Chapter 1444
He smirked defiantly, “Easy, second cousin!”
Robin’s face turned a shade of iron, “Get the hell out of my car!”
Elbert gripped the seatbelt, rebellion etched on his face, “Make me!”
Just as Robin was about to kick him, Bernard, sitting in the backseat with eyes that captured the soul, glanced
toward the front. “Dear cousins, your cousin-in-law is pregnant. Please focus on driving and cut out the bickering.”
It was a simple, serene statement that silenced the impending squabble between the two childish fools. Elbert
quieted because of Bernard, and Robin, because of Eleanor’s words, each nursing their own woes.
Ultimately, acknowledging that Eleanor was with child, Robin slowed down the car, suppressing the urge to throttle
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇtElbert, and drove in silence to the chapel.
At this moment, Katharine knelt before the altar, her head bowed in prayer. Every afternoon, she would attend the
pastor’s sermon, finding solace in the scriptures as she thought of Caleb, the incense of the chapel calming her
grief.
But each night, she was awakened by dreams of Caleb. The pain of losing a loved one was a heart-wrenching agony
not easily forgotten. Often, Katharine would sit by the window, gazing at the moon, lost in thought all through the
night.
She stared at the stars, starting to believe that the souls of the departed become celestial bodies, shining down on
those they wished to watch over. She felt certain that the stars she could see were Caleb’s essence; otherwise, why
would they always catch her eye?
It was with this self-deception that she managed to keep living, convincing herself that Caleb would return. And
indeed, before long, he appeared.
Katharine remembered praying for Caleb, eyes closed, when a clear and untainted voice reached her ears.
The man questioned the pastor, “The Good Book says, ‘To be in the world, but not of it, which should spare me
worldly troubles. Why then, since I’ve come to faith, am I still restless?”
The pastor replied, “It must be an earthly bond that’s unsettled, causing you to seek escape but finding none.”
“And is there a way to resolve this?”
“Only through personal revelation.”
“Revelation?”
“What kind of revelation?”
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As he spoke, the man’s gaze fell upon Katharine, her face wet with tears, looking back at him. Her eyes, brimming
with hurt and tears, struck him like lightning, piercing his heart.
In an instant, the pastor’s voice faded away, and silence enveloped him, his vision clearing to see only the woman
kneeling, silently weeping.
It wasn’t until she rose from the pew, her frail body trembling as she approached him, that he came back to reality.
She reached out, her fingers trembling as they touched his face.
He stepped back, reminding her that he was a lay disciple, bound for a spiritual path, and she shouldn’t touch him.
But Katharine, convinced that Caleb had returned, threw herself into his arms in front of the altar.
Crying out for Caleb, she begged him never to leave her again. So profound was her longing that she mistook the
lay disciple Zephyr for Caleb.
Zephyr, with downcast eyes, felt a vague familiarity with Katharine but pushed her away, insisting she was
mistaken.