e night. Colin slept restlessly, and was sud
one in the early morning. He rubbed his eyes and thought of Susie wh
ie had fainted. She had lain on
igure rush out faster than him. Despite the heavy rain, he
ng a soup opera in real life. He said to himself, "Aren't you bein
. Then he put some clothes o
ant Linda was calling the family doctor. Lucy wa
couldn't help but chuckle when h
but she was stopped at the door by Colin. She
im. Seeing that, Colin acted as if nothing had
r clothes. She had been soaked like a drowned mouse
quietly, but he didn't leave.
el to a former sweetheart? Obviously he has been worried to death about her, but he behaves like nothing has happened. Doesn'
nt to die,
olin turned around with a smile. Since Lucy had finis
I saw! But look at you! Such a worri
g. Instead, he frowned at
rl should drink more water. If her fever could be brought down after dawn, she woul
mber the doctor's instruction
in such situation. He could o
iolin from an antique gramophone echoed in the room. Sever
et Susie was at the
the piano, while his paren
oung woman with a little girl who was four or five years old. The young woman was talking to his parents about something with excite
family would be broken as soon as his wife left. But how could a heartbroken mot
released. His father kept him, with half of his p
that woman who appeared in front of the gate with a little gir
ot Su but Lin. Raymond, on the other ha
uld follow him around and call
sister, which he didn't kn
his life underwent
ied of a heart attack in the same year he went to prison. With all the property of the Lin family, his stepmother married a member of the Su
Susie Lin became Susie Su. S
rs in prison. He lost all his best years there. How
taken, Susie and her mother were livin
e? You haven't suffered even one-tenth o
gotten your brother Frank Lin? How else could you be so
anything wrong. D