Does this count as self-sabotage?
âVincent, do you love me?â Alicia pressed him, her voice quietly insistent.
Vincent said nothing. His Adamâs apple bobbed as he swallowed, but he couldnât make himself say that one word.
He hesitated, weighed down by his concerns. Alicia was an orphanâshe had no connections, no family name that could help his status or his career.
Heâd even thought, if Alicia were just the least privileged debutante among high society girls, heâd marry her without a second thought.
But Alicia... was just an orphan.
If he wanted to marry her, heâd need to be much stronger than he wasâto have the kind of power where nothing else mattered.
To say âI love youâ now? It was just too soon.
Alicia let out a cold, mocking laugh under her breath and turned to leave just as a young girl burst through the door, a backpack slung over her shoulder.
âVincent!â The girl, Nola, was adorable and always smiling.
She rushed in and called out to Vincent first, not even glancing at Alicia or greeting her as âsister.â
Four years ago, Nolaâs mother had run off, and her father had been left paralyzed after a car accident. Nola had been forced to drop out of school, even though sheâd scored top in her class, and ended up crying alone on the pavement. That was when Alicia found her. Alicia, though barely scraping by herselfâan orphan who rarely managed a hot mealâstill wanted to help the girl. So she swallowed her pride and turned to Vincent for help.
Vincent was a businessman, and everything with him came with a price tag. He agreed to sponsor Nolaâs education, to cover her fees all the way through graduationâbut only on the condition that, since she was such a promising student, sheâd intern at Lawson & Co. after college.
It was the same demand heâd once made of Alicia when she was finishing universityâthat she intern by his side.
âI heard you did well on your exams,â Vincent said, flashing a rare smile.
Nola beamed and ran to sit beside him. âVincent, I ranked fifteenth in the whole state!â
It was a result to be proud of. After all, this was Seaview Cityâbeing fifteenth in the entire state meant she was a prodigy.
Rich Radiant and Over Him (Alicia and Vincent)
Alicia mustered a smile for her. âCongratulations.â
Nola glanced at her. âHow did you do on your exams back then, Alicia?â
Alicia neatly dodged the question. âI ordered a cake to celebrate. It should be here soon, so Iâll justââ
A pouty protest, half teasing: âAre you leaving already? I just got here! Are you upset because I did well?â
Alicia shook her head and sat down, deliberately putting distance between herself and the other two.
Over the past four years, once Nola came under Vincentâs wing, Alicia had faded into the background. Nola barely spoke to her anymore, clinging only to Vincent.
Nola might still be young, but she was old enough to know better, old enough to understand the difference between men and women. Still, she loved to play the part of the spoiled kid, wrapping her arms around Vincentâs in childish affection.
Vincent didnât seem to think anything of it. In fact, he even shot Alicia a sly look, as if testing whether sheâd get jealous.
Alicia said nothing, her gaze calm and unreadable.
Last year, at Nolaâs eighteenth birthday, it was Vincent and Alicia who celebrated with her. Vincent had given Nola the latest iPhoneâover a thousand dollars. Nola was over the moon and kissed Vincent on the cheek in a burst of excitement.
Alicia had sulked for days, but Vincent just brushed it off, saying Nola was still a kid, just spirited, nothing more...
âNola, congratulations on getting into college,â Alicia said, her tone gentle but edged with something else. âDo you remember the day I found you on the side of the road, crying and begging for my leftover lunch? Look at you nowâall decked out in designer labels. That outfit mustâve cost a fortune.
Bought it with your scholarship money?â She let her gaze linger on the expensive sneakers. âAdd all that up... probably enough to cover a semesterâs tuition, right?â
Back then, Nola couldnât even afford a meal. Now, she was head-to-toe in Adidas and Nikeânot luxury brands, but together worth a monthâs salary for most people. The pair of shoes she wore alone cost nearly five hundred dollars.
Her father was still disabled from the accident, but instead of helping out at home, Nola spent her scholarship money on brand names.
ï¤Chapter 156 Transmigration: I Have Storage Space in the Apocalypse ï¤Chapter 760 - 756: Encountering a Man with Evil Intentions