Chapter 1526
The Day I Kissed An Older Man
Chapter 1526
Annie looked at her with pity and annoyance. âOf course I know youâll only feel better if you can vent it
out on Uncle Jeremy, but heâs still missing, Corinne! Francine and I are really worried that youâre going
to explode one day!â
Corinne thought of the man in the wheelchair who seemed to be having the time of his life. âWell, I
wonât have to keep all those emotions in for longâ¦â
Annie was a little taken aback. âWhat do you mean? Corinne, are you saying thatâ¦thereâs a lead on
Uncle Jeremyâs whereabouts?â
Before Corinne could answer her, David came in with âBryanâ, who immediately threw himself into
Corinneâs arms.
Corinne stroked his head and looked up at David. âHow did it go? Did you find out the reason for his
behavior change?â
David nodded. âYes, but I need to speak to you in private. Would you mind following me upstairs?â
Corinne instinctively feared for the worst, that her son indeed had some kind of serious mental health
problem.
Frowning, she passed âBryanâ to Annie and then got up to follow David upstairs.
David led her to his counseling office, where he normally had one-on-one counseling with his clients.
After sitting behind his desk, he waved her over. âHave a seat, Miss Corinne.â
Corinne pulled out her chair and sat down. âWhat is this about? Is my sonâs condition serious?â she
asked anxiously.
David shook his head. âAfter talking to your son, I concluded heâs just shy. So thereâs no need for him to
have a counseling session.â
âShy? Thatâs impossible. I gave birth to him and raised him, so how could I not know my own sonâs
personality?â thought Corinne.
After all, the real Bryan had always been mischievous. He could make friends with anyone he just
made. âBryanâ could never be called âshyâ.
What Corinne wanted to know was why âBryanâ had been acting so quiet and so timid for the past few
days.
âMaybe this therapist isnât as good as Annie says he is,â she thought with a frown.
David could tell what Corinne was thinking about him. He smiled and said,â Miss Corinne, do you not
agree with my diagnosis?â
âNo, Iâm not. I think your diagnosis of my son is wrong. Heâs always been an extrovert since he was
born, so his shyness for the past few days is unusual behavior, to say the least,â said Corinne gruffly.
âBut through our talks, I didnât find any signs of his extroversion. Plus, it wasnât some trauma that made
him feel like his home is an unfamiliar place, but itâs exactly because it is indeed an unfamiliar place to
him,â said David calmly.
Corinne had no idea what he was talking about.
âWhat do you mean? How can he suddenly feel like his home is unfamiliar when he lived there all his
life? Did he have a memory loss or something?â
At the words âmemory lossâ, Corinneâs tone became vehement.
David was perplexed, too. There was just something he could not figure out.
âMiss Corinne, I didnât mean that. Uh⦠What I meant is⦠Is there a possibility that the kid downstairs
isnât your real son at all?â
During his talk with âBryanâ, he discovered a lot of contradictory points. It was as if the boy was trying to
hide something from him. Nonetheless, the boyâs mental health was under no threat whatsoever.
Davidâs question shocked Corinne.