My Baby's Daddy Is An Ex-convict
some more food for us!"
n went to t
when he entered his old room. It was clean though,
re none other than his parents. It looked as though
veral of his old clothes. They had aged through
ly a little small though, and they must be out of fashion by now. Old folks like us don't really understand the fashion trends of young people!" As she sa
to be so worried about me. I have money, and I'm going to let you and Dad live in a big villa in the future. You've suffe
im a sum of money, probably in excess of tens of thousands. After all, if Severin had not paid the remaining debt of twenty-six thousand to the six men earlier, there
d a*sured. "Dad's done in the shower, so it's about ti
to his old clothes, he sat with his fam
ight, Dad?" Severin could not help but ask
t at all! You know how fond I am of these drinks. Doing all that physical work is
hat Severin would be worried about them, so she ad
a daily thing here!" Ma
would neither be any wine nor any stewed meat on the table. At most, there would be shredded potatoes and a plate of yellowed cabb
well when you were inside prison?" When Judith saw Severin's blank and qu
so soon otherwise!" Severin immediately put a smile on his face, and scooped some meat for his parents too. "T
eved that worrying could turn your hair gray, but your mother has proven me wro
o I'll make her hair black again! But whether her hair
ith Maurice and took a si
verin's statement, but at least she had a smile on her face now that her son had return
he woman who was dressed in a food delivery person's uniform placed an envelope at
uld not help but ask, "Could a rela
h. Those relatives used to keep in touch with us every now and then, b
nd the matrimonial home was sold, everyone avoided us after
cle Vincent? Haven't they helped us at all?" Severin was slightl
t be able to pay it back. After all, we're old, and it's difficult for us to change our lives for the better. Unlike them, Aunt Marie and her family are very poor, yet she was
ible. I know that she has quarreled a lot with your uncle because of what happened, and to makes things worse, she had no money for surgery when she fell sick. In t
to collect our debt every month, and demanded seven hundred every single time. We don't always manage to save up that much, so there was no way we could pay back what your aunt len
s gla*s. "Don't blame her for that though. If anyone's to blame, it's us.
t Marie has been kind to us, so I promise
every single month. It's usually a hundred and twenty or a hundred and thirty, but sometimes it'll reaches a hundred and fifty! The letter inside says tha
that a so-called 'friend whom he had met once' would help his parents out l