Vince was stunned.
Back then, after Sheila’s offhand remark made him suspect Jessica might be her sister, he’d gone to Jessica’s hometown to investigate. That’s when Herbert inadvertently mentioned Jessica’s birthmark. Vince pressed him for details, but that fool—believing Vince was interested in Jessica—refused to say a word about it. Vince had even snapped at him, demanding to know why he hadn’t chased after Jessica in all these seven years.
All this time, Herbert hadn’t gone after Jessy because he’d been hiding away in an operating room, researching aphasia?
Vince deeply regretted the way he’d spoken to Herbert that day.
If he’d known the truth, he never would have said those things.
Jessica’s heart pounded so hard she felt paralyzed, unable to move.
He’d come back—returned to their hometown to find her. The very first time they met again, he’d given her that voice-emitting necklace.
Later, in order not to hold her back because of Timothy’s suspicions, he’d brought up leaving the Wheeler family several times—and eventually, he really did leave.
He never told her, not wanting to put any pressure on her.
He spent seven years locked away in a lab, researching aphasia on his own, and never breathed a word.
When she finally found her voice, he only told her that a friend of his had made it possible.
She had no idea how much he’d done for her, quietly, behind the scenes.
Memories from their youth surged and tumbled through Jessica’s mind.
Whenever he’d seen her getting bullied, he’d hang around after school, slinging his backpack over one shoulder, waiting for her to come out before heading home himself.
Every morning, when she left her house, she’d always “coincidentally” bump into him leaving his own.
When they started junior high at a school farther from home, Mrs. Reynolds had bought him a bike, and he’d given Jessica a ride every day.
He’d always been a troublemaker, loved getting into fights, never seemed to care about the rules. Yet somehow, he’d grown up to become a brilliant doctor.
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