
As I said this, the wound on my freshly bandaged hand began to bleed again.
"Grace..." Asher looked at my hand, his face full of anguish.
I smiled and reassured him, "It’s not like it’s severed. Why are you crying? At most, I won’t be able to paint for a while. If she had cut any deeper, I might never be able to paint again."
Asher gently stroked my hand, crying, "No, no… that won’t happen."
Shortly after, he agreed to send Jasmine to a psychiatric hospital.
The day Jasmine was sent away, I was there to watch as they took her.
"Let me go! I’m not crazy! I’m not crazy!" she kept struggling and shouting.
But everyone knew she had gone mad.
Only I believed what she said—she wasn’t crazy.
Locking up a sane person in a psychiatric ward, that is the real torture.
I said I wouldn’t let any of them go. Not a single one.
I finally divorced Christopher.
After the divorce, I handed the company over to a professional manager and went abroad to relax by myself.
During those three years overseas, I visited many countries, met many people, and saw countless beautiful landscapes, but none of them made me want to stay.
So, three years later, I returned home.
I went to the orphanage I had been supporting for years and decided to adopt a child. She was just three years old and absolutely adorable.
But the adoption required a married couple.
I was stuck. Where was I going to find someone to marry on such short notice?
Just then, Asher approached me.
He handed me a brand-new business card and proudly listed off his many accomplishments.
But I wasn’t the least bit interested in his shiny resume.
Finally, he said, “I’m 6'1" and have an eight-pack. Does that work?”
I finally nodded.
We went together to visit the child I wanted to adopt.
She had her hair in two little pigtails and was running around, playing with the other kids.
“Why did you choose her?” Asher asked.
I said, “Don’t you think she looks a little like you?”
(The End)


