"Is there anything else?" he asked.
She pointed to the lights of the Coco Tams restaurant in the distance, "Next time, let's not book the entire venue. Look over there, it's so lively with lots of people and a fire show. It's so quiet here."
Mr. Xu, unreservedly, "I didn't like it, too many people, and the sweat smell."
"…"
Thoroughly amused, Leh Ying laughed out loud, her laughter ringing crisply and echoing through the emptiness.
In the high heat of summer, she had never noticed how this man always disliked crowds and was fastidious about cleanliness, repelled by anything sloppy or untidy.
Whenever she painted, she would be covered in paint, and as soon as he saw her, his brows would involuntarily furrow.
Always so high and mighty.
Leh Ying, curious, asked, "What was your childhood like, sir?"
Xu Jingxi patiently walked her through step by step, "Next time, I'll ask grandma for some photos."
"Can I see them?"
"You can."