Hadwin Stephenson raised his hands and gently pulled Linaâs hands down into his palms.
âBut even so, I gave her a way out. I didnât give the evidence to the police right away. I just made sure she wonât be able to leave her home for the rest of her life. Iâm sorry⦠Iâm sorryâ¦â. muttered Hadwin Stephenson.
He kept his head down and apologized profusely.
Lina said, âHadwin, youâve done enough for me. Donât apologize again. Youâve done nothing wrong!
You made sure your mother can never leave her house, and thatâs no different from imprisonment. Did you think I would still blame you or think you were being partial to your mother?â
âIâ¦â He opened his mouth. The woman in front of him seemed to know what he feared most.
âIâm glad that you didnât keep me in the dark. You claimed justice for me. Even though the culprit is your mother, you still acted on my behalf and didnât cover it up or act as if nothing ever happened,â said Lina.
He froze before slowly looking up again. âYouâre glad?â
âYes, Iâm glad. Iâm glad to have you protect me like that, but⦠Iâm also upset because I know you must be very upset now, right?â
she said.
Otherwise, he would have gone home instead of staying in the office.
She knew he did not want her to see him upset.
âHadwin, you donât need to hide your emotions in front of me. Sheâs your mother, and I know⦠you stillâ¦â
âNot anymore!â said Hadwin Stephenson. After all these incidents, he could not have seen her colors more clearly. âLina, Iâll only live for you and our child from now on!â
He muttered and kissed her lips!
It was his promise to her. It was the most important promise he had ever made.
Linaâs heart was full of sorry for the man. She would love him with all she had for the rest of her life!
In the hospitalâs VIP ward, Martin Weiss was lying on the hospital bed as the nurse inserted a needle into his forearm and drew blood.
3/3 A doctor in a white coat said to Martin Weiss as they held the test report, âMr. Weiss, your physical test report is out. Youâre in good health. Although you had part of your liver removed five years ago, thereâs nothing wrong with your liver and everything is fine.â
âWill I have enough liver to donate if I need to do it again?â asked Martin Weiss.
âWellâ¦â The doctor instantly hesitated when they heard that. âYou just donated your liver five years ago. Although the human liver will grow again, it has only been five years. If you have to donate again, the risk will be much greater than the first time. As a doctor, I donât recommend you donating again.â
âThat means thereâs still a chance of success, right?â asked Martin Weiss.
âWellâ¦â The doctor hesitated a little. âThereâs still a possibility of success, but itâs very small.â
âOkay, I see. Besides thatâ¦â Martin Weiss glanced at the blood surging toward the blood bag. âIâll store my blood in your hospital. Iâll come over to donate my blood every once in a while. If my wife needs a lot of blood when she goes into labor, at least the hospital wonât be lacking it. But I hope the hospital wonât tell anyone about it, including my wife.â