Eighteen hours. That was how long the surgery lasted.
The surgeons removed the charred, necrotic tissue from Charles’s thigh, managing, for now, to save his left leg.
But from the very top of his thigh, much of the muscle had to be excised to stave off infection.
What had once been a powerful, sculpted leg was now pitted and disfigured, stripped of its former strength.
This was the conservative treatment plan Charles had chosen himself.
He knew the odds of saving his leg this way were vanishingly slim.
He knew, too, that for the next months he would endure a pain few could even imagine.
Months of agony, only to likely lose the leg in the end. Amputation would probably be inevitable.
But still, Charles chose to try.
He wasn’t afraid of pain. What terrified him was being left incomplete—becoming someone unworthy of saying he loved Evelyn, unworthy of her.
—
One month later.
Hospital room.
The doctor came in to clean Charles’s wound.
Layer by layer, the gauze was peeled away, exposing the raw, bloody flesh of his thigh.
So much muscle had been lost, the wound needed daily cleansing and sterilization to prevent infection and give what little hope there was for muscle regrowth.
Every cleaning was a kind of torture.
Just as he had every day for the last month, Charles’s hospital gown was drenched in cold sweat.
The whole time, he bit down on his lip, enduring in silence.
His recovery was slow—the muscle loss was simply too great.
But at least, there was no infection.
After the doctor left, Charles, expressionless, let the orderly help him clean up and change out of his soaked gown.
Ever since the fire, Mr. Jenkins—Charles—had seen Ms. Evelyn’s hair streaked with gray. After Ms. Josephine’s words to him, the light in Charles’s eyes had gone out.
For over a month now, he’d seemed hollow, as if all the life had been drained from him.
“Mr. Jenkins, I can go to Ms. Evelyn. I’ll tell her it was you who saved her and Ms. Josephine…” Aiden offered quietly.
He believed, once, Evelyn had loved Charles deeply.
If she knew Charles had risked his life for her and Josephine—exactly the kind of devotion she’d always hoped for—maybe her heart would soften.
Maybe she’d come, even if only to sit by Charles’s side for a while.
Aiden knew Mr. Jenkins wanted to see Evelyn.
With her here, perhaps Charles wouldn’t seem so lifeless every day.
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...