I owned a villa by Willowbrook Lake. It was a gift from my parents, and it was finally proving useful.
Once I arrived, the chauffeur offered to help me move in, but I just wanted to do it alone. So, I found an excuse to send him off and started moving the boxes myself.
The boxes weren't too heavy, but the constant trips up and down were exhausting since the bedroom was on the second floor. I was already panting by the second round.
As I stood in front of the third box catching my breath, a surprised male voice came from behind me. "Jane?"
Why did the voice sound so familiar? I turned around in confusion, and when I saw the tall man in a white shirt and black pants walking toward me, I froze.
Eric Flint? What was he doing here?
Eric and I went to the same college. He was the president of the student council while Jeremiah was the vice president. The two often clashed over work and constantly fought. Over time, they became mortal enemies.
Since Jeremiah disliked Eric, I never got close to him. We were just acquaintances who exchanged polite nods though we crossed paths frequently.
But he was the one who extended a helping hand during my lowest moments in my past life. Now that I saw Eric, it almost felt like he radiated the glow of a savior.
"So it is you. I thought my eyes were playing tricks on me." He approached, and his gaze landed on the boxes at my feet. "What are these?"
I smiled and answered truthfully, "I'm moving."
Eric seemed to instantly understand. He raised an eyebrow and said in a teasing tone, "Splitting up already? What happened? Is Jeremiah kicking you out to bring his mistress in?"
Eric was sharp-tongued as ever. Jeremiah could never match his verbal sparring, and that was why he detested Eric so much.
But judging from what he said… It seemed he had caught wind of Jeremiah's rampant scandals.
Even as a bystander, he could see through Jeremiah and Elsa's relationship. Yet Jeremiah insisted on feeding me clumsy lies.
As I recalled how I had fallen for his deceptions in my past life, I couldn't help feeling pathetic.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Revenge is best served cold