Chapter 872 - 014 Let’s go back to the country together_2
Celia Wade nodded, finally understanding why Ellie Wilton had made such a deep impression on Marcus Parker; her attitude towards men wasn’t about blindly controlling them. She remembered how her mother would tightly control her father as well.
Although she knew her mother’s strict control over her father stemmed from concern, there were times when a man needed his partner’s support instead of an unwavering "no" in every situation.
Just as Ellie Wilton said, one was Ryan Parker’s biological father, another his adoptive father and future father-in-law, and the last one, Uncle Henry, who had watched him grow up. All three were aware of Ryan Parker’s previous surgery, so they wouldn’t intentionally get him drunk.
By ten o’clock that night, Ryan Parker had been set free, while the other three continued drinking.
Of course, they couldn’t discuss the marriage proposal tonight.
Celia Wade and Ryan Parker were both well-acquainted with the Wade family, so even though Harry Wade and Uncle Henry were drunk, they arranged their own rooms and settled Anna Turner, before Ryan Parker escorted Celia Wade back to her room.
At the door of her room, Celia Wade turned to look at him, and they gazed at each other. Ryan Parker could see the reluctance in her eyes; he knew that with both families’ support, their matters had naturally come to fruition—a realization she had waited on for so long.
"You must be tired today, go inside and sleep, okay? You won’t have to wait much longer," he said. Even without her saying anything, Ryan Parker understood her intentions, but he wanted to save their precious moment for the bridal chamber.
Perhaps others would call his thinking traditional, or some might find him old-fashioned, but Celia Wade’s perfection was worth the wait—besides, it wouldn’t be much longer now.
Tomorrow, the parents from both sides would decide on a date to return to the country, and their wedding would then be scheduled.
The wedding could even be moved up; he wouldn’t follow Bryan Hawkins’s example and inexplicably postpone the wedding because of a wedding dress complication.
