Chapter 236 - 236 205 The Drivers Misunderstanding Tang Su Explains
Chapter 236 - 236 205 The Drivers Misunderstanding Tang Su Explains
?Chapter 236: 205 The Driver’s Misunderstanding, Tang Su Explains (2 updates)_1 Chapter 236: 205 The Driver’s Misunderstanding, Tang Su Explains (2 updates)_1 After lunch, Su Ruoan left for work because she was starting her official vacation tomorrow, and she needed to finish seeing all the remaining patients in the afternoon.
Otherwise, Su Ruoan’s vacation would not be a peaceful one.
Tang Su went with her father and brothers to the supermarket to buy some milk, nutritional supplements, her grandfather’s favorite sorghum liquor—a whole case of it—as well as a case of snacks that her grandmother enjoyed, and then hailed a taxi with the purchases in tow.
The family actually had a car, except that lately, Tang Su’s uncle had some business to attend to back in his hometown and had borrowed it.
Tang Su’s grandparents had four children—two daughters as the eldest and the youngest, and two sons—Tang Su’s father being the third child.
Originally having a son and a daughter, the old couple had not planned on having more children, but when Tang Su’s second uncle was nine years old, Tang Su’s grandmother had an unexpected pregnancy with Tang Su’s father.
My goodness, even Abortion Pills failed to terminate that pregnancy, so the old couple figured that since this child had a strong will to live, they might as well keep him.
And that was how Tang Shengyi came to be; otherwise, Tang Feng and Tang Su themselves would not have come into this world.
Tang Su’s aunt was not the biological child of the old couple; she was a foundling that Tang Su’s grandmother had discovered in a pile of grass next to a trashcan while she was out collecting cardboard.
Tang Su’s grandmother was kind-hearted. With three children to raise and already not well-off, she took in the baby girl who was covered in red spots; at that time, there were no adequate rescue stations like there are today.
The village chief refused to help take care of her. Tang Su’s grandmother could not bear to leave the child to her fate, to throw her back beside the trashcan. When Tang Su’s grandfather saw that his wife had done a good deed, he encouraged her to keep the child. ‘If there’s rice to eat, she eats with us; if there’s porridge, she drinks with us.’
They had no money to treat the rash, so Tang Su’s grandmother insisted on bathing her daily with the water used to wash rice. Hey, to their surprise, after half a year, the spots gradually faded.