Unexpectedly, Tuell sneered and said, "Kill him? Don't be so ridiculous!" He stepped on his cigarette butt on the floor and squinted, "It was his own avarice that killed him. He wanted to enter the American market, so he bet everything on a single throw, but he failed in the end, so it was natural that he would commit suicide."
Irish looked at his face, and it was easy to tell that he hated Alston bitterly, but his death also had something to do with him. She didn't respond immediately but to sort out the information in her mind. According to Tuell, Alston not only killed his wife and son he also assaulted his wife. He bore this grudge for many years in his heart. He waited for a chance to defeat him, and it finally paid off in the end.