I Took Off The Dress And Took Back My Life Chapter 10
Six months later, the eminent domain.Â
compensation plan was officially finalized.Â
My loft was assessed at a total value of forty–two million dollars.Â
Clarence helped me finish the paperwork,Â
and I signed the redevelopment agreement.Â
That afternoon, Jordan took me to a primeÂ
steakhouse for a celebratory dinner.Â
“Forty–two million! Audrey, you’re rich!”Â
“It’s only about thirty million after taxes.”Â
“You think thirty million is too little? YouÂ
used to walk to work every day to save twoÂ
dollars on bus fare-”Â
“That was for exercise.”Â
“Fine, fine, whatever you say. Anyway,Â
Julian knows this figure; I bet he’s greenÂ
with regret.”Â
“He won’t know.”Â
“How is that possible? The whole street isÂ
being redeveloped; he’ll find out the compensation plan just by asking around. He wanted you to transfer it to him? ForÂ
forty–two million, he tried to trade it for a six–million–dollar wedding house mortgageÂ
“He didn’t trade; he just didn’t know.”Â
“Not knowing is even more ridiculous.Â
Scarlett knew he didn’t know. He riskedÂ
everything for Scarlett, only for her to be calculating your forty–two-”Â
“Enough, eat your steak.”Â
Jordan shut up. After chewing a few bites ofÂ
ribeye, she couldn’t help herself.Â
“What happened to Julian later?”Â
“The company is shrinking; most investors. have pulled out. He’s trying to find ways toÂ
pay back the bank.”Â
“What was the sentence for the forgery?”Â
“Probation. First–time offender, activelyÂ
returned the funds and compensation, andÂ
pleaded guilty. But he has a criminal recordÂ
now.”Â
Jordan shook her head: “It’ll be hard for himÂ
to get funding in the future-”Â
“It has nothing to do with me anymore.”Â
She glanced at me, hesitating.Â
“What else?”Â
“I saw him yesterday. On the street where your old loft was. The redevelopment area is fenced off, and he was standing aloneÂ
outside the barrier. He stood there for a long time.”Â
My hand holding the fork paused for aÂ
moment.Â
When we finished dinner and came out, itÂ
was already dark. After Jordan took a cab home, I strolled for a while to digest.Â
Passing the street with the old loft, I saw the green metal hoarding from a distance. Red posters with redevelopment notices were pasted on it, the edges already curled by theÂ
wind.Â
Opposite the hoarding, on the stone edge ofÂ
a roadside planter, sat a man.Â
Julian Sterling.Â
In his hand was a cup of convenience storeÂ
coffee, the lid unopened.Â
He saw me too. But he didn’t stand up, norÂ
did he call out to me.Â
The streetlights shone on his face; hisÂ
features were vaguely as I remembered themÂ
the day I met him, but everything in his eyesÂ
had changed.Â
After looking at me for a long time, he finallyÂ
spoke, his voice low, as if talking to himself.Â
“Audrey, are you doing well now?”Â
I stood on this side of the road, and he sat onÂ
the other.Â
“I’m doing okay.”Â
He nodded and looked down at his coffee.Â
“That night when Scarlett called, I couldÂ
have chosen not to answer.”Â
“But you did.”Â
“Mhm.”Â
Silence followed for a while.Â
“Audrey, I only now understand what youÂ
meant by that sentence.”Â
“Which sentence?”Â
“You said–you only notified me after theÂ
decision was made, which meant in yourÂ
heart, Scarlett’s emergency was moreÂ
important than our marriage.”Â
He looked up.Â
“You were right. That night I chose her emergency. I’ve been paying for that choice. every day since. But you don’t need to comfort me; I brought this on myself.”Â
The streetlights cast my shadow and hisÂ
shadow in two different directions.Â
He stood up from the stone edge.Â
“Goodbye.”Â
I turned and walked forward.Â
After a few steps, his voice drifted from behind, lighter than the night breeze.Â
“Audrey.”Â
“Mhm?”Â
“In the next life, I won’t answer that call again.”Â
I didn’t turn back.Â
“Julian, there is no next life. As for the debtsÂ
of this life, you can pay them back slowly onÂ
your own.”

