She praised him for being so diligent with his care and promised she would wait for him in New York City. When he finally arrived, she was going to show him a great time.
Finally, she shared some excellent news.
The clinical data she had gathered from his case had gone through rigorous expert reviews and cross-checks recently, and it was nearly finalized. Once she completed the last round of edits, she would officially draft the paper and submit it for academic publication.
This data wouldn't just document his specific symptoms and aid his long-term care; it would serve as an authoritative clinical reference. It was going to help countless other patients suffering from Butterfly Children disease across the country, bringing hope to their treatments, daily care, and lives.
After finishing the letter, Willow gathered a bunch of items from New York City. Mimicking Ethan's family, she carefully packaged every single thing before asking the receptionist to ship it out for her.
Right after that, Willow called Leo Yardley and the other project members into the conference room to officially discuss the academic publication and patent application.
Leo spoke first. "Director Horgan, this dataset is totally solid. Before, domestic Butterfly Children research relied entirely on overseas case studies, which had terrible compatibility. Many grassroots care plans were useless for domestic patients. Now, our localized, comprehensive case system is an absolute industry first. Should we go straight to journal submission?"



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The readers' comments on the novel: Three Years Forgotten, Why Go Crazy When I Say Goodbye?
Im enjoying this book very much, however it's really taking long for silas and willow to start dating she has to know his feeling by know and the pending divorce...