This matter might have been forgotten by everyone in the house, even by Jane Sampson, who had always been kind to him; it seed insignificant, but to the young Bright Sampton, it had forever left a deep and indelible mark in his heart.
"Julie Sampton, what right do you have to constantly target my sister? It’s true you are the biological daughter of our parents, but the person who made you miss out on this ho wasn’t my sister. You are pitiful, but isn’t my sister pitiful as well? At least you have found your biological parents, who provide you with compensation and understanding by their side. But what about my sister? Ever since you returned, she’s been walking on thin ice, worrying every day about displeasing soone in the house, fearing she might lose her ho forever."
Standing behind Bright Sampton, Jane Sampson listened to the words she had kept buried in her heart, tears welling up in her eyes.
So it wasn’t that no one had noticed her embarrassnt, nor that no one knew her sorrow.
"Julie Sampton, your thods are despicable, and your selfishness is horrifying. Did you think no one would ever find out about the way you lied about my sister going abroad for a competition? Bribing hospital doctors to fake a car accident, lying in the hospital to tie everyone, including our grandparents, to your side, while my sister went abroad alone, competed alone, and returned ho alone with a trophy, with no one to congratulate her or tell her she did great. Did you really think the lies would never be exposed? You probably don’t even know that the doctor you bribed was later arrested, and your na was among those in the account book of a caught underage person!"
"Since you ca back to this house, you’ve put on a face as if the whole world owes you sothing. At first, you sched for dad’s attention, for mother’s love. Then, you sched for the things mother had once given to my sister, my sister’s clothes, my sister’s jewelry, including the company shares mother had given to my sister. If I’m not mistaken, the shares that mother had taken from my sister’s hands are now under your na, Julie Sampton, right? Encouraging dad to kick my sister out of the house, your next target for scheming is dad, as well as the shares our grandparents gave to my sister, right? It probably won’t be long before you start scheming for what I, Bright Sampton, have in my possession."
"And dad," Bright Sampton’s voice trembled, "can’t you and mother see that my sister is not at all happy, let alone blessed, in her marriage to Brother Jas Black? If there were affection between husband and wife, if there were indeed happiness, why would my sister never bring up Brother Jas Black on her own? Because she doesn’t love him, that’s why. She is unhappy because she married soone she doesn’t love. Can’t you see that? Or do you know, yet believe it’s only right for my sister to sacrifice her marriage for the sake of the Sampton Family?"
"Probably the latter, right? Because you think my sister isn’t your biological child, you feel that after raising her for many years, her repaynt to this ho is expected. So, you don’t care whether she’s happy or not because you think it’s unimportant. What’s important is that the Sampton Family benefits, right? By marrying my sister to Jas Black, the Sampton Family’s company was revived; according to your rationale, my sister’s debt of gratitude should have been repaid, right? You raised her, she saved the company once; shouldn’t you be even?"
"Now, my sister has her own ambitions, and so what if she divorces Brother Jas Black? She doesn’t owe this ho or anyone anything anymore. She wants to live her life how she wishes. What’s wrong with that!"
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