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Tears stread down Es’s face, each drop burning with the weight of her forgotten past. Her chest felt as though it was being ripped apart, and her heart thudded painfully against her ribcage. She couldn’t believe it—she had forgotten her mother’s face. How could she, of all people, have lost the mory of sothing so fundantal, so deeply tied to her identity?

The woman, the one who looked like her but wasn’t, stood there holding the younger Es. That mory, so vivid and so warm, stung her now. It was a bittersweet ache, a longing she hadn’t even realized she harbored. But just as Es felt like she was being swallowed by the crushing weight of her emotions, sothing unexpected happened.

A voice, cheerful yet laced with a sweet playfulness, cut through the haze like a lifeline. It was a voice Es knew well—a voice she had also forgotten. The sound of it stirred sothing deep inside her, sothing so familiar that it made her heart stop for a mont.

"You idiots! How dare you dump !" the voice scolded, though there was no real malice behind it. The playful tone was almost addictive, dripping with the kind of warmth that pulled Es out of her spiral of despair.

She blinked, trying to make sense of what she was hearing. Who was that? She knew this voice. But before she could fully grasp it, the figure of a man appeared, just a few steps away from the woman—her mother. He stood with his hands on his waist, glaring at Es’s mother with mock frustration, though a smirk danced at the corners of his lips. His hair caught the light, a shimring golden hue that reminded Es of sunlight, as if the very sun itself had painted his locks.

Without a second thought, the man rushed toward them, his movents fluid and filled with energy. He stopped beside Es’s mother, and with a teasing grin, he tugged at her ears. "You! Playing with your bio and your daughter, forgetting all about ? Do I not exist?" he huffed, though his eyes were filled with fondness, not anger.

Es’s breath caught in her throat. She hadn’t even realized she was holding it. The sight of him—the way his golden hair frad his face, his cheerful blue eyes that sparkled with mischief—it all felt so familiar. Yet, just monts ago, she hadn’t rembered any of it.

The younger Es, still cradled in her mother’s arms, bead at the sight of him. With a squeal of pure joy, she leapt from her mother’s grasp and jumped into the man’s arms. "Daddy!" the child cried, wrapping her tiny arms around his neck.

And then it hit Es like a crashing wave. Daddy. That voice, that face—it was her father.

The mory was so overwhelming that Es staggered, clutching her chest as fresh waves of pain surged through her. She could barely stand. How could I have forgotten him? The man she idolized, the one who had lifted her onto his shoulders when she was too small to see over the garden hedges. The man whose laughter had filled their ho with warmth.

She gasped, covering her eyes with trembling hands as tears stread down her cheeks. The realization was like a knife to her heart. She had forgotten both of them. Her mother. Her father.

How could that be possible?

Her mind raced, searching for answers in the chaos of her thoughts. She was Es Valhalle, known for her near-perfect mory—her photographic mory. Every detail, every face she saw, was etched into her mind like a permanent mark. It’s impossible. She had always been able to recall even the smallest things, the tiniest monts. So how could she, of all people, forget the faces of her own parents?

It didn’t make sense. It shouldn’t be possible. Yet here she was, standing in this vivid mory, realizing that the faces she thought she had known, the ones she believed were imprinted on her soul, had been wrong all along.

The weight of it was crushing.

How could I forget them? Es’s mind replayed the scene—her mother, so tender and loving, her father, so full of life and joy. The little girl who was her past self, so innocent and full of laughter. It felt like another lifeti, a world she had been ripped away from.

And as her tears fell, her body wracked with sobs, the thought gnawed at her.

"Ahhhhh".

Was it possible that she had buried these mories so deep, hidden them away because of the pain? Had she shielded herself from this heartache for so long that even her brilliant mory had failed her?

Her parents—their love, their faces—everything was slipping through her fingers like sand. She could see them now, clearer than ever before, but the pain of having forgotten them, even for a mont, was unbearable.

Es looked up at the mory of her father holding her younger self, his blue eyes twinkling as he kissed the top of her head. Her mother stood beside him, smiling, her hand resting gently on his shoulder.

How could I forget this? Es wondered, her heart breaking all over again. She had lost so much more than she ever realized. And now, the mory of them was both a gift and a curse, a reminder of everything she could never truly get back.

.....

Es’s eyelids fluttered open, the dim light filtering into her vision. A strange sense of disorientation settled over her, as though she were waking up in a place she had only vaguely known in dreams. Her mind felt clouded, weighed down by the haze of sleep, and yet the room around her—the hospital equipnt, the soft beep of machines—was unmistakably real.

Turning her head slightly, Es’s gaze landed on the window across the room, the faint glow of morning seeping through the curtains. It took her a few monts to realize she wasn’t alone. There, beside her bed, sat Ray. His figure was slouched in the chair, his head tilted at an awkward angle, fast asleep.

You are reading The Heiress's Comeback Chapter 154: [Volume 1] - 154- Forget on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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