Sir, You Don’t Know Your Wife Chapter 1030
There was enough liquid in the bamboo shoot to satiate them after they took a couple of bites.
She looked at Mason pleadingly as she handed the rest of the bamboo over and he finished it.
Soon, the sun broke over the morning mist and light shone through the slanted makeshift roof under which they found shelter.
“Come on,” the man said as he lowered his head to cast his gentle gaze at her.
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“Okay,” she answered, turning her face to his as she nodded.
Mason wrapped an arm around Janet’s waist and they marched into the sunlight.
As he walked, a frown began to etch on Janet’s face. With a worried tone she spoke, “Here, lean on me.” She lifted his arm and ducked beneath it so that she could hold him up by the waist.
He chuckled lightly. “I’m sorry for burdening you, Janet.”
“You can burden me anytime,” she quipped.
When he saw the steely look in her eyes, he nodded and agreed to lean on her for support.
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Having emerged from the rubble, they saw that they were at a foreign place.
There were no plants around them, let alone skyscrapers or residential areas.
The road upon which they stood was barren and he guessed the land around them had been abandoned.
By the time it was noon and the sun hung high in the sky, they still could not find any source of water around them.
Still, she held onto him and her steps were firm as she marched forward.
The sound of sweat dripping onto the dry ground was akin to the ticking hand of a clock and in the blink of an eye, half a day had gone.
Janet wiped the sweat from her forehead before she glanced at the wound on Mason’s leg.
The wound from the snakebite was beginning to swell and redden. It had to be cleaned immediately, or bandaged at the very least; otherwise the wound could fester and she hated to think about what may happen when it did.
Her chest tightened as panic rose in her. She did not like to know that Mason was suffering.
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