Chapter 1021
Married at First Sight
âSerenity, Liberty, you came back just in time. Whatâs this about? Iâm telling you, the moment you left this house and this town, the house and fields belonged to us.
âMy son left this house for us. The property belongs to us, so we can give it to whoever we want, but we wonât give it to you since youâre married into other families.â
Old Mrs. Hunt felt slightly guilty when she saw the sisters bringing many people over. When she was in the hospital, she had heard about how incredible Serenity had become. Now, she also knew that Serenity soared to the top and became the missus of a wealthy family.
This made Old Mrs. Hunt a little guilty. After all, she and her husband had forcibly occupied the house.
Back then, taking advantage of the fact that the sisters were still underage and incapable, she even kicked them out.
Serenity was only about twelve years old when she and her sister were booted out.
After Serenity and Liberty were thrown out of the house, they would return to the town in the first few years to visit their parentsâ graves. They also tried to live in their parentsâ house again but were beaten and scolded by their grandparents with thick canes. The sisters were hit so hard that they did not dare return for a few years.
The two parties lost contact after that. It was not until Liberty was getting married did her grandparents receive the news and shamelessly ask the Browns for a betrothal gift of 300,000 dollars. Even so, Liberty refused and disallowed the Browns from fulfilling the request. She also shooed her grandparents away.
Following that, there was no news from their grandparents for about three more years.
When Old Mrs. Hunt fell ill, nobody wanted to pay for the medical expenses, so they remembered Serenity and Liberty. They thought the sisters were doing well, so they reconnected with them.
Old Mrs. Hunt knew they had gone too far and that the people in town could not stand them. That said, those people did not dare offend her because she was feisty, shameless, and immoral.
Now that her interests were involved, Old Mrs. Hunt unleashed her shamelessness to the fullest again.
âIâve never seen married daughters returning to their parentsâ home to fight for a house,â Old Mrs. Hunt muttered.
When she was coldly stared at by Zachary, she stopped yelling and mumbled softly instead.
She even stuck out her chest to boost her confidence. She was not afraid.
So what if Serenityâs husband was the eldest son of the richest family? Could he take her house away by force?
In any case, this was Scottâs house. Scott was Old Mrs, Huntâs son, and it was only right for the mother to inherit her sonâs property.
âGrandmom, tell me, who did my parents adopt as their son when they were still around? You were shouting that this is your grandsonâs house. Which grandson of yours owns this place?
âMy sister and I have the right to inherit our parentsâ house. Weâll fight for it if itâs ours and we donât want any of it if itâs not, but we wonât yield if it belongs to us!â Serenity coldly refuted Old Mrs. Hunt.
She even glanced at the others before approaching the truck driver and ordering, âMr. Driver, dump this truck of bricks there. Thereâs an open space there.â
She instructed the truck driver to dump the bricks on the empty spot to the right of the entrance, which was also her familyâs place.
When Serenity and Libertyâs parents were still alive, they told the sisters to buy more housing land. The sisters would build two houses on the land when they grew up, so they could be neighbors who lived together. By having each otherâs company, they could also support each other and would not be bullied by the townspeople.
âYouâre not allowed to dump them here. Youâre not allowed toâthis is my house!â
Old Mrs. Hunt saw what was happening and immediately rushed over. She stood in the middle of the open space and spread her arms as she shouted, âWhich one of you dare dump those bricks here?
Crush me here if you dare!â
Zachary waved his hand.
Following that, two bodyguards walked over and held Old Mrs. Hunt on each side. They took her away.
âWhat are you doing? What are you doing? Let go of me!â
Old Mrs. Hunt struggled desperately.