His words showed no fluctuation. If such words ca from an average person’s mouth, perhaps Old Master Walyon would not take it seriously.
However, Adrian said it, and Old Master Walyon absolutely believed he could do it.
Adrian had done similar things for Sumr Sutton before; didn’t his disappearance a year ago serve as the best explanation?
The room suddenly fell silent.
Old Master Walyon slumped in the chair, his body trembling uncontrollably.
Adrian watched him coldly for a while, took a deep breath, and poured a cup of tea for the old man, "Actually, sotis I really don’t understand where grandpa’s anger towards Sumr cos from every ti."
He handed the cup over, waiting for Old Master Walyon to drink it.
Old Master Walyon originally thought that since Adrian had poured him tea and changed his tone, he was ready to reconcile.
Little did he know that Adrian’s intention in pouring the tea was to let him steady his heart and continue to endure the blows.
"A year ago, she did nothing wrong and was chased out of this house by grandpa. Honestly, it was grandpa who was at fault."
"Today, she only ca because she thinks of you as her husband’s grandfather, yet she received a cold face from you. In the end, it’s because grandpa holds onto things too tightly."
Adrian was never afraid of Old Master Walyon and would always say whatever he thought.
"Did she cause the disharmony in this family? What did she do to make this family disharmonious? Is it her fault that Ryan Walyon likes her?"
"Was her attitude unclear, playing both sides between the brothers? She did nothing, so why does grandpa put all the bla on her?"
"Just because she has no blood relation to this family, grandpa favors his own family over principles, always siding with your grandson, and Sumr has to beco an innocent sacrifice?"
He paused for a mont, his tone suddenly intensified, "Ryan’s the one who likes her, the fault lies with Ryan! What grandpa should do is have Ryan sort out his own heart, not push the responsibility onto her!"
Old Master Walyon looked at him in shock, his hand shaking so much that the tea splashed out of the cup.
All his fault?
The grandson he raised from a young age was now boldly criticizing his wrongs because of a woman.
Was it wrong for him to act in his grandchild’s best interest?
"I’m not hoping grandpa would love her imnsely, just wish that grandpa would be fair. It’s okay if you can’t do it, after all, Sumr and I don’t really care about others." With that said, Adrian turned and left the study.
They don’t care much about others?
Old Master Walyon replayed those words in his head, angrily almost grabbing the teacup to throw at him.
Was he, as a grandfather, now considered just another person?
...
After leaving the study, Adrian directly left the Walyon family mansion.
At this ti, the banquet was not yet over; there were many guests at the Walyon family, yet the initial liveliness was gone.
None of the guests could have anticipated what happened tonight.
Since Sumr Sutton appeared, the hosts were absent from the gathering area, and sensing the unusual situation, the group of guests lost interest in doing anything.
As Adrian reached the gates of the Walyon family ho, Sumr Sutton was waiting in the car.
Seeing him through the car window, her gently lowered face suddenly lifted.
"Are you okay?" Sumr Sutton asked, scanning his face, a bit worried.
"I’m fine, let’s go ho!" Adrian said, opening the car door, sitting inside, fastening his seatbelt, and starting the engine with a roar.
"What did grandpa say to you just now?" Sumr Sutton looked at him with concern and asked.
User Comments
0 comments from readers