Chapter overview: Chapter 1267 from No More Mrs. Nice Wife (Eleanor)
In this standout chapter of the Romance novel No More Mrs. Nice Wife (Eleanor), Harper Laine introduces new challenges, powerful emotions, and major plot progress that captivate readers from beginning to end.
Joy was frustrated. "How can it not be important? The pain was real! Even if he was trapped at the time and had to play along to keep Vanessa on the hook, that's no excuse for how he neglected you. There were times, before Vanessa showed up, when you two were happy together."
Eleanor rested her chin on her hand and said softly, "The way things are now is fine. He has his path, and I have my life to live. You only dig through old misunderstandings if you're trying to fix things, and I'm not interested in that anymore."
Joy looked at her friend and suddenly understood. She leaned in closer. "Ellie, have you really… let it go?"
She saw it in her friend's eyes. It wasn't out of anger or resentment, but a state of genuine release.
"Right now, I just want to live my life well, focus on my work and Evelyn, and be able to have tea and chat with you like this. I'm already very content," Eleanor said, a sincere smile gracing her lips.
Seeing the light in Eleanor's eyes, Joy finally understood. Eleanor was no longer shrouded by the shadows of the past. In her new life, Ian had become a passerby.
Even though she had loved him so much.
"Alright," Joy said, raising her teacup. "Then here's to your new life. Box up all the old drama and all the old guys and dump it at the curb!"
Eleanor smiled and clinked her cup against Joy's. "Cheers."
Still, Joy couldn't quite let it go. In a tone that was half complaint, half jest, she said, "If it were up to me, I'd make Ian chase you all over again, just like you once loved him. Let him get a taste of what it's like to bare his soul and never feel sure of you, only for you to shut him down in the end. Then he'd know what heartache feels like."
Eleanor couldn't help but laugh at that. She shook her head with a hint of amusement. "My time and energy are too precious to waste on things like revenge."
Joy huffed. "If it were me, I wouldn't let it slide so easily."
But she was truly happy that her friend had moved on.
"You're right. You're the bigger person, Dr. Sutton," Joy said with a smile.
Eleanor held her teacup and gazed out at the bustling street. "Life is short. You should spend it doing things you love."



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