Chapter 489 - 489 Forgetfulness
Alpha's Rejected Mate Returns as Queen
489 Forgetfulness
Benson Waltonâs POV:
She only âraised her headâ to look at me but didnât say anything.
I began to suspect that she had also gone mute, but she asked in a hoarse voice the next second, âA sandwich?â
Her voice was as sharp and piercing as glass sliding across a blackboard.
âYes.â I nodded. âAre you hungry? Or maybe a cup of blackcurrant soda?â
Julie fell silent again. Half a minute later, she began madly whipping the withered bushes around her. The flying leaves and branches suddenly splattered all over my body, but I didnât sense any evil intent from her, so I didnât stop her. I just quietly stepped to the side â who could stop a lunatic from going crazy? Why stop a lunatic from going crazy?
Julie was crazy for a while before she suddenly calmed down. A few seconds later, she replied with a completely different calmness, âIâve made a fool of myself, Sir. Although I donât know who you are, I donât think a crazy woman like me is worth your schemes.â
She was not crazy anymore, and she rejected me.
At this moment, she showed extraordinary wisdom and calmness, not like a lunatic at all. Perhaps she had a split personality or something, and her conscious personality was why she was still alive.
âI just want to provide some help,â I said.
Julie sneered. âNo one would come to an abandoned old house just to help a wandering madwoman. You can just state your purpose of visit.â
âYou donât look like a lunatic.â
âI donât look like one now, but I donât know when I will. Lunatics donât always go crazy, just like normal people arenât always normal.â
âOkay. Would you like a ham and egg sandwich?â
Julie stopped talking again. A few seconds later, she sat on the ground, and just like before, she sat in the bushes in a daze, ignoring everyone.
I didnât know if she was crazy or awake, so I went to the store and bought a sandwich and a soda. Julie was already gone when I returned, so I went to the old man to ask about her.
âI donât know. I havenât seen anyone in ten days to half a month.â The old man shook his head. âWhy donât you go into the house and look for her? Crazy Julie is very strange. Although she is a lunatic, she is very smart. She knows that there would be a rainy day before anyone else. Maybe itâs going to rain soon? Maybe she went into the house to take shelter from the rain?â
I searched the manor again and found her in a storage room. She was wrapped in a tattered blanket and hiding under a pile of torn cardboard boxes. I saw pustules and scars on her exposed joints. When it rained, these things would hurt and itch like ants gnawing on her heart.
âIf I had known it would rain, I would have brought you a hot tea.â I handed the bag over. âBut thereâs no ice in the soda. Maybe youâll like it?â
Julie looked at me for a few seconds, then reached out to take it. She then tore open the sandwichâs packaging and gobbled it up.
A series of muffled thunder sounded outside the window, and dark clouds soon covered the cloudless sky. After Julie swallowed the last bite of food, the light rain fell on the window sill, leaving dark marks on the gray cement board.
âHow long have you been living here?â I asked.
âI canât remember. Itâs been many years,â Julie answered.
âYour name is Julie?â
âMaybe. I donât really remember.â
âDo you still remember your last name?â
âIâve forgotten.â
âYouâve worked here before?â
When I asked this, Julie fell silent.
After a long while, she replied blankly, âMaybe... Maybe, but I donât really remember.â
I took a look at the real-time weather forecast. The situation was not very good. There would be rain on and off from today to tomorrow afternoon. Julie twitched slightly unconsciously. I guessed the disease of her joint must have brought her a lot of pain.
âThe rain will continue for another day and night, and you probably know better than me that this is not a warm enough place to live. If you want to, I can send you to the rescue station. There will be a blanket, hot soup, and some medicine that will help your joints.â
Julie refused without hesitation, âThatâs not a place for someone like me, sir. Iâd rather go to a mental hospital than a rescue station.â
âIt sounds like you donât have a good impression of the rescue station.â
âIf youâve ever been close to being used as an inflatable doll by homeless people and the volunteers donât care about it, youâll never want to set foot there.â
I fell silent.
Julie was in a strange state but was undoubtedly familiar with the manor. This house was a product of the last century, inheriting the gorgeous decoration style and bloated room structure of that time. The steep spiral staircases and cobweb-like corridors were not where a blind madwoman could come and go as she pleased.
I was pretty sure that Julie lived here before she went blind. It wasnât a short stay because of her familiarity with this place. She might have stayed here long or been one of the aboriginals.
Julieâs dirty clothes revealed a dark green collar full of stains. The collar was embroidered with a fine olive branch pattern with white thread. I had seen this pattern in the file about Laylaâs suicide case. It was the uniform of the servants in this manor back then.