What Happens in Chapter 753 – From the Book How a Dying Woman Rewrote Her Epilogue
Dive into Chapter 753, a pivotal chapter in How a Dying Woman Rewrote Her Epilogue, written by Miss Lyra. This section features emotional turning points, key character decisions, and the kind of storytelling that defines great Romance fiction.
He kept his gaze fixed on her. “But cheating? I never have, and I never will.”
Elodie stayed silent, just waiting to see what he’d say next.
Despite the headache still throbbing behind his eyes, Jarrod took her hand and placed it over his heart. “I’ve never let anyone else in here. Not before, not now. Elodie, I’ve spent nearly a decade—eight, nine years—on you alone.”
He sounded like a man with nothing left to lose, as if illness had stripped away all hesitation and left only the raw, honest truth.
“That ‘couple’s profile picture’ you were upset about—do you really not remember it at all?” His voice carried a note of helplessness. “You drew it yourself. Don’t you recognize your own work?”
Elodie’s brow unfurrowed, but the memory just wouldn’t come.
Jarrod pulled open the drawer by his bedside and took out a hand-drawn picture, neatly framed.
On the letter-sized paper was the full sketch of Jarrod’s profile image, and in the bottom right corner, in delicate handwriting, was her signature: Elodie.
It was unmistakably her handwriting.
Looking at it now, memories began to stir, distant and blurred but undeniable.
Back then, she loved stargazing with her telescope, and sometimes she’d sketch whatever inspired her—astronomy, the night sky, little fragments of her imagination. Most of the time, she forgot about them afterward; she’d drawn so many.
“Our grandfathers fought together in the war. That year, for my grandfather’s birthday, the Thorne family was among the guests. You were seventeen, shy, avoiding the crowds, tucked away in the garden with your sketchbook. I could tell you had no patience for those kinds of social gatherings. It was the third time we’d met, and you even yelled at me.”
He smiled wryly at the memory.
His grandfather, right in front of both boys, had joked with Elodie’s grandfather that their grandchildren weren’t far apart in age—maybe there was a bit of fate between them.
Jarrod hadn’t thought much of it then.
But when he wandered outside, he saw Elodie sitting alone, phone in hand, quietly chatting with a friend, completely unaware that he was watching. She looked so sweet and composed, but her words were sharp as a blade: “Matchmaking me with him? No way. He’s too old—I’m not interested in anyone that ancient.”
That one stung.
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