The Ex-Husband’s Revenge By Dragonsky Chapter 56
The Ex-Husband's Revenge
The Ex-Husbandâs Revenge By Dragonsky Chapter 56 Jenson felt as if he was struck by a bolt from the blue. â
That canât be! How could you say that you canât do anything when you predicted in advance that my gr andfather was going to vomit blood!â
âIf you asked me to treat him at the beginning, I can say for certain that Iâm confident of curing his illnes s. But now that thereâs so many other factors at play, his condition has worsened and I donât have a sim ilar level of confidence,â Leon lamented. He said it not because he wanted the old man to die, but because he genuinely did not feel confident in turning
the situation around.
Jenson was thunderstruck by what he heard, and his heart was filled with so much regret that he wante d to just slap himself a couple of times.
He knew that time was of the essence when it came to saving a personâs life, and such a golden opport unity would not present itself anymore once the best chance passed!
Everything turned out the way it did because he distrusted Leonâs medical skills at the beginning and allowed Hilmar to provide the incorrect treatment. As a result, his grandfatherâs condition worsened and he missed the best chance at saving the old man.
If something did happen to his grandfather, then the biggest responsibility fell on Jenson, for one could
almost say that he killed his grandfather himself!
It was a pity that his realization came too late!
âSir, Iâm sorry for questioning your medical skills earlier. I shouldnât have done that. Iâd like to sincerely a pologize to you for that⦠Iâm sure youâll have a way with the kind of medical skills you have, so Iâm beg ging you! Please think of a way! Iâm willing to pay you no matter how high your price is!â
Jenson bowed and apologized profusely with the utmost sincerity.
There was no other option for him and he was not going to give up so easily because Leon was his only hope.
âItâs not about money. Iâm not confidentâ¦â Leon said helplessly.
âNot confident? This means you have a way, but itâs just that the success rate isnât high. Am I understanding that correctly?â Jensonâs eyes lit up, and a hopeful glim mer rekindled in his eyes.
âYou can put it that way.â
Leon nodded and did not deny it.
âThen whatâs the success rate?â Jenson asked cautiously.
âAbout sixty or seventy percent,â Leon said truthfully.
âSixty or seventy percent? And you say youâre not confident?â Jensonâs mind went blank and he had th e sudden urge to facepalm.
If a famous doctor like Hilmar could not do anything about his grandfatherâs condition, then the questio n of a success rate did not even exist because there was never a solution, to begin with.
Even if Grahamâthe most wellârespected master of alternative medicine in Springfield Cityâ
came in person, he might only be 30 to 40 percent confident of turning the situation around.
Leon, on the other hand, was about 60 to 70 percent confident! That was already high enough!
âYou donât understand! To me, being ninety percent confident is the same as being zero percent confident!â L eon said sternly.
He was 90 percent confident when treating Serena the previous night, and in his opinion, that was the s ame as being 100 percent confident. Such a high level of confidence meant that he had good a grasp of the patientâs condition and the various changes that would happen during treatment.
Being only 60 to 70 percent confident meant that he had great concerns.
After all, he was not a regular doctor, and he could not be compared to Graham, the doyen of alternative Graham is a wellâknown master of medicine, and his reputation was so great that if any patient dies in his hands, everyone would think that the patientâs condition was too serious to be cured. No one would blame Graham for it.
Leon, on the other hand, was different. If he killed a patient, said patientâs family would definitely call him a quack and he would even have to pay for it with h Even if the deceasedâs family did not blame him, he still had to bear the corresponding legal responsibility for practicing medicine without a license!
All in all, treating a disease and saving someoneâs life were two different things. In the absence of absolute certainty, Leon could not treat others on a whim, because the death of a patient in his hands would leave him with a bad