Chapter 322 A faint, almost imperceptible smile tugged at the corner of McNeil's lips, the upward tilt betraying his good mood.
"Coming home," he said, and ended the call.
On his way back, he passed by a flower shop and decided to pick up a bouquet.
When he arrived, Gwyneth was the first to greet him at the door.
"Wow, Daddy, the flowers are so pretty!" She reached out, trying to grab them, but her little arms couldn't even begin to wrap around the bouquet. McNeil dodged her tiny hands. "These are for your mom." He glanced around the hallway. "Where is she?" "Mom's in the kitchen. I told her I wanted chicken wings in cola sauce, and she said she'd make them for me." Gwyneth was beaming, still delighted from the gher mom had just played with her.
McNeil headed to the kitchen. The chicken wings were already set out on the table, but Victoria was nowhere to be seen.
Xenia happened to walk by as he stood there, still holding the bouquet.
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇt"Where's Mrs. McNeil?" "She got a phone call and stepped out," Xenia answered without hesitation.
McNeil's face darkened instantly. Without a word, he tossed the bouquet straight into the trash and strode out of the house.
Gwyneth ran over to the table, thrilled to see her favorite chicken wings ready, but paused, watching her father's retreating figure with confusion. "What's wrong with Daddy?" Xenia sighed. "Oh, what a mess." When the mister is away, the missus is down in the dumps. Now that she's started ignoring him, he's the one losing his mind. Those two are a pair of star-crossed lovers if I've ever seen one.
McNeil grabbed his car keys-no chauffeur this time-and peeled out of the driveway, engine roaring, leaving the household staff startled. They'd never seen him take the sports car instead of the company sedan.
He dialed Paul as he sped through the city.
Paul picked up, the background noisy.
"Sendthe address. Now " One of Paul's friends glanced at him, looking like he'd seen a ghost. "What's up with you? Jumping out of your skin. Didn't you just invite that woman over? Has she arrived?" Paul shook his head, trying to play it cool, but his heart was pounding. "Not her. It's my cousin." He had no idea why McNeil kept haunting him. He'd said he'd cby earlier and never showed. Now this-what was he up to? Paul sent the address. A few minutes later, Victoria arrived.
Paul's friends spotted her and let out a whistle. Victoria, unfazed, had changed into a flowing dress with a warm-colored cardigan, her long hair draped over her shoulders. She looked every bit the picture of gentle elegance.
"Hey, sis-in-law-" The group greeted her with a chorus. Victoria just rolled her eyes.
Paul slid off his barstool. "Ignore them." He gave her a subtle thumbs up-sthings only a good friend would understand.
"You didn't callhere just to keep you company drinking, did you?" Victoria asked.
Paul grinned. "I wouldn't have the heart for that. There's a crowd tonight, and you had the day off. Figured I'd invite you out so you wouldn't be bored." Judging by her wholesoutfit, she clearly wasn't the type to frequent places like this.
"Con, I'll teach you how to play dice." He pulled her over and plopped her down on the sofa beside him, treating her like swide-eyed innocent. Victoria chuckled. "If there's nothing else, I'll get going." She was nearly thirty-she'd had her wild days. Now, she was past that; this scene didn't interest her anymore. "Relax, it's easy. You roll the dice, count the numbers. Loser takes a drink. Don't worry, just a sip-it won't get you drunk." Paul refused to let her leave, and his friends egged them on.
Victoria, not wanting to lose face or waste targuing, made a deal. "Five rounds, best of three. If you win, I'll drink with you. If I win, you letgo." Kids these days, she thought-they're playing the sgames we used up years ago. Paul's friends whistled again, surprised by how readily she agreed. Paul himself hadn't expected it and suddenly felt fired up. "Don't talk big. Bring it on."
They each grabbed a glass with three dice inside and started the first round. Victoria took it with ease-Paul drank. The second round went to Paul, and Victoria lifted her glass.
Paul hesitated. "Forget it, I won. You don't have to drink." Victoria pushed aside his hand, refusing to be treated like sdelicate flower. She was older than Paul, hardly the type to play helpless in front of a kid.
Follow on Novᴇl-Onlinᴇ.cᴏmHead thrown back, she downed the whole bottle.
Paul swallowed hard, eyes wide. This woman was a lot tougher than he'd imagined—not the demure type at all.
"Another round." Victoria slammed the empty bottle on the table, shrugged off her cardigan, and rolled up her sleeves.
Paul stared. "Wait, con-" "Scared?" Victoria challenged.
"Who's scared? I'm not forcing you to drink-you're the one asking for it." Victoria smiled coolly. "Enough talk."
Soon, their dice gdevolved into a drinking contest. Victoria's cheeks flushed pink, and Raul fost four out of five rounds, downing glass after glass until the room started spinning. "Hey, can we call it quits?" he pleaded, glancing at the friends who'd already passed out around them. For the first time, Paul actually regretted pushing her.
Victoria just grinned. "No way-I'm just getting-"
Before she could finish, she was s. McN yanked into someone's arms. McNeil stood over the ragny his expression Lover thunderous as he surveyed the scene of drunken men slumped across the sofa. His troublemaking cousin sat there, staring at the table with a look of utter defeat.
McNeil pulled Victoria down next to him, signaled the bartender to bring over two more six-packs, and fixed Paul with a glare that could kill.
"You like drinking? Fine. Drink with me."