“I did use the Ryker funds,” Abel admitted, “but what I bought was Lizbeth, not Emma. I had put my life on the line to rescue Emma, and she was not bought with the funds.”
Adrien was shocked by this revelation.
Abel added, “If you want to thank me, you’ll have to repay me with your life. So, you can’t afford to thank me.” Abel turned around and confidently left.
“Emma,” Adrien climbed the stairs, “does he know about our situation?”
Emmeline returned to the platform and retorted, “Why are you talking so much?” Adrien was confused and asked, “Why am I talkative?” Emmeline replied sharply, “I only said I permitted you to propose. I didn’t say we were getting married. When did I mention that?”
“I didn’t say that,” Adrien spread his hands, “I swear to heaven, I just said that if you agreed, I could propose to you.”
Emmeline sat on the swing chair, feeling helpless, and said, “Let’s forget it. I should have explained it more clearly.” Adrien pushed her onto the swing and said, “Emma, we are the parents of The Triplets. If I propose to you and you agree, wouldn’t we be getting married?” Emmeline swung back and forth slowly and replied, “I haven’t thought about it yet. I only want to be fair to you by giving you a chance.” Adrien felt wronged and said, “I don’t understand what you mean. Why do you have so many requirements?”
Emmeline halted the swing with her foot and swiveled around to face Adrien. “What I mean is,” she said, “if you propose to me, I will only consider getting engaged first. It will give us an official year to evaluate each other. If you prove yourself qualified for our child and me, then we can discuss getting married. This way, it’s fair to all of us.” Daisy and Sam exchanged glances and nodded in agreement, acknowledging that her reasoning was sound. It wouldn’t be right if she didn’t give Adrien a chance.
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