Chapter 332: You Wouldn’t!
Kaiden’s hand hovered mid-air, finger cocked back like a gun.
Alice’s smile froze. Her eyes widened, then darted to his hand in terror.
"W-Wait, wait, wait, big brother! Y-You wouldn’t-!" she stammered, jerking against her restraints, but the runic shackles only clanked uselessly. Her shoulders wriggled like a trapped rabbit, black hair spilling into her face as she desperately tried to lean away from the incoming doom.
Kaiden flicked.
His fingertip snapped forward with precision, aimed straight at her forehead across the transparent wall.
There was no physical impact—of course, there couldn’t be—but Alice jolted as though she’d been struck by a sucker punch to the gut. Her eyes began watering instantly.
"Too cruel!" she whimpered with accusation, voice wobbling as fat tears began to roll down her cheeks. "You’re too cruel, big brother! How could you do this to your loving little sister?! Don’t you know younger sisters are to be cherished? To be spoiled? To be showered with love, not cruelly punished!!"
Her pout quivered, lower lip trembling in despair.
"How curious. But alas, a big brother’s duty is to set their younger siblings on the right path when they stray." Kaiden didn’t flinch at the heavy accusations thrown at him. His unimpressed stare could’ve frozen magma.
He stared deep into the teenage girl’s red irises. "I’ll say this only once, Alice. I am never breaking up with them. Those four are anything but gold diggers. And another thing..." His tone sharpened even further. "What exactly did you mean by ’done anything with them?’ They’re my lovers. We’re all adults. I don’t need your permission; we can do whatever we damn well want."
He then looked at the cameras aimed right at him and added with a whisper, "So long as the law permits..."
Hearing his firm words, Alice froze again while tears still glittered at the corner of her eyes. Then she bit her lip and puffed her cheeks up with indignation. Her restraints clinked angrily as she tried to shift in her seat like a sulking child.
