Nurses and doctors shuffled in and out of the room.
At last, only Jarrod and Elodie remained.
Jarrod tossed Watts’s jacket aside. His gaze fell on Elodie’s torn, wrinkled blouse and the angry red marks blooming along her shoulder and neck—finger-shaped, unmistakable.
Up until this moment, he’d managed to keep his emotions under control. Now, a storm broke inside him, his eyes hardening as if lashed by wind and frost.
He stared at the bruises on her skin for a long time before finally speaking; his voice was rough and strained, as if he’d forced the words up through a clenched throat. “Do you blame me for losing the VistaLink Technologies bid?”
Elodie had already overheard the announcement from the corridor when she left that room. She wouldn’t pretend she felt nothing—of course she did. Still, she knew this particular contract wasn’t vital enough to make or break The Silverstein Group.
“It wasn’t your intention,” she replied, her face still pale but her tone remarkably cool and steady. “But it did happen because of you.”
After all, the attack had been aimed at Jarrod. She couldn’t deny that.
Jarrod didn’t attempt to argue.
Elodie turned to stare out the window. “And because Watts tried to save me, Eldrion Global lost their shot too.”
At those words, something darker stirred in Jarrod’s eyes, a current gathering beneath the surface until it took shape.
He lowered his gaze, hiding his thoughts. “You think he beat me to it?”
Elodie had no interest in debating such questions. The facts were plain: Watts had been the first to arrive, and because of her, Eldrion Global had lost out—an undeniable loss.
She didn’t get the chance to answer.
Alexander hurried in, looking visibly shaken. When he saw Elodie unharmed, relief washed over his face, though he still appeared far from composed.
Elodie was suddenly overwhelmed by guilt—for all the people at VistaLink Technologies who’d poured days and nights into that proposal.
“Alex, I’m sorry. This was my fault.”
“What are you talking about? You’re more important than any project, you know that?” Alexander’s voice was still tinged with panic as he checked her over, then gently ruffled her hair. “Don’t blame yourself. No one wanted this to happen. You’re the victim here. VistaLink Technologies will have plenty of other opportunities. So we lost this one—there’ll be more.”
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....