Chapter 42 - What is Emilys mothers disease? (2/2)
I'm sorry to have to leave town at a time like this, but it's necessary, I'm in a happy time where I've found a place where good people have welcomed me, and it makes me glad to see.
But I won't part with them forever, and I would bring all these beautiful people to be by my side in the future.
”Yes, I made it,” I told Emily as I looked into her face.
When I said that Emily looked at her face for a moment watching a little sad, she stared at me firmly and then pulled me close to her.
She scared me right away, but when I realized I was already in her arms and she was covering me very tightly.
”Please don't forget about me while you're away, all right?” Emily said in a tearful voice as she hugged me.
It looks like I'm the ȧduŀt here. She's more childish than I thought. But I can imagine since I took her out of that prȯstɨtutė life and promised to help her somehow, of course, she would be grateful for that and wouldn't want me to forget her or anything, and of course, that would never happen.
”I would never forget you, stop saying stupid things,” I said in a slightly firm voice to put certainty in my sentence to reassure her.
After a while we kept hugging each other while Emily cried softly, I didn't think she would look like this after supporting me so much that I left town for safety, well, some people don't show their real feelings.
”Emily, can I take a look at your mother? And you tell me how the disease affects her body?” After we stopped hugging each other, I asked her, expecting a helpful response, because if it's a brain tumor, I can cure her somehow.
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After a while, Emily had told me all about how her mother behaved, she started talking a little wrong, and when she said that, I already thought about the possibility of CVA.
She also said that half of her body started to paralyze and then only got worse until she turned into a state where she couldn't say anything else and had a hard time eating. I didn't believe this could be a CVA since it was probably already dead because I don't think this world has medicine and treatment for it.
The possibility of a brain tumor not being ruled out since my grandmother had the same symptoms as Emily's mother, so I was getting a little happy to know that.
”Emily, I think I can cure your mother,” I said to Emily with a stuffed ċhėst, trying to look like a proud person.
But when I said that, Emily stood looking at me saying nothing.