The Ninety-Ninth Spring Goodbye
Vivian Grant lost her memory and forgot everything about me.
Her memory stopped in the year when she loved her ex-husband most.
No matter how the people around her tried to explain it, she still believed I was the third party who had come between them.
The doctors said her amnesia might be treatable, so I held on to that hope and refused to let go.
For three years, we got divorced and remarried over and over again.
We became the biggest joke in the city's elite circles. Some people even started betting on us.
They bet on when I would finally give up, and when Vivian would finally remember.
Then news of our eighth divorce hit the trending charts again.
Reporters rushed into the law firm with cameras on their shoulders.
They shoved microphones in my face, their questions full of provocation.
"Mr. Sterling, as a divorce attorney, how does it feel to have been divorced eight times yourself?"
The firm's sign was smashed. The commendation banners clients had given me were trampled underfoot.
Before I could respond, my supervisor fired me for damaging the profession's reputation.
"Julian Sterling, let me give you some advice. Have some self-respect. Stop clinging to Ms. Grant."
I clenched my trembling hands and suddenly felt exhausted.
They were right.
This time, I really should give up.
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