Chapter 1645
Married at First Sight
âWill you and my brothers not seek justice if I were together with Remy and got bullied by the Johnsons?â
Elisa returned a question to her mother.
âBesides, Iâm not someone whoâs easily bullied. It has always been me bullying other people.â
Mrs. Stone choked for a moment and said, âYou can act recklessly in Wiltspoon, and no one will dare to do anything to you. Thatâs because you have the huge Stone Group behind your back. Clive can back you up and clean up your mess.
âIf you were to be with Remy, youâd live in Annenburg. Whoâll dote on you and be your shoulder to rely on if you move to a faraway place after marriage?â
Elisa argued her case. âRemyâs job is based in Wiltspoon, and he lives here longâterm. Iâll be living in Wiltspoon in the future with him as well. Even if we must return to Annenburg, itâll only be during the festive seasons to accompany his parents.
âWhat trouble can arise from that? Besides, youâre aware of what type of family the Johnsons are. The Johnsons are openâminded. They wonât bully their daughterâinâlaw.â
Mrs. Stone said, âWhich of the Johnsonsâ daughtersâinâlaw are easy to deal with? All of them have people backing them.â
The eldest Johnson missus was a Lafayette from Meadspring while the second was an heiress of a wealthy family. The fourth was most likely the genius doctorâs student. All of them could not be offended.
âDonât I have a backing as well? Is Stone Group not going to be my backing if I get married and move to a faraway place? When I return, will the doors of the Stonesâ house not open for me anymore?â
Mrs. Stone was reduced to silence by her daughterâs retorts but also furious.
âIf youâre worried about me marrying into a family like the Johnsons, I think you can just make me stay by your side and become an unmarried woman forever. Donât even complain about me not getting married despite reaching thirty years old in the future.â
Mrs. Stone was speechless.
âYou little brat. Canât you be considerate of how much Iâll miss you? Everything I said boils down to one point. I canât bear you moving to somewhere far after getting married. I only have one daughter. If you marry someone who lives far away, Iâll have to sit in the airplane for several hours whenever I want to meet you.â
âRemyâs new house is just beside ours. You wonât have to take a fewâhour flight. You can meet me in just two to three minutes of walking. I can even go home and have meals with you every day.
Mrs. Stone said, âRemy will eventually have to return to Annenburg.â
âItâs normal to return for some time during festive seasons. You canât possibly refuse to let me visit the Johnsons for my entire life, right? Even if I marry someone from Wiltspoon, Iâll still live with my inâlaws most of the time after marriage. If so, isnât it better if I get married to Remy? We can even be neighbors.
âIâll be able to come over to eat as soon as you start cooking. How convenient is that?
âMy sisterâinâlaw married into a family thatâs close enough, right? However, doesnât Clive have to accompany Alice back to her home every festive season? The same logic applies. If I get married to Remy and become the Johnsonsâ daughterâinâlaw, shouldnât I accompany my husband back to visit his family during the holidays?â
Mrs. Stone was rendered speechless.
âDriver, stop the car!â
Mrs. Stone suddenly ordered the driver to stop. He quickly drove to the side and stopped the car.
âGet down, Elisa.â
Mrs. Stone told her daughter to get out of the car.
Elisa was stunned. Was she being chased off the car by her mother?
Did her mother chase her away because her arguments were too aggressive and had made her mother speechless?
âMom.â
âGet off. I donât need you accompanying me anymore.â
Elisa saw her motherâs firm attitude. After pressing her lips together, she softened her tone and said, âMom, if anything I said just now happened to hurt you, I apologize. Donât be angry, Mom. I know youâre only doing this for my own good.â
Her parents and brothers have loved her ever since she was young.
She was the most spoiled child in the family.
Her parentsâ and brothersâ kindness toward her was definitely sincere. She never doubted it.