Emma Evans nodded at her son's suggestion, knowing this was their only chance.
"Alright, let me help. I want to prepare food for my daughter too… this is something I should have been doing for her a long time ago," she said, her voice choked with emotion.
Her husband, Edward Evans, stood beside her, looking equally forlorn. Though he didn't say a word, he didn't object either. Instead, he silently walked with them, carrying the boxes of seafood into the kitchen alongside Eric and Ethan.
Without another word, they all worked together, each lost in their own thoughts. Emma washed the seafood with careful hands, Edward and Ethan carried the remaining boxes, and Eric focused on preparing the other ingredients.
Meanwhile, Eliot busied himself with cooking, carefully preparing every dish he was good at—each plate a silent offering, a hope for reconciliation.
After half an hour, Eliot and his family had finished preparing the seafood feast. Coincidentally, the Aldens were starting to get hungry, having only nibbled on pickles—which, while tasty, were far from filling.
As the rich aroma of freshly cooked seafood wafted through the cafeteria, heads turned, eyes filled with hunger and anticipation. Then, the Evans family emerged from the kitchen, carrying trays of food.
Their expressions were almost eager, their movements careful as they approached the table, clearly hoping to please Kisha.
But Kisha ignored them.
She didn't even understand why she felt so irritated. Before, it had been easy to disregard this family and move on, but now… now, their presence annoyed her in a way she couldn't quite explain.
Was it because she had grown up without real parents? Was she envious that someone like Melody had parents who were always ready to protect and pamper her? Parents who would shield her, even when she was in the wrong, just to keep her safe?
But Kisha had experienced love and care too—her grandparents had given her all the warmth and protection she needed. So why was she brooding over this now?
She didn't understand it.
She deliberately looked everywhere except at the Evans family, refusing to acknowledge them. And yet, despite herself, her eyes kept drifting back to them—pulled in like a magnet, no matter how much she tried to resist.
Duke also noticed Kisha stealing glances at the Evans family, and a mix of emotions stirred within him.
A nagging sense of jealousy crept in—what if she was looking at the Evans brothers, admiring them? After all, the Evans family had just as strong a gene pool as the Winters, producing accomplished and undeniably handsome men like Eric, Ethan, Elios, and Eliot.
The thought unsettled him.
Duke felt an irrational sense of danger. His fingers twitched with the urge to march into the kitchen and cook the meal himself. If Kisha had to steal glances at someone, it should be him. In fact, he didn't want her to just steal glances—he wanted her to stare openly, shamelessly, at him. Every day.
She didn't need to look at anyone else.
He would gladly let her examine every inch of him, down to his very pores—so long as her eyes never wandered to another man.
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