.
Delaney nodded once as Damian flipped to another page.
"Three weeks before that testimony, she died in a car accident."
"Yes."
"The prosecution claims intimidation was ordered against her shortly before that."
"That’s correct."
Damian slowly lifted his eyes.
"Did you order it?"
Delaney did not answer immediately. Instead, he leaned back and crossed his arms.
"I told my campaign aide that Vargas needed to be convinced to stay quiet."
Clara’s eyes widened slightly.
"And how did he interpret that?" Damian asked calmly.
"He hired someone. A private investigator with ties to organized crime."
"And what instructions were given?" Damian asked with genuine interest.
If Delaney had deliberately arranged her death, he would have known. Yet for the first time, Damian sensed something close to regret in the man’s voice.
Delaney exhaled slowly before answering.
"I gave the order to scare her."
Damian remained completely calm.
"So you didn’t order the accident?"
"I didn’t order that," Delaney said firmly.
Damian nodded in quiet satisfaction. The man was many things, but he was not foolish. Men like this rarely fell because of their own mistakes. They fell because of the incompetence of the people working beneath them.
Delaney was far too intelligent to murder someone directly connected to his case.
"The prosecution will attempt to link that intimidation campaign directly to you, and if they succeed you could face charges of witness tampering and conspiracy," Damian said at last.
"I’m aware."
Damian nodded faintly and continued.
"The investigators will attempt to build a chain of responsibility. They will argue that your aide would never have acted without your approval, and juries often believe arguments that appear simple and obvious."
Delaney leaned forward again. He did not seem frightened in the slightest.
"So what is your strategy?"
Damian closed the case file slowly and reached into his breast pocket, pulling out a pack of cigarettes. Without asking permission, he removed one, lit it, and took a deep drag that burned nearly a quarter of the cigarette in a single breath.
"The prosecution’s narrative depends on three pillars. First, Halberg’s testimony. Second, the financial trail. Third, the intimidation campaign connected to Vargas."
Smoke drifted slowly upward as Damian held the cigarette between his fingers.
"If we break any one of those pillars, the case becomes unstable. If we break two, it collapses entirely."
Delaney nodded in approval. There was no hesitation in Damian’s voice. He spoke as though this was merely another routine battle in a long and familiar war.
"So which do you plan to focus on?" he asked.
"Halberg will be the easiest to attack," Damian replied without hesitation.
"He has been under investigation for years, and cooperating witnesses always have powerful incentives to lie."
A faint smile appeared on Delaney’s face.
"What about the financial trail?" he asked, hoping to erase the corruption label attached to his name.
"Financial evidence will be harder. Paper trails are persuasive," Damian admitted with a small shake of his head.
"I suspected as much," Delaney sighed.
Although he had hoped for better news, he respected Damian’s honesty. Delaney was surrounded by people who constantly fed him optimistic reports in hopes of earning his favor. It was refreshing to encounter someone bold enough to do the opposite.
"As for Vargas’ death, that is where the prosecution will attempt to inflame the jury emotionally. They will not need to prove you ordered her death directly. They only need to convince the jury that your actions created the conditions that led to it."
Clara nodded quietly before adding, "They will frame it as a pattern of corruption."
Damian nodded in agreement and shot her a small knowing smile. Delaney studied both of them before asking the question that mattered most.
"So how do we stop them?"
Damian’s eyes narrowed slightly.
"We dismantle the narrative piece by piece," he replied calmly.
"First, we destroy Halberg’s credibility in court. Second, we create alternative explanations for every financial transfer. Third, we prove that your aide acted independently when he escalated the intimidation."
"And Vargas?" Delaney asked.
"We argue that her death was a tragic accident the prosecution is exploiting for emotional leverage," Damian replied before placing the cigarette between his lips.
Delaney studied him carefully.
"You sound confident."
"I always am."
Damian shrugged lightly as the councilman leaned back and crossed his arms.
"Tell me something honestly, Mr. Hill. If this case goes badly, if the evidence becomes overwhelming, will you still stand beside me?"
Damian did not hesitate.
"I don’t abandon clients," he said calmly.
A long silence followed before Delaney finally nodded.
"I think I made the right choice requesting you."
Damian gave him a small smile as he stood and closed the case file.
"Councilman, you need not worry about this case anymore. Go home, get some rest, and prepare to make a major comeback at the next hearing," Damian said confidently.
Delaney rose as well, a satisfied smile spreading across his face.
"For what it’s worth, Mr. Hill, if you win this case there will be doors in this city that open for you."
Damian’s smile widened because that had been his goal all along.
"I will hold you to that promise."
The two men exchanged numbers and brief farewells. When the councilman finally left the room, Clara exhaled heavily and collapsed back into her chair.
"That man is completely guilty."
Damian picked up the case file again.
"Yes," he said calmly. "And that’s what makes this interesting."







