Never would she have guessed that now, years later, Lucinda would use it as a source of biting sarcasm.
Elinor simply smiled, rising without giving anything away. “Oh, Lucinda, you do have a way with words. Good matches don’t just fall from the sky—they’re written in the stars. I suppose they were just luckier than most.”
Lucinda sipped her tea and let the topic drop.
Jarrod clearly had no interest in continuing the conversation. He took Elodie’s hand and gently guided her to an armchair, then released her without a word.
Sprague acted as if he remembered nothing about the past, sliding easily into a seat. “If I recall,” he said, glancing at Elodie, “just before I left for Europe, wasn’t there a car accident you were involved in?”
Elodie nodded. “Yes, you still remember that?”
Jarrod’s gaze lifted, slow and measured.
Sprague’s eyes settled on Elodie’s arm. “You broke your right arm, didn’t you? I remember Jarrod was beside himself with worry. He practically dropped everything for you—even during that critical time with the board. Stayed by your side for weeks, didn’t he?”
Back then, Jarrod hadn’t officially taken over the Silverstein Group yet. He was still locked in a delicate battle with the board. Any misstep could have cost him everything. But Elodie was hurt, and Jarrod had walked away from the most important meeting of his career to find her.
If Jarrod hadn’t been such a shrewd strategist... that could have ended his chances right then and there.
Elodie remembered it all, vividly.
Her love for Jarrod was never some vague feeling; it was rooted in moments like these, in the way he acted and the choices he made. She never knew precisely what was happening at the company back then, but for two months, Jarrod personally took care of her—cooking, helping her with everything. He’d even taken to making her simple, nourishing meals himself. Those days were some of the happiest she could recall.
Sprague poured himself another cup of tea and sighed, “It’s good to see you two still so close after all these years.”
Elodie hadn’t expected Sprague to remember any of it. But she and Sprague had never been more than acquaintances. Most of their interactions were little more than a polite nod and a passing smile.
Midway through the afternoon, she excused herself to the restroom.
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....