Granny Cui truly disliked the Guan family.
The most important reason was that the dowry from the Guan family was too little.
In Granny Cui's heart, the ideal granddaughter-in-law was someone like Anning, a Miss from a noble family.
It was nothing else but the fact that such families had solid foundations and would provide substantial dowries.
The men of the Cui Family were living in a drunken stupor, still believing in the fantasy that we're rich, we own mines, and I'm a second-generation rich kid.
However, Granny Cui, who had managed the household for years, knew all too well that the family's circumstances were worsening by the day.
In the early years, the Cui Family's ancestors were generals who rose in rebellion with the Grand Ancestor, amassing a fortune from the wars. Although it didn't compare to the Ji Family, the Cui Family also had a considerable amount of wealth.
