In their view, sending her to university, letting their daughter succeed and gain leverage, would allow her to have better and higher choices in marriage in the future.
Back then, wasn't it the same with her brother? Her brother's marriage was entirely arranged by their parents, and he married the daughter of a leader in the military.
She was pampered since childhood, and her arrogance and domineering nature were expected; her brother suffered quite a bit in the marriage.
But he willingly accepted it because his father-in-law's family indeed brought him many benefits, even to their own family, his father.
She didn't want to end up like her brother with an arranged marriage by their parents, so stubbornly she didn't join the military school and chose somewhere far away from home in the North.
Unexpectedly, it still turned out this way in the end.
