Elodie ended the call and sat in the car for a few moments, lost in thought. Suddenly remembering something, she hurried out and rushed upstairs.
In her bedroom, she tore open drawers and rummaged through boxes, searching frantically for the divorce certificate she’d tucked away. There it was—plain black ink on crisp white paper, stamped with an official seal.
How could there possibly be a problem with something so clear, so indisputable?
She sat on the edge of the bed, the divorce certificate clutched in her hand, frozen in place for what felt like ages. Dozens of wild, impossible scenarios flashed through her mind, none of which made any sense.
She didn’t want to torture herself with spiraling thoughts. Running a hand through her hair, she exhaled sharply. There was nothing she could do now except wait for Jarrod’s call.
Rain began to patter against the windows. Sitting and stewing would only drive her crazy, so she decided to shower, hoping to wash away the anxiety gnawing at her insides.
Again and again, she told herself—there must have been a mistake somewhere in the process. She kept herself distracted, puttering around for nearly three hours.
Still no word from Jarrod.
The silence made her even more anxious. Just as she was about to call him again, a knock sounded at the door.
Elodie stared at the entryway, breath caught in her chest. Only after a moment did she force herself to get up and open the door.
Jarrod stood outside, rain still falling behind him. His suit jacket and the collar of his shirt were streaked with wet patches. He glanced at his watch—this was the fastest he could have possibly gotten here.
“Andrea said you needed to see me. Urgently.”
Elodie’s eyes searched his face. She hadn’t really believed he’d drop everything and come, but… he was here.
“Jarrod, there’s a problem with my background check.” She tried to keep her voice steady but couldn’t hide the way her gaze bore into him. “They said I’m still listed as married. That’s got to be a mistake, right?”
Jarrod stood in the doorway, his dark eyes fixed on her. His expression was unreadable—no surprise, no guilt, nothing.
In that instant, Elodie’s heart sank, heavy and inexplicably certain.
“Why aren’t you saying anything?” Her voice trembled, raw with fear.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: How a Dying Woman Rewrote Her Epilogue
Hi..please update the story..its been 2 days and a lag at this point in the story is just killing the vibe...
No update yet.....
Please do regular updates..This is going really well..dont kill the mood.....
Still no update......
Why are you not updating regularly.. please do update this one......
May! Getting better and better! Thank you!...
Pls upload More chapters soon. So interesting. 5 or 10 chapters aren't enough per day. At least 20 chapers..... Will you...
Hi, may I give a recommendation to add a story from Goodnovel? Author Elaine Cass with the title Revenge of The Broken Luna, I really want to read it. I hope you can put it in this website, thank you....