Chapter 435 Remarried Widow 28

Chapter 435 Remarried Widow 28
That year, when Mrs. Cui gave birth to Cui Lao Er, she had a difficult labor and was sent to the hospital to give birth. Everyone suspected that Mrs. Cui had given the wrong child. Later, they found out, but they couldn't find their biological son.

That's why Mrs. Cui would do her best to bully Cui Laoer and his family.

Even the status of several daughters-in-law in the Cui family is higher than that of Cui Laoer.

Everyone is talking about it secretly, this is the truth.

Some people couldn't help being curious and went to Cui's house to ask Mrs. Cui if the wrong child had been taken away from the hospital that year. Mrs. Cui was so angry that she beat those people out.

Everyone said that Mrs. Cui was feeling guilty.

Even Cui Lao Er believed the rumor and went to ask Old Man Cui, "Dad, tell me the truth, am I your son and mother's son?"

"What nonsense are you talking about? You are not my son. How could I raise you to this age? How could I find a wife for you?" Old man Cui was extremely annoyed by those rumors.

When he got home, this beastly son actually suspected that he was not his biological son.

Old Man Cui was so angry that he slapped Old Man Cui several times.

Cui Laoer held back his grievance and said, "Since you said I'm your biological child, then tell me, for all these years, why have you and mother favored my brothers and sisters? They are obviously lazy and greedy, and the work points they earn every day are not as much as women, while I earn ten work points every day, and when I get home I have to chop wood and water the vegetable garden. If I don't work, mother will scold me, while my brothers and sisters go to sleep when they get home, and they eat more for meals than me who earns full work points. If you say I'm also your biological child, then why do you and mother treat me so differently from my brothers and sisters?"

Cui Laoer is cowardly, weak, and foolishly filial, but he is not stupid.

Since he was a child, his parents were partial to every brother in the family except him. All the heavy work at home was done by him, and he had no share in the good food and clothes.

He had been wearing his eldest brother's hand-me-down clothes since he was a child. Although his younger brothers also wore hand-me-down clothes, his mother would occasionally make them new clothes. However, he had lived for more than 30 years and had never worn a single new piece of clothing.

Even on his wedding day, he borrowed his elder brother's new clothes and wore them to pick up his bride.

There are so many children in the family, and his nephews and nieces can all go to school, but his three children have never entered the school gate and cannot read a single word.

Forget about his daughter, she is still young, but what about his two sons?

Are his two sons not as important as his older brothers’ daughters?
His two sons are the grandsons of the Cui family. Why shouldn’t they be allowed to go to school, while the daughters of his older brothers and younger brothers can go to school?
Cui Laoer has been foolishly filial for thirty years. He used to think that as long as he listened to his mother in everything, everything would be fine and the family would be harmonious. But now he knows that he is not his parents' biological son, and he no longer misses the days he spent in the Cui family for so many years.

Cui Laoer suddenly felt it was unfair.

It would have been fine if his parents were mean to him and favored his older brothers and younger brothers, but why was it that when it came to his son's generation, his parents still favored his older brothers and younger brothers' children and were extremely mean and vicious to his three children?

His older brothers' children were at home and didn't have to work, but his three children were like donkeys and horses at home, working from morning to night, and yet they didn't even eat as well as his older brothers' children.

Even his niece could eat half an egg every other day, but his three children had never eaten eggs since they were young.

The more Cui Laoer thought about it, the more unfair it seemed.

As a result, Cui Laoer began to develop a rebellious mentality.

(End of this chapter)