Li Xi, a new media professional, transmigrated into a book and became the infamous beautiful waste of Jiangcheng. Her biological father didn't care for her, her stepmother didn't love her, ...
The girl's life experience was kept secret by her family, not only because of her ignominious origin, but also because her family did not want her to have anything to do with the Hua family.
The girl's mother was a very ordinary small town girl. She was an average student and attended a mediocre college. After graduation, she struggled to survive by wandering around. By chance, she came to the Hua family and worked as a maid to take care of flowers and plants.
Because of her unremarkable appearance and her conscientious work, she wouldn't attract the attention of the male masters of the Hua family. Furthermore, the housekeeper generally wouldn't place young girls near the male masters. Even the male masters, no matter how hungry they were, wouldn't search the entire garden for women. Logically, this girl was relatively safe working in the Hua family.
But if nothing unexpected happened, something unexpected would happen. One rainy night with thunder and lightning, the girl was worried about the flower seedlings that had just been planted in the garden. She tossed and turned and couldn't sleep, so she got up and went to the garden to see the flowers in the rain. She happened to meet the drunk Mr. Hua who had just returned home.
The drunk man lost his mind. Seeing the woman's slender figure, soaked by the rain, something in him was burning in him, urging him to act. So, drunk and bewitched by the woman, Mr. Hua, despite the girl's resistance, dragged her into the greenhouse and had sex with her.
Although no one was constantly guarding the flower room, the noise still alarmed the housekeeper. The housekeeper of the Hua family was like the eunuchs who served the emperor in ancient palaces. They would not take the initiative to send the "servants" of the family to the master's bed, nor would they stop the master from "favoring" the servants. They would even help clean up the mess afterwards.
As soon as Mr. Hua Er finished his work, the butler took his master back to his room and provided him with a one-stop service, including washing, changing clothes, and tucking him into bed. The girl's treatment was also a one-stop service, as she was used to, but it was not a service of that nature, but to dispose of the body.
While the girl was powerless to resist, the housekeeper had her bathed to remove any traces of the incident. He also had the family doctor treat her injuries and provide her with medicine. He then led his men to clean up the greenhouse and garden, erasing all traces of the night as if nothing had happened.
When the girl woke up the next day, the physical evidence was gone, the location of the incident was gone, and any witnesses who might have testified that she wasn't in the room the previous night were gone. All that remained were two contracts handed to her by the housekeeper: one for continued employment with double pay, and one for voluntary resignation with a substantial compensation package. There was no mention of what had happened the previous night, but every word reminded her that she had accepted the money and pretended nothing had happened.
The girl didn't want to let it go, but she had no evidence or witnesses. She was just an ordinary person, and the Hua family was powerful, so she couldn't compete. And since then, she found herself particularly afraid of men getting close to her, a double aversion both physically and psychologically.
Finally, unable to resist the housekeeper's coercion and inducement, she chose the second contract and returned home with the huge compensation. After a period of confusion, she found out she was pregnant. She was puzzled. The housekeeper clearly said that he had given her medicine after the incident, so why did she still get pregnant?
The doctor listed various reasons, but she didn't listen to any of them. She only knew that after the doctor's long rambling, her parents persuaded her to give birth to the child. What happened next was already described before: pregnancy, difficult labor, and separation from her parents.
The story of the child who was born by accident is even simpler.
I grew up in a harmonious family, with loving parents, a doting brother, and kind neighbors. Smart and a decent student, I lived an ordinary, peaceful life. That was until I met a man in college who captured my heart. It was like a match made in heaven, a match made in heaven, a match made in heaven.
Their love story, like any ordinary one, went through ignorance, passion, setbacks, and finally, they finally walked into marriage hand in hand. During this time, they also encountered other suitors and were sabotaged by others, but they ultimately chose each other firmly.
In the next few decades, their relationship may go smoothly, or it may be full of arguments, or even end abruptly for various reasons. However, they are both open-minded people who never pay too much attention to things that have not happened, and just live the present in a plain way.
The turning point came with their child. From pregnancy to birth, both parents, or rather, both families, held immense anticipation. It was the fruit of their love, the continuation of their relationship. They longed for the child to be born and for it to grow up.
After much anticipation, the child fell ill with a fever. A trip to the hospital revealed it wasn't just a common cold, but a genetic disease, incurable. Why did the child get this? Aren't the adults in both families fine?
The doctor said that genetic diseases are caused by changes in hereditary genes and may be related to family heredity, physical factors, chemical factors, biological factors, disease factors, etc. The specific cause needs to be investigated.
For the sake of the child in the hospital bed and for the possibility of another child in the future, they investigated. When checking the family heritage, the man revealed his life experience. Although he had told his wife about his life experience before marriage, he only said that his background was not very glorious. He did not mention the Hua family or that his mother had an extramarital affair with a man.
After all, his parents were not important to him, nor was the Hua family. His family only consisted of his grandparents and his wife, who would soon become his family. He himself did not want to have anything to do with the Hua family.
But he didn't want to hide it from his wife, so he told the girl's family. They all knew his background, but no one had guessed that he was from the Hua family. It was only then that the boy revealed that his father was from the Hua family.
Then the girl's "mother" collapsed. She knew what had happened to her sister, and she knew who had bullied her. Although she didn't know which man in the Hua family was the boy's father, there was no doubt that the two children were close relatives.
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