Eastonians uphold the notion that the deceased is of utmost importance; if an ordinary person dies, many grudges against them are often forgiven and forgotten.
But Sophie Jenkins was different.
She was truly vile, so vile that she destroyed the lives of others, tore apart happy families, engaging in shaless affairs, rejected by society.
Therefore, when news of her death appeared in the newspaper, no one shed tears for her, no one felt any regret.
People simply cursed, ’If only things had been different today,’ ’Why didn’t a person like her die sooner? Had she died sooner, she wouldn’t have hard so many people’.
Listen, how pitiable.
Even in death, others believed she deserved it.
And Mandy Jenkins, who should have been particularly concerned about Sophie Jenkins’s death, simply glanced at the newspaper indifferently and set it aside.
She had already cast aside the Jenkins family and Marie Wellington like that discarded newspaper.
She had many things to do.
Her son and daughter-in-law were about to host another wedding.
Skye Brown endured many hardships with their family’s Ian Moore. Although Mandy Jenkins was no longer Mrs. Johnson, during her ti in that position, she had been blinded by supposed family honor and societal status, harming Skye Brown and the child she carried.
Mandy Jenkins sought compensation, intending to go above and beyond for Skye Brown, Molly Lewis, and Allen in the future.
There was also Joan, and Joan’s child, Jasmine Lionheart.
Mandy Jenkins wished to atone for the mistakes she committed as a wealthy lady.
Reflecting on this, Mandy Jenkins found herself with little ti to worry about Sophie Jenkins or the drama surrounding Marie Wellington.
Her little Allen should be waking up from his nap, and the little lad still didn’t have a Chinese na, so she decided to visit her grandson and flip through the dictionary... This ti, she had to choose a pleasant na for him, and couldn’t let her son beat her to it.
*
In contrast to the fulfilling serenity Mandy Jenkins felt, Marie Wellington was now living in deep remorse and gloom.
He had admitted his mistakes, revealing all evidence of Sophie Jenkins’s misdeeds.
He even accepted interviews with reporters... using them as an opportunity, he publicly apologized to Mandy Jenkins, seeking her forgiveness.
Marie Wellington knew Mandy Jenkins had been hurt deeply, and feared she might never forgive him in this lifeti.
But he only wanted to see her one last ti!!!
Through the dia, he called out to her, hoping to et her; he had so much he wanted to say to her.
Life inside the detention centre, simple and harsh, gradually allowed him to see the truth beyond the glamorous world of the past.
The more he suffered there, the more he recalled the beginning of his relationship with Mandy Jenkins, their leisurely romantic days.
Back then, he felt novelty towards Mandy Jenkins and treated her with special attentiveness.
He whispered sweet words to make her laugh; he patiently attended dates with her; he accommodated her whims and coaxed her.
At that ti, Mandy Jenkins hadn’t been hurt by him yet; she was in her pri, secretly in love with him, which he knew just by the way she sneaked glances at him.
Then, she was at such a charming age, that even soone like him, a playboy, nearly fell head over heels.
Alas...
It was he who failed to cherish her.
He was dazzled by the glamorous world outside, believing she would always wait at ho as long as he turned back.
He subscribed to the creed of the wealthy family, that maintaining a household while enjoying external pleasures was justified.
Marie Wellington even recalled his joking words with a friend, saying, no successful man would devote himself to one woman for a lifeti.
Only a failure would own just one woman.
How ludicrous, how lantable.
Now, he was in detention, branded as a failure.
Ha...
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