
For years, Julia Carter endured her biased mother-in-law, troublemaking sister-in-law, and indecisive husband David Foster for the sake of family harmony. On her daughter's 18th birthday, her in-laws forced the daughter—who was about to take her college entrance exams—to donate a kidney to her younger uncle's son, simply because they didn't want to pay one million for an external kidney donor, and they valued sons over daughters, calling their granddaughter a mere accessory. Enraged, Julia finally exploded. Faced with her husband's moral coercion, the family's secret tissue-typing tests, and threats of divorce, she saw their parasitic nature clearly. She decisively stopped covering the medical bills, took back the house she had gifted to her mother-in-law, settled old scores, and made the selfish Foster family suffer the consequences of their actions.