Cane finally confessed all his ᴄʀɪᴍᴇs and begged for forgiveness Young And The Restless Spoilers
Young And The Restless Spoilers that From the moment Jack walked into the Jabot conference room with a tense face, the atmosphere changed.
The backlog of reports still lay on the table, but the numbers suddenly became meaningless when he realized another storm was brewing in Genoa City: Cane.
Over the weeks, the pieces of the puzzle of unusual transfers, hidden subcontracts, and emails using new intermediary accounts gradually emerged.
Jack knew that if he continued to throw money at Abbott Communications as Billy suggested, he would lose the leverage he needed when it came time to tighten his grip on what Cane had done.
Before Billy could get close to convincing, Jack opened a video call with Jill. One look at Jack’s wavering eyes on the screen told Jill there was trouble — and like a mother’s instinct, it involved Billy.
Jill wanted to jump in and explain, but Jack interrupted, his voice calm and cold: he was not taking sides in the mother-son tug-of-war.
His calmness was not avoidance but intense focus on another subject—Cane—who, in Jack’s view, posed a more lasting threat than a media sponsorship decision.
Jill objected. Cane had been the person she had trusted most during the Chancellor’s turmoil; it was hard for her to accept that the “reasonable guy” was now being labeled a threat. But Jack didn’t want to argue with memories or emotions.
He suggested the only way Jill could get an irrefutable answer: go to Genoa City, see the files for herself, hear the stories of those who were suffering, and feel how the “lost” money had crept into the system. Jack understood that only the bare facts on the ground would make Jill put her trust back in the right place.
The call abruptly ended as Billy burst into the room, the screen lighting flickering. Jack turned off the video before Billy could figure out who he was talking to.
Tensions flared as expected: Billy asked Jack to review the Abbott Communications funding, arguing that the communications project was a golden opportunity to reposition the brand and “preemptively defend” against any public backlash. But Jack shook his head.
Not only had Billy repeatedly pushed his patience to the limit with his risky “double-crosses,” but the real stakes were in the Cane game. Jabot’s resources needed to be kept for the fast-paced legal-audit-communications battle, where one misstep could send all the hard work down the drain.






