What Happens in Chapter 438 – From the Book Goodbye, Mr. Regret
Dive into Chapter 438, a pivotal chapter in Goodbye, Mr. Regret, written by Piper Jameson. This section features emotional turning points, key character decisions, and the kind of storytelling that defines great Romance fiction.
Even now, Timothy trusted Sheila without question.
What else could she believe, after all he’d said?
Whenever it came to Sheila, he never bothered to double-check a thing.
Seven years ago—the one who saved him was her.
She was the one who saw him run into the burning house and, scared out of her mind, chased in after him. He was struck by a falling beam.
She wasn’t from a wealthy family; as a kid, she’d often helped her grandmother around the house, so she was certainly stronger than Sheila.
Still, even with her strength, she couldn’t lift the beam. She had to use a piece of wood as a lever to push it aside.
It was love and worry for him that gave her the strength to drag him out of the fire.
The faint scar on her palm was a silent witness—left by the rope that cut into her skin and bled as she pulled him to safety.
Maybe, in the past, she would have told him the truth: that it was she who saved him that night.
Now? She wouldn’t stoop so low.
Let Timothy believe it was Sheila. If he wanted Sheila to be his savior, so be it.
He saw Sheila as the woman who saved his life, the one he wanted to marry. If she confessed the truth now, it would only make her own divorce harder.
“Why don’t I believe you?” Jessica’s voice was cold but steady. “Because you showed me the truth, Timothy. Even your son likes her. Out there, everyone thinks Sheila is his mom. The three of you together—you look like a perfect family. You should just be that: a family. You’re not the man you were seven years ago. You have the power now to break through any obstacle for Sheila. So stop dragging me along. I don’t have another seven years to waste on you.”
Timothy’s anger twisted in his stomach. “What are you saying? What family? Just because you want a divorce, you don’t care what comes out of your mouth?”
“The law says there’s a waiting period for divorce,” Jessica said, her tone clipped. “But for me? I’ve never been more certain. The first time I asked you for a divorce, I’d already decided to let you go—to let you have the woman you love. Especially after that day at the school fair, seeing you, Sheila, and Henry—your happy little trio—I nearly applauded. You looked perfect together. Didn’t you see all the family group chats? Everyone was congratulating you.”
Jessica’s words stabbed into Timothy’s throat like thorns.
“I already explained,” he said, strained. “That day, at the family event, your phone was off when I called. You were late. Sheila just happened to be with me.”
“Enough,” Jessica cut him off. “If you were late, you could’ve sent someone else, but when people mistook her for Mrs. Lawson, for Henry’s mom, you could’ve corrected them. Why didn’t you?”
“I…”
Timothy wanted to explain, but the words felt hollow. The truth was, he hadn’t corrected anyone’s assumptions.
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