Chapter 153
Married at First Sight
Serenity nearly burst into an outrage when Chelsea said that in her face. Still, Serenity had class and did not slam the table in front of Chelsea.
She unhurriedly went behind the cash register and sat down before looking Chelsea in the eye and bombarding her with questions, âChelsea , you mentioned my sister hit my brotherâinâlaw? Did you witness it? Did my sister start it? Did my brotherâinâlaw fight back? How bad was he beaten? Was he hospitalized?â Chelsea replied shamelessly, âSo what if Hank started it? Your sister ought to be taught a lesson, and Hank wanted to discipline her the other day. However, he didnât want to make your sister look bad since you came over with your husband. We even talked him out of punishing your sister.
âAny man wouldâve slapped their wives for all the things your sister had done. Your sister deserved a beating for her mistakes. She had the audacity to hit Hank back until he was black and blue. He couldnât bring himself to go home.
âSerenity, you might be younger than your sister, but youâre married and can stand on your own. Since youâre Libertyâs family, we must discuss the matter with you. You should get your sister to come to our place and apologize to Hank, bearing gifts. She should also have it in writing that sheâll never raise a hand against Hank before taking him home.â
Chelseaâs statement was something else. It was a real eye âopener for Serenity and Jasmine.
Serenity learned that Chelsea was ridiculous when her sister confided in her. Chelseaâs absurdity right now seemed to take the cake.
She was about to blow up.
The mother and daughter did not give Serenity a chance to speak as Mrs. Brown took over right after Chelsea was done talking. âSerenity, Chelsea is fair to say that. Show me a family whose wife doesnât go to work or cook.
âHank has to work, and his schedule can be busy too. After going full steam on work in the morning, he comes home to no lunch on the table. He was expected to make his own lunch too. Itâs like heâs single and has no wife.
âHank pays for the mortgage and household expenses while your sister sits around the house and does nothing except caring for the child. Sonny is an easy kid. Your sister fools around all day at home, yet she doesnât know how lucky she is. She even fought with Hank.
âItâs hard enough that Hank is under a lot of pressure. Itâs fine if she canât help with taking the burden off him, but she refuses to cook and leaves Hank hungry. Of course, Hankâs going to be angry.
Anybody will be, if they were in his place. Going halves was the last resort. Your sister squanders money. She fiddled away over a thousand bucks in one day. Does she think Hankâs money grows on trees?
âFor a family of three , fifty bucks for groceries is good enough, your sister would only need a thousand and five hundred dollars a month. Still, Hank gives her three thousand bucks every month. She has the cheek to fuss over going halves.
âShe has the means to earn her own money. Donât mooch off Hank. Your sister might not care for Hank, but we, parents, do. Whatâs the point of your sisterâs education? She canât help with the financial burden either. Look at Chelsea. She has three kids, but she works to help with the family.
âYour sister refuses to go to work because she wants to take care of the child. She insists Hank pay for her upkeep. Is she Hankâs daughter? Why should Hank be her bread and butter? Fine, so Hank pays for her living expenses, but she canât even attend to Hankâs needs or cook for him. Does that look like a wife to you?
âWe have been nothing but kind and patient with your sister. Do you think anybody else would be tolerant toward your sister? They wouldâve divorced her and kicked your sister out.â
Mrs. Brownâs words siung harder than Chelseaâs.
Jasmine picked up a broom, pretending to sweep around the place. In fact, she was waiting to get a cue from her best friend to sweep the absurd mother and daughter out of here.
They were all women here. They should be supporting one another instead of giving each other a hard time.
Boiling with rage, Serenity scowled and blurted coldly,â Mrs. Brown, do you think itâs easy caring for a child since you have experience caring for Chelseaâs kids? Do you think you can work with a twoâyearâ
old in tow?
âChelsea has three children, but you and Mr. Brown are handsâon with the kids. All she did was pop the babies out. My sister gave you a grandson that bore your last name, but you wouldnât help out as grandparents. Itâs funny that you compare Chelsea with my sister.
âMy sister can go to work and earn an income if you can help look after Sonny. My sister had a higher income than my brotherâinâlaw before they got married.â