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The Old Me 9

The Old Me 9

Chapter 9 

After dialing the number, a cold, mechanical female voice came through the receiver. 

“Sorry, the number you have dialed is not in service…” 

Hearing this, the father and son stood frozen in place. 

Timothy blinked his large, grape-like eyes at Frederick and asked, “Dad, did you dial the wrong number?” 

Frederick looked at the call log, at the contact labeled ‘Abigail,’ and confirmed he hadn’t made a mistake. 

He called again, but it still showed the number was not in service. 

Frederick frowned slightly, put down his phone, and raised his hand to call the butler over. 

“Did Abigail say where she was going before she left?” 

The butler hesitated for a long time before finally taking a note out of his pocket. 

“Mrs. Kemp didn’t say where she was going. After she left, I found this note from Mrs. Kemp on the dining table.” 

Frederick took the note, and when he saw the words on it, his face turned cold, but there was no sign of guilt from having a secret exposed. 

In that instant, he suddenly understood why Abigail had changed so much lately. 

Timothy craned his neck to look, and when he saw what was written on the note, his eyes widened in shock. 

“Dad, does Mom not want us anymore?” 

Frederick crumpled the note into a ball and tossed it aside. 

“Of course not. How could your mother bear to leave us? She’s just been in a bad mood lately and went out to clear her mind. She’ll be back in a while.” 

Whether he was comforting his son or trying to convince himself, as he spoke, his eyes unconsciously drifted toward the entryway, his thoughts complicated. 

Hearing his father’s words, Timothy thought about it seriously and felt it made sense. 

After all, he was his mother’s son. How could she possibly not want him? 

As he thought about it, Timothy tugged at Frederick and asked, “Dad, then when will Mom come back?” 

Frederick gently patted his son’s soft hair and said with certainty, “She’ll be back very soon. She can’t bear to be away from us for long.” 

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Chapter 9 

“Then can we still go camping with Shannon tomorrow?” 

“Yes, we can.” 

288 Vouchers 

After Frederick’s reassuring answer, Timothy couldn’t help but cheer, “That’s great! Then I’ll go to bed early tonight so I can spend more time with Shannon before Mom comes back.” 

With that, he jumped off the sofa and followed the butler upstairs to sleep. 

After Timothy left, Frederick sat on the sofa, opened WhatsApp, and sent Abigail a message in their chat. 

“When are you coming back? I’ll take Timothy to pick you up.” 

The message was sent successfully, and Frederick unconsciously breathed a sigh of relief, even more convinced that Abigail was just sulking. 

Otherwise, why would she only cancel her phone number but not block him on WhatsApp? 

Wasn’t she just leaving a way out, waiting for him to coax her? 

Thinking of this, Frederick’s uneasiness faded. He put away his phone and went back to the bedroom to rest. 

Neither father nor son took Abigail’s note seriously. 

Frederick was convinced that Abigail was just angry because he had deceived her. 

She definitely couldn’t bear to leave them. 

Once Abigail calmed down, she would come back on her own. 

At the same time, far from San Francisco, in London. 

Abigail and Jacob landed safely. 

As they got off the plane, Jacob held Abigail’s hand and led her out of the airport. 

Abigail lowered her eyes to look at their intertwined hands, and her heart gradually settled. 

His large, well-defined hand completely enveloped hers, giving her a strong sense of security, as if she had returned to ten years ago, during the passionate days of their romance. 

Seeing the smile on Abigail’s lips, Jacob’s features softened, and he held her hand even tighter. 

After leaving the airport and getting into the car, Jacob handed Abigail a new phone. 

“Since you’ve decided to start over, forget everything from the past.” 

“With your new identity, let’s fall in love all over again. This time, you don’t have to compromise for anyone. Just be yourself.” 

Abigail had already thrown her old phone away at the airport. 

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14:31 

288 Vouchers 

Chapter 9 

She took the new phone, looked at the brand-new account and contacts inside, and held Jacob’s hand tightly. 

“Alright, let’s start over.” 

This time, she would not wrong herself for anyone. 

Meanwhile. 

Oceancrest Estates. 

The next morning, after getting up, Frederick picked up his phone from beside the pillow and opened WhatsApp. 

There were only work messages in the chat, nothing else. 

The message he sent to Abigail sat alone in the chat, with no reply. 

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The Old Me

The Old Me

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Status: Ongoing Type:
The Old Me Summary & Review: The Old Me

Abigail Briggs had been married to Frederick Kemp for eight long years. On the outside, their marriage seemed peaceful — even ideal — but beneath that calm surface lay years of quiet sacrifice and loneliness. Abigail had built her entire world around Frederick and their young son, Timothy, believing that patience, obedience, and unconditional love would eventually win her husband’s affection. Yet, deep down, she knew something had always been missing — Frederick’s heart had never truly belonged to her.

Throughout their marriage, Abigail secretly followed Frederick’s ex-girlfriend, Shannon Perez, on Instagram. Shannon was the woman Frederick once loved deeply but lost because of his mother’s disapproval. One ordinary day, as Abigail scrolled through Shannon’s social media feed, she stumbled upon something that shattered her calm exterior — a photo of Frederick’s will.

In bold letters, it read: “I bequeath all of my property to Shannon Perez.”

For a long, paralyzing moment, Abigail couldn’t breathe. The world around her froze. Why would her husband, who had shared eight years of marriage and a child with her, leave everything he owned to another woman — his ex-lover?

The truth behind Frederick’s decision came to light soon after. Inside his office at Beacon Law Firm, his friend Benson Acosta questioned him about the will. “Fred, why are you leaving everything to Shannon? What about Abigail?”

Frederick, in his usual calm and emotionless tone, explained that their son, Timothy, would take care of Abigail after his death. He described Abigail as a “gentle woman” who had never raised her voice, implying she wouldn’t be angry even if she discovered the truth.

When Benson asked why Frederick didn’t just divorce Abigail and reunite with Shannon, Frederick fell silent. After a long pause, he said something that revealed the cold reality of his heart: Shannon was meant for romance, not marriage. Abigail, on the other hand, was suitable for the role of a lifelong companion — dependable, calm, and unexciting. “At the end of my life,” he said quietly, “I want Abigail by my side.”

What Frederick didn’t know was that Abigail had been standing outside his office door, holding a lunchbox of his favorite smoked beef ribs. She had overheard every word.

But instead of bursting into the room in anger or tears, Abigail remained composed. True to her gentle nature, she simply dropped the food into a trash can and walked away. Her steps were steady, but her heart felt heavier than ever.

For the first time, she didn’t want to go home. She got into a taxi, handed the driver three hundred dollars, and told him to “just go anywhere.”

As the city lights blurred past the window, Abigail reflected on her life and the choices that had led her here. Her marriage to Frederick had always been a business arrangement. It wasn’t built on love or passion, but on convenience and family expectations. She had entered the marriage hoping that her devotion might someday change things.

But love, she realized, cannot be earned through silence.

After their wedding, Abigail learned that Frederick had never truly moved on from Shannon. In time, she uncovered more details about their past — how Frederick and Shannon had once been deeply in love for five years, separated not by lack of affection but by his mother’s interference.

Mariana Kemp, Frederick’s mother, had despised Shannon for her poor background and family history. Shannon’s father was an alcoholic, and her mother had remarried and left her behind. Worse, Shannon suffered from a hereditary illness — hemolytic anemia. Mariana found this completely unacceptable. She begged Shannon to leave Frederick and even threatened suicide to make her point.

In the end, Shannon walked away. And Frederick, though heartbroken, obeyed his parents and married Abigail instead.

Over the years, Abigail fulfilled every duty expected of her. She cared for Timothy, managed the house, respected her in-laws, and stayed out of Frederick’s personal matters. She never complained, never argued, never demanded more. She believed that her patience and hard work would eventually earn her husband’s respect and affection.

But she was wrong. Her silence wasn’t seen as strength — it was taken as weakness. Her endurance didn’t earn her respect — it earned her contempt.

When she finally returned home that evening, it was already past 9:00 p.m. Inside, Frederick was helping Timothy with his homework, his usual expression serious and focused. Without even looking up, he scolded her gently: “Why didn’t you answer my call this afternoon? Timothy waited two hours for you.”

Timothy, mirroring his father’s tone, added coldly, “Mom, you do nothing at home every day. How could you forget to pick me up?”

In the past, Abigail would have immediately apologized, lowering her head and blaming herself. But this time, something inside her had shifted.

She remembered Shannon’s Instagram post from a few days ago — a cheerful photo at an amusement park where Timothy was chatting with Shannon affectionately. It was a reminder of how close her own son felt to the woman her husband still loved.

So instead of apologizing, Abigail said calmly, “I’m going back to work. From tomorrow, the housekeeper will pick Timothy up.”

Both Frederick and Timothy were stunned. Frederick asked, “Why do you suddenly want to go back to work?”

Abigail didn’t flinch. “Nothing major. Timothy’s growing up, and I want a life of my own.”

She left the room before anyone could say another word.

In her bedroom, she opened the bottom drawer of her nightstand and pulled out a small notebook — one she hadn’t touched in years. Inside were five handwritten entries — five wishes she had written down before her marriage but never fulfilled. As she read them, tears welled in her eyes.

She realized she had spent her entire adult life living for others — for her husband, her son, and her in-laws — but never once for herself.

That night, as the lights of Oceancrest Estates shimmered outside her window, Abigail made a silent promise.

She was done being the quiet, obedient wife. Done living in the shadow of another woman.

The woman who once defined herself as Frederick’s wife — the “gentle” and “harmless” Abigail — no longer existed.

For the first time, she wanted to rediscover herself — to become someone new. Someone free.

And though she didn’t say it out loud, her heart whispered the words that marked the end of one chapter and the beginning of another:

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