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The Art of Pursuing: The Unyielding Ex-wife-Chapter 363: A Letter from Her
Munni remembers that shortly after meeting Yisen, he graduated and went to university.
Initially, Mr. Xu, Xu Haotian, suggested that he study abroad, but since he was the only child in the family, Grandma Xu was not comfortable letting him go abroad alone, so Yisen stayed in the country.
In the end, he attended a prestigious private university in G City.
Munni couldn’t see Yisen as frequently as she did when he was in high school, and at that time, writing letters was particularly popular, so she would write a letter to Yisen’s school almost every week.
She sent countless letters but never received any reply from Yisen. She always thought that perhaps Yisen didn’t like her and threw away the letters she wrote.
Unexpectedly... he actually kept them all?
Munni reached out and opened one of the letters...
[Dear Yisen,
It’s raining outside today, and after school, I couldn’t stop thinking about you, so I couldn’t help but pick up a pen and write you another letter.
Aunt Bai said you would return this weekend to visit them. To see you, I’ve already found an excuse to visit your house and I’m eagerly hoping the weekend will come sooner.
I haven’t seen you for three weeks, and I miss you. Do you miss me? How have the past three weeks been at school? Is the study pressure intense? Are you eating well?
By the way, the results of the monthly exam came out the day before yesterday, and my scores were better than I imagined. Dad is very pleased with the scores I received and rewarded me with a new violin.
I’ve been diligently practicing the violin, looking forward to the day we can play a piece together.
...]
She could even recall the scene from years ago, when she sat at her desk, earnestly writing letters to Yisen.
The letter was one and a half pages long, and when Munni flipped to the second page to finish reading, she discovered Yisen’s reply right after her content...
[School is going well, the study pressure isn’t high, and I’m eating well. Lastly, congratulations on your excellent grades; I’m very much looking forward to hearing you play the violin.]
Munni was somewhat surprised by Yisen’s reply at the end of the letter. She placed the letter back into the envelope, took out another letter from the box, and quickly browsed through it. Sure enough, there was Yisen’s reply at the end, just like the previous letter.
Compared to Munni’s lengthy messages, each of Yisen’s replies was very concise, yet even so, it implied that he had earnestly read through her letters.
Munni felt as if she had discovered a tremendous secret, a sense of surprise and joy sprouting in her heart.
She sat on the sofa and opened every letter in the box, paying special attention to Yisen’s replies.
After finishing the first set of letters, she neatly stored them back in the box, walked to the book wall, climbed the ladder to put the box back in its place, and then took down the second and third sets.
Just like the first set, the box contained all the letters Munni had sent to Yisen.
When Munni opened and quickly went through all three boxes of letters, the sun outside was gradually setting. She unknowingly spent most of the day in the study.
She placed the second and third sets back on the top shelf of the bookcase, as if she had never discovered or opened them.
Munni climbed down from the ladder, stretched as she went downstairs, and found that the cleaning lady had already finished tidying up and left. There was a sticky note left on the refrigerator...







