Craving 15 - The 100th Attempt to Win Her Back - NovelsTime

The 100th Attempt to Win Her Back

Craving 15

Author: NovelDrama.Org
updatedAt: 2025-11-02

“Wait! Don’te over just yet. Let me take some photos and

videos first.”

The man said while taking out his phone and aiming it at

Harriet. “Ellsworth’s loyalist simp finally decides to give up?

“I gotta show this to him.”

Shortly after, he sent Ellsworth the photos and videos without

hesitation.

***

At Auburn Heights.

Under Patsy’s watch, Ellsworth came home at 7:00 p.m.

He was working in the study.

Just then, his phone on the desk dinged a few times. He picked

it up and saw several WhatsApp messages.

His expression darkened the second he saw the photos.

He went back before dark, and Harriet was having fun out

there in the bar?

Perhaps worried the photos weren’t clean enough, his friend

also sent him a few clips of Harriet ying dice games with

several college boys.

In those videos, she yed stiffly, her bright smileced with

awkwardness. Staring at her, Ellsworth remained motionless,

his gaze turning icy.

Having fun with college boys? Good for her.

He called her right away.

In the next second, he heard a robotic voice-her phone was

turned off.

He called her a bunch more times, but nothing changed.

In a fit of anger, he tossed his phone away.

He was no longer in the mood to work.

Irritated, he stood up and walked over to the window. The

courtyard was so quiet, showing no sign of hering back at

all.

Then he fished out the cigarette case from his pocket, held a

cigarette between his lips, and lit it.

He took a deep drag and exhaled heavily, the sound of his

breath loud.

Rooted by the window, he only moved when the familiar white

car reappeared in the courtyard.

Downstairs, Harriet got out of the car.

She sniffed her clothes and smelled tobo and wine. With a

quick p, she tried to air out the stench. Only then did she

head inside.

She had wanted toe back earlier, but Kathie was having so

much fun.

After walking inside, she heard nothing. Perhaps everyone had

gone to bed.

She went upstairs on tiptoe. Just as she opened the door to the

guest room, Ellsworth’s indifferent voice rang out. “Where did

you go? Why didn’t you answer your phone?”

Startled, Harriet looked over. “Gosh, you haven’t slept yet? You

scared me.”

She didn’t answer Ellsworth’s questions. He looked at her

scrutinizingly while keeping his hands in his pockets.

Under his gaze, she somehow felt guilty.

He had never cared about her.

Avoiding meeting his eyes, she exined, “My phone died. Kat’s

back from the business trip, so I went to dinner with her.””

Ellsworth scoffed, “For six hours?”

Hearing this, she looked up at him.

Apparently, he knew where she had been.

After remaining silent for a while, she said, “I’m entitled to have

friends and my own life.”

Looking down at her, he said indifferently, “We haven’t got a

divorce yet. And you can no longer keep up the act?”

The act?

What act had she ever put on?

Over the past three years, this was her first night out. He just

happened toe home earlier than her, and her phone just

happened to run out of battery tonight.

For the past three years, she had endured endless nights alone.

She looked at him, not arguing.

After all, it was the path she had chosen.

She just reminded him, her voice t, “Ellsworth, we’re about to

get a divorce.”

He caught her drift effortlessly. She was saying, “Don’t try to

control me. You don’t get to.”

He stared at her icily.

Sensing his silence, she turned around to wash up in the

bathroom. Just then, he grabbed her wrist. “You demanded to

marry me, and now, you call for a divorce. Who gave you the

nerve to disrespect my family like this?”

Novel