Login via

Julian's Stand in Wife novel Chapter 1150

Summary for Chapter 1150: Julian's Stand in Wife

Chapter 1150 – A Turning Point in Julian's Stand in Wife by South Wind Dialect

In this chapter of Julian's Stand in Wife, South Wind Dialect introduces major changes to the story. Chapter 1150 shifts the narrative tone, revealing secrets, advancing character arcs, and increasing stakes within the Romance genre.

Chapter 1150

Diana was stunned.

Her face flushed red. Thankfully, the lights were off at night.

She suppressed the strange, nagging feeling she had of Simon, and hugged Julian’s neck. Nodding, she said, "Julian, let’s have another baby."

"Another baby?!" Julian's voice rose to a high pitch.

Smack! The lights went back on. White lights flooded the entire room. The passion in the air dissipated at once.

Diana furrowed her brows in confusion. "What’s the matter?"

Julian remained silent, his face tense. He threw open the sheets, and caressed Diana's stomach at the place where her scar was.

Her physical condition was unique. As much as she used a variety of lotions and treated her wound with care, the scar remained.

In the past, she didn’t think much of it whenever she looked at it. Yet, Julian looked so solemn as he gazed intently at it.

Diana’s chest tightened with emotion, and she asked indignantly, "Do you despise me for it? Are you worried that the scarring will get worse with another child?"

She heard about that happening when she was hospitalized back at Stirling City. After experiencing natural birth, some women would face their husbands' disdain over a lackluster sex life.

Women who went through cesarean delivery might face their husbands' complaints over a saggy stomach and a frightening scar. Some husbands even refuse to look at it, saying that it was disgusting.

Diana didn't care about that in the past, because she didn't have a husband back at Stirling City. She couldn’t even remember who her husband was. The only thing she knew she had to do was to raise her children.

However, things were different now.

She had regained her memories and her husband. What she cared about now was her beloved husband, who was staring at the scar on her stomach.

He hauled her up in his arms, and put her back on the bed.

The moment their bodies touched, the uneasy feeling in Diana's heart vanished, and the anger in her chest dissipated.

"You know I'm not that kind of man," Julian said.

"I wouldn't have married you if you were," she said.

'Then why did you get angry just now?"

"I..." Diana was almost rendered speechless. "I just felt uneasy when you keep being so silent."

The insecurities a wife felt when she didn't receive a response would often result in her flaring up at her husband.

Reading History

No history.

Comments

The readers' comments on the novel: Julian's Stand in Wife