Engaged to Be Broken Up: The Pitiful Girl Brings Space and Rises

A car accident caused Su Hua to transmigrate into a thirteen-year-old foolish girl in Shanghe Village of the Great Yu Dynasty.

Her home was bare, she was clumsy at everything, nothing she pla...

Chapter 195 Raising a son is not as good as raising barbecued pork

The windows of the Su family's house were made of the most ordinary fir wood. After more than 20 years of wind and sun exposure, the window frames had long since weathered and cracked. Da Bai had been eating a lot these past few days, not only gaining a lot of weight, but also becoming much stronger.

Seeing that it couldn't squeeze its body into the gap for a while, it simply raised its claws and scratched at the window frame.

With a single blow, one of the cedar strips snapped in two.

The break was just the right size, big enough for half of its head to fit inside. Big White stretched its head out to try, but seeing that it still couldn't squeeze into the room, it raised its chubby front paws again...

This scene almost gave Su Hua a heart attack on the spot.

She really raised her son well. At this moment, she truly understands the meaning of "raising a son is not as good as raising a piece of barbecued pork"!

Seeing that the person on the bed was about to be woken up, Su Hua sprang up and rushed to the window before the big white cat could destroy a window frame. With lightning speed, she stuffed half an apple into its paw.

This half apple was what she hadn't finished eating that night.

Now, it's just the right time to deal with this big son!

Just kidding, if it really opened all the windows, wouldn't that be the same as putting her face-to-face with the three white tigers outside? She and they don't have a friendly relationship that allows for face-to-face communication.

With half an apple, Da Baiguo finally calmed down and stopped struggling with the rickety window frame. Instead, it held the fruit in its little front paws, slurped up a mouthful of apple juice, and then happily stretched out half of its little head to rub against Su Hua.

But while it was pleased, the tigress beneath it had an even more undeniable, eerie green gaze.

It felt like a sharp blade scraping against my skin.

Su Hua pinched her palm to try and calm herself down. She didn't look at the tigress, but instead focused her gaze on the white fur on its forehead. She then began to gesture with her hands and feet.

"Sister Tiger, I really didn't kidnap your little cub. I just happened to find it in a ditch on the mountain behind the house."

It was badly injured and bled a lot. If it hadn't been brought back to be treated and cared for, it would have died. You understand?

These past few days, my family has been treating it very well. If it wants to eat fish, they won't give it meat; if it wants to eat stewed food, they absolutely won't give it braised food; if it wants to eat fruit, they absolutely won't give it water.

Even that little black dog in the kennel outside always gives your puppy whatever it wants, carrying it around all day long. If it tells you to go east, it will never go west, ensuring your puppy never suffers the slightest hardship..."

She gestured for a long time, but didn't notice the slightest change in the gaze fixed on her.

He could only secretly give Big White a wink.

But when Da Bai saw Su Hua wink at it, it immediately opened its bright blue eyes and winked back at Su Hua, then let out a soft meow.

Her voice is as gentle as it can be.

Almost as soon as the big white meow fell, the tigress's razor-like gaze intensified.

Su Hua: "..."

The air suddenly became quiet.

The cub of the king of the mountains, within three or four days, started meowing like a kitten. No tiger could accept that, right?

Especially this domineering family of three.

"Whether I die sooner or later, I'm going to die anyway." Seeing this, Su Hua simply stopped struggling, clutched the poison powder tube tightly in her wide sleeve, raised her almond-shaped eyes and glared back. This glare met the tigress's eerie green eyes.

She couldn't see clearly from across the courtyard, but now, separated only by a window, she could almost see the eerie green light in the tigress's eyes.

From the eye socket to the pupil, the light gradually condensed from a light grass green to a dark green.

Profound and majestic.

Like two bright green gems set on snow-white satin, they are extremely beautiful.

A wave of amazement washed over Su Hua, and she forgot all her previous fear. She couldn't help but be curious. If it weren't for the fact that it was dark and the light was dim, the tigress's eyes would be a clear brownish-yellow, which would be even more beautiful than the dark green.

Just as she was silently babbling to herself, she suddenly heard a soft slurping sound.

Following the sound, they discovered that the slurping sound was coming from the last half-grown tiger to climb into the yard.

It had somehow gotten close to Big White and was staring intently at the small half of an apple in Big White's mouth.

Big White stretched out its paw to share some with it, but it silently moved its big head away, pretending to be indifferent.

Even the male tiger next to the half-grown tiger would occasionally glance at the apple on the big white tiger's paw, its azure eyes, just like the big white tiger's, sparkling with curiosity.

Su Hua was delighted. The tigress was majestic, but the rest of the tiger father and tiger sister were actually gluttons.

Thinking of this, she quickly took out two round apples from her sleeve and gently placed them on the windowsill in front of Big White.

The moment the two children saw the fruit, their eyes lit up. They glanced at Su Hua's sleeve, then lowered their heads and sniffed the apple for a while, as if to confirm that the fruit was non-toxic and harmless, before finally opening their mouths and taking the fruit in one bite.

They don't eat the fruit; they just lick the outer skin of the apple tree with their barbed tongues.

Whether it was her imagination or because the father and daughter were completely focused on the fruit, Su Hua clearly felt that Er Hu's guard had lessened considerably. At this point, the anxiety that had been hanging over her finally eased a little.

She glanced at the tigress in front of her without making a sound, thought for a moment, and then took out a large crabapple from her sleeve and placed it in front of her.

Since they are all tigers, it's their business whether they eat or not, but she can't refuse to give them any, showing favoritism.

Just as I put Ringo down, I heard a sound of someone turning over on the bed behind me.

Immediately following was Su Bai's sleepy voice, "Hua'er? It's so late, why aren't you asleep yet? What are you doing standing by the window..."

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