@Akera93
The latter, unfortunately. Although the concubine was not a piece of a saint and she does not seem to have a particular affection for Su Luxia - who is also the daughter of another woman - she was never painted as an excessively cruel woman (Let us not forget that, at least in the stories of feudal China, beating the feet between the various wives was practically the norm. There is no way that two concubines and their daughters lived in love and agreement or at least in mutual support in these stories). In fact, when she advised her daughter to wear modestly coloured clothes to go to the Temple she was also wise and foresightful (pity the daughter is a wh*re).
Unfortunately, she’s just a pawn in the mouths of that monster daughter who fate has bred her, like Grandma who even deserves to suffer but certainly not die because of the b*tch's schemes. NO one deserves to die, no matter as much as an assh*le he can be, especially not betrayed by his loved ones and dismembered
@Alicia_kun
You forget about Grandma. It’s twice that the old hag is poisoned by her adorable favorite granddaughter...
@Strowy @pokefairy
It was Mingyue who poisoned her grandmother, while her concubine mother showed the first signs of anxiety and nervousness about her daughter’s conspiracies (ch 153). Exactly the opposite of what her daughter accused her mother.