/1/110546/coverbig.jpg?v=412cf3d7807bc9680a9069b41db1a92d)
randmother, who suffered from Alzheimer's. She still though
cold. "It's useless. Even if you got down on your knees
He thought I was manipulatin
thing more. I had left th
me forever, right up until
en dead for two years
world s
r me in the most e
pte
as
ll. I was trapped in the realm of the li
she clutched my battere
er and over again. It would ring
icon Valley tech park, asking everyone she met, "Excus
hers offering polite but dismissive apologies. Yet, Nana didn'
to tell her to stop looking, to just go ho
wd surged out of the c
ctively and caught sigh
as L
long that I almost didn't recognize him at f
as now a billionaire. Flanked by a beautiful, young executive
hful vulnerability that once marked his face
ur hunched over a keyboard writing code, s
tech ti
nger at Liam and excitedly told a passerby, "Look
de him and muttered in confusion
died, her condition deteriorated rapidly. S
riving her to this tech park. Deep in her fragile mind, she still beli
ould come!" Her voice was bright and tou
as she looked left and
ing right beside her, s
g? Come on, let's go see him. He'll
t in some places, entirely blank in others. She remembered the goo
t that I
us as a deepl
he thought we were still together,
re he built was erected upon
mix of joy and sorrow. In that momen
any we founded together, the ideas we shared-they had culminated in t
the attention of the crow
ored her, shooting her a cold, in
gh the crowd, trying to run toward him. Blocked by his bodyguards
randdaughter Chloe Miller's boyfriend! They lov
urned his head to look at my gra
eplied coldly, "I don't know he
illion agonizing pieces. The suffocating pain made me realize that
an anything I had experienced in life. It was
had grown, festered, and ultimately mu
letely erased my existence, denying what
ective, three years ag
t you remember me
nto her worn
out a faded
e smiling, arms wrapped around each other, his head resting
trembling. "It's Chloe. It's us." She
back. The crowd surged forward, eager to catc
fell to her knees. Her purse gaped open, i
er tattered wallet, coming to rest righ
kers. People whipped out their phones, ready
dignity. No one offered a helping hand. In the vast
ngered on the photograph for a moment. In that split second, I saw a flick
ent
rapid succession. He picked up the photo, his
ad long since stopped bea
ed. He had
ar-blurred eyes. A small smile touched her lips
e the photo in half. Then into quarters. He kept goi
he ground, scattering them aro
e," he said. "Lies, betrayal, and
ing those words still made m
always knows exactly ho
They ripped through my spirit, stinging m
ompletely, piece by piece,
embling hands trying to gather the torn pieces. Her face contorte
at Grandma, at the scattered fragments of our past, eag
shield her, to make them stop. But I was like
sly, without a shred of re
d. "Don't let them do this to h
ignored me. He
irk playing on his lips. "Isn't it a bit
ts something from me, she knows what she has to do. If she gets d
ked up, her
ooking lost. "But Chloe... s
rstand. She cou
-ached with an unbearable longing. Oh, h
uldn't touch her, couldn't comfort her, couldn't be
scoff. He turned on his heel and walked away, his en
of clarity sparked
ed, and a painful memory pierced through the fog. Her lips
can't. She can't apologize. S

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