Chapter 389 Eighteen Years, Five Thousand Yuan, Ten Times Repaid



Chapter 389 Eighteen Years, Five Thousand Yuan, Ten Times Repaid

"What are you talking about? You want to calculate with me how much I've spent raising you for the past eighteen years? My dear girl, can you even count it clearly? Forget about valuable things, even your life is the one I gave you."

After entering the room, Tian Jun laughed out of anger when he heard Tian Tian wanted to settle with him how much money he had spent in supporting her for 18 years.

She really won the award, and she became more confident in her words.

Can she calculate it clearly?

He gave her life!

Tian Tian didn't rush to refute. She was very calm, as if she had put on a mental defense countless times during the day. "It's true that you gave me my life. I can't calculate it clearly, but it's also clear because other than providing that thing, you never raised me for even a single day."

"Dad, you seem to have forgotten that from the day I was born, you looked up at the heavens and said that they were unfair to you because I wasn't your son and my mother didn't marry you sincerely. You forced me to marry you and kidnapped me."

"Tian Tian, ​​I think you really deserve to be punished." Tian Jun was confused. The most embarrassing thing in his life was that Tian Tian's mother did not marry her willingly, but he forced her to marry him.

Although the people in the alley are poor, no family can say that they are willing to do so, but they have the blessings of their parents.

He was different. Tian Tian's mother got lost and went in the wrong direction. He had evil intentions and made things a fait accompli. He thought that as long as he had the child, the mother would be obedient. In the end, she ran away and he was given a money-loser.

Tian Jun beat and scolded Tian Tian. The neighbor couldn't bear it, so he took Tian Tian to his home to take care of her. However, Tian Tian was too sensible and didn't want to cause trouble for the neighbor's family, so she stayed like this until she grew up.

"Don't get so excited. Even if you deny it, in my mom's heart, you're a rapist. I forgot to tell you, I let my mom go because she was so pitiful. I was young at the time, but I understood. When you took her out, you looked respectable, but at home, you chained her feet. That day, you vented your anger enough and got drunk. My mom cried for a long time and was in pain for a long time. When she saw you hid the key, I stole it and let my mom go."

"You damn girl!"

"I thought she would take me with her, but in the end, she didn't. But I don't hate her, because I am enduring all the suffering she endured, so I hate you."

"See these diaries in my hands? I didn't quite understand why I had to do this before, but the uncle next door told me that every penny should be detailed in the expenditure. I thought you blamed my mother for just wasting money, so I learned to keep accounts to please you and stop being so angry with her."

"In the end, I didn't expect that no matter I poured hot water for you to wash your feet after work, or washed your clothes in the freezing cold, or when An Nuan and Li Xiong went out to play, I went to pick up cardboard to sell to you to buy wine, you wouldn't even look at me with any affection."

"Every day I ask myself, what did I do wrong? What made my father unhappy? Later I realized that my unpopularity was related to my gender. Sometimes I can't help but wonder, if I were a boy when my mother gave birth to me, would you treat me like Uncle An treats Nuannuan? Would I have a childhood that was perfect, even if it was imperfect?"

"But I was wrong, because from the very beginning, I was a girl. From the moment my gender was determined, everything seemed to be determined. In junior high school, I rebelled. I argued strongly that girls who finished high school were more valuable. You wouldn't let me go, and I had originally planned to finish high school and accept my fate because I wanted to get away from you."

"It was An Nuan who pulled me out of the abyss when I couldn't see the way forward. Only then did I realize that I could live a completely different life. This is the account book of every penny you've spent on me since I was born. Don't think I'm young and have no memory, but I found the IOUs you signed at home and in your neighborhood for borrowing money. I started collecting them the moment I decided to get rid of you."

"I drink my mother's milk, not your money. I wear clothes from my uncle's sister next door. Even my diapers are made from a few pieces of cloth that my mother borrowed money to buy. And you have never paid them back."

"After my mom left, you didn't want me to go to school. You made me keep picking up cardboard or begging. But because you wanted to save face, you had to send me to school. Here's the tuition from preschool to sixth grade: 100 yuan per semester, 200 yuan per grade, 1,200 yuan for six years of elementary school."

"Among them, I was sick and needed medicine, and you bought vegetables and rice. Since you also had to eat and were often not at home, I roughly calculated that in 18 years, it didn't exceed 3,000 yuan. Most of the money was collected by the neighbors."

"These are all IOUs. You've read them. Pretending to be poor doesn't count. Saying I died of illness or starvation is just to lighten your burden. They insisted on using the money to treat my illness and feed me. Let them be responsible for that. It has nothing to do with you."

"Not to mention junior high and high school. Even though the tuition is much higher than elementary school, it's all paid for by the neighbors who can't bear to see you committing such a sin. So, Dad, you've raised me for eighteen years, and the total cost is 4,789.2 yuan and 70 cents. If I round it up, it's less than 5,000 yuan."

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