Given the current situation, old man, what you just said is really easy to misunderstand.
The surroundings were still quiet, and in that moment, facing Cass's statement, Fu Qian couldn't help roasting him inwardly.
If you run through the three wishes completed so far, it's not hard to see that although they look very disconnected, there's still a thread tying them together.
For example, the question of why he didn't show up for that promised meeting with Lucy.
Cardon had already said he was perfectly willing and had the time, but in the end he just didn't go.
And then the experience at the inn just now—though it didn't directly explain that point, it obviously, with very high probability, took place at night.
And Cardon had also said that his decades-long insomnia started from the day he met Lucy.
That night when Mr. Dickens felt unwell, could the reason Cardon noticed something was wrong have been simply because he wasn't asleep?
