“Mr. Jenkins’s left thigh muscles are severely damaged. I’m afraid there’s little hope for this leg. We may have to amputate.”
Even the doctors couldn’t understand how Charles had managed to get out of bed in his condition.
The damage to his thigh was so extensive that saving the leg was nearly impossible.
“Do you even know what you’re saying?”
Aiden hadn’t expected things to be this serious. The moment he heard the news, his face went pale. “I don’t care what it takes—you must save Mr. Jenkins’s leg.”
He couldn’t bear to imagine Mr. Jenkins—always so proud, so untouchable—reduced to a man with a missing limb.
How could Mr. Jenkins ever accept that?
“We’ll do everything we can,” the doctor replied, but his voice held no confidence.
He’d already taken Charles’s case to the conference room, bringing together top specialists from across the country via video call to discuss every possible treatment. This was their conclusion after exhausting all options.
Charles understood this, too.
The hospital wouldn’t give such a prognosis lightly. If they said it, it meant they had already done everything within their power.
Charles lowered his gaze to his left leg, his eyes clouded with despair.
Amputation meant he would be disabled for the rest of his life.
He’d already hurt Eve deeply in the past.
As Ms. Josephine had once said, he didn’t deserve her forgiveness in the first place.
And if he became a cripple…
The thought of facing Evelyn with only one leg, broken and incomplete, made Charles clench his fist involuntarily. His nails dug deep into his palm.
How could he ever ask her forgiveness now?
He lowered his eyelids, pain etched across his face.
…
Evelyn found out at the nurses’ station that Brooks was getting his wounds dressed.
The burn was ugly—he didn’t want her to see it.
He cared too much about her to let her see him at his worst.
But as he moved, the nurse—caught off guard—pressed the disinfecting forceps directly into the wound.
She froze.
Brooks grunted in pain.
Evelyn rushed in, worry etched across her face, grabbing his shoulder. “Don’t move!”
Whenever little Charlie scraped his knee or bumped into something, she’d always blow on it to make it better.
Charlie would say that made the pain go away.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Day Our Promise Breaks (Charles and Evelyn)
What a bad novel. Evil deeds rules the entire story, no ending, villains characters succeed, no way out for the good people. I was hoping for better twists but disappointed again and again. Time close the book for me, no more, enough....
When will Evelyn's sufferings end? You mean to say evil rules the world? No longer funny, the twists are getting ridiculous....
Wow Finally! Thanks!...
More chapters please...