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Chapter 242: A talk with Mila’s dad.

I honestly didn’t know what to think. Mila had said she got in a fight with her dad, but was that something uncommon for her or did she not have a good relationship with him? Her attitude with her mom made me want to believe the former, and Mila had never said anything bad about her family. Well, other than being annoyed that they put her in charge of taking her little brother to school in the mornings.

We heard the steps coming from the stairs, and Mila stiffened. Her dad appeared at the door, and… Fuck me, it looked like he was only a size smaller than Mr. Carlos. He had a rectangular face, short black hair and a mustache. His general build was huge, with an emphasis on his shoulders and arms. The blue suit and the shirt he was wearing had to be tailor-made not to burst from him wearing them.

Frowning, he looked from Mila, to me, and back to his daughter. “So you decided to rope someone else in to do the work for you?”

Mila flinched. “I… I…”

The big man let out a sigh. “Young man, I’m sorry about my daughter. Don’t worry about that. You may leave if you want to.”

His tone was surprisingly polite, and it felt genuine. Like he was ashamed for what he perceived were his daughter’s shameful actions. Honestly, I was a bit intimidated. He not only was huge, but had an immense presence. Still…

I forced a smile. “If you don’t mind, Mr. Aliev, I’d like to stay. Mila asked me for a favor, and she’s done so much for me that I’d be a terrible friend if I didn’t at least try to help. She didn’t rope me in.”

“...” Mr. Aliev looked me up and down, but his gaze was more scrutinizing than Mila’s mother’s. He looked around the room, too. He saw the already unassembled old desk and seemed to be looking for something else, too. Maybe he noticed that the room was tidier? “Mila, go to the garage and get my toolbox.”

“Y-Yes!” Mila took her chance and ran, precisely like a girl who’d just avoided a good scolding.

Mr. Aliev stepped into the room. He began looking at the boards for the new desk, at the instructions and the small plastic bag of smaller pieces. As he did, I stood there silently, stiff, anxious.

Mila eventually came back with her dad’s toolbox. She set it on the floor, and looked at her dad, silently asking what she should do next.

“Go help your mother with dinner.”

Mila looked at me. “B-But…”

“Go.” He didn’t raise his voice, but his tone left no room to argue.

Mila shot me an apologetic look and went downstairs.

Mr. Aliev closed the door and let out a heavy sigh. “I wanted her to think her actions more thoroughly, but I didn’t expect her to bring someone else to do this for her. I’d rather not let a guest at my house do any sort of work, but if you insist, then I’ll help you.”

“I-It’s not trouble, sir,” I said.

“It is to me, young man. Would you let a guest at your house clean your bathroom?”

I flinched. He got me there. “...No.”

Mr. Aliev smiled, or at least I think he did. His mouth barely moved, but the look in his eyes softened. “Here, hold these boards.”

For a while we worked together in silence. It was a little awkward, but it was more up my alley than trying to make small talk. I held stuff, he put in the screws, we both got annoyed at the use of different types of screws, we puzzled over what some of the pictures in the instructions meant until I saw a video link, played it on my phone and we watched the instructions there. As we were getting closer to the finish line, Mr. Aliev finally spoke.

“What’s your name, young man?”

“Oliver, sir. Oliver Brooks.”

“You said my daughter has helped you a lot. What could that girl have possibly done?”

His tone there ticked me off. It sounded as if he didn’t believe Mila could do anything… I don’t know, important. Still, I didn’t want to screw anything up, so I kept my own tone in check. Thinking of Mila helped.

I smiled fondly at the memories. “Until not long ago, I couldn’t speak to people. I would freeze up and the words wouldn’t come out, no matter how much I wanted them to. Mila didn’t care. She pushed through and was insistent on becoming friends with me, even when it looked like I was glaring at her. It’s in large part thanks to her that I can do things I never thought I could, so I really owe her the world.”

“Things you never thought you could do. Like working as a waiter?”

I blinked.

Mr. Aliev smiled that non-smile again. “She talks a lot about you. She told us that you go to the gym, that you work at a coffee shop, that you did well in your midterms, that you have a sister you’re trying to fix your relationship with… and much more.”

My face burned. Whyyyy? Why would she tell her parents about me? None of that was interesting in the least!

“It’s the first time she talks about a boy so much, I was curious to meet you.” He looked around the room. “And suddenly, when I find you here with her, her room looks decent for once and you’re helping her with one of her whims. She didn’t make you clean, did she?”

I chuckled. “No, sir. I helped, but it was me who told her we had to clean up first if she wanted my help with the desk.”

Mr. Aliev’s smile became more clear, and he even chuckled softly. “You don’t say? You’ve gotten her to do more than her mother and I have already.”

He finished putting in the final screw, stood up and checked the stability of the desk. We were finally done.

“...We spoiled her a lot as she was growing up,” Mr. Aliev said, eyes on the desk’s surface. “Now she has a loose sense of responsibility. She barely studies, she doesn’t clean her room, she doesn’t take care of the car we bought her, and now she even has an easy job that gives her money to spend without thought, like on this desk. She didn’t stop to think if she’d have to put it together, believing I’d do it for her.” He sighed with eyes closed. “I worry for her future.”

I swallowed. Much as I love that girl, I couldn’t deny any of what her father had said. Mila wouldn’t study if Grace and Alice didn’t push her, the way she spent money hurt my frugal soul, and the inside of her car was always full of bags, junk and dirt. But…

“And yet her friends love her so much they scold her for those same reasons,” I said. “She’s a bright girl who cares immensely for her friends and always finds a way to cheer them up. I find myself wishing I could be a bit more like her, actually.” I smiled sheepishly and rubbed the back of my neck. “Sorry if that was out of line, but…”

Mr. Aliev shook his head. “It’s a relief that you have that to say about her. Thank you.” He turned to me and smiled. “You will stay for dinner, won’t you?”

His tone was cordial… yet it left no room to argue.

************

Chapter 243: Dinner with the Aliev family.

I felt so tense I thought my stomach would turn upside down. I mean, come on! I was at the dinner table with my girlfriend and her parents, and they didn’t know their daughter and I were dating!

At least I thought they didn’t know. Something made me believe they had an idea, and it was the fact that my dear Mila seemed to talk a little bit too much about me at her house. If they didn’t think we were dating, then they at least had to believe Mila liked me.

Speaking of her, she wasn’t faring any better. She was stiff and silently poking at her food. Meanwhile, her parents didn’t seem affected at all. Mr. Aliev was about as stoic as he’d been before, if not more, while Mrs. Aliev was happily telling about her own high school days.

I smiled and nodded along. She was carrying the conversation on her own, which made me see where Mila got her liveliness. That said…

No, this wouldn’t do. This wouldn’t do at all.

I was finally here, meeting Mila’s parents. Whether they knew about our relationship or not, it was my chance to make a good impression, wasn’t it? Fuck, the mere possibility of screwing this up almost made me want to throw up, but I couldn’t afford to waste this chance. You can never change a first impression, after all. I couldn’t just keep quiet, but what could I say? Talking about myself without being asked seemed like a really bad idea.

Wait. Being asked?

Aha!

“Y-You went to university after high school, Mrs. Aliev?”

The older woman pouted in a way that was extremely reminiscent of Mila. God, they were almost TOO alike! “I did, but I dropped out in my sophomore year because SOMEONE put a baby in me.”

Mr. Aliev, the big, stoic, intimidating man… flinched and blushed. “Don’t make it sound like it was an accident,” he grumbled. He looked at me with serious eyes. “We talked about it. Yana didn’t want to continue her studies, so I promised I’d take care of her.”

Mrs. Aliev put a hand on her cheek and sighed lovingly. “He’s always been so manly. We got married three months after that.”

I glanced at Mila and caught her blushing madly. I didn’t have to read her mind to understand. Hearing her own parents talk about that stuff had to be embarrassing, so I moved on to another question.

“And what do you do, Mr. Aliev?”

“I’m a corporate lawyer for a big toy company.”

I blinked. “A lawyer?”

Mrs. Aliev giggled. “He doesn’t look it, does he?”

I shook my head. “N-No….” I could actually see it. What I really wanted to ask was how he had the time to train a body like that. But how do you ask without sounding rude? “Um… D-Do you practice something?”

Again, I saw the big man smile his small smile. “I used to be an olympic wrestler.”

My eyes shot wide open. “No kidding!”

“Don’t be so impressed,” he dismissed with the faintest chuckle. “My biggest achievement is a single bronze medal. To this day I keep thinking even that was luck.”

“How so?”

That got him going. Mr. Aliev began to recount how he was training as a wrestler alongside his law studies. He told me about the two times he’d been to the Olympics, and how the second time he somehow managed to squeeze third place, believing his opponent was feeling ill that day. Even I was able to tell he was in a good mood.

“I retired after that. Felt like I’d done enough and could finally focus on my family.”

“But you continue your training?”

Mr. Aliev chuckled. “Right. You exercise, too. Yes, I go to the gym three times a week. It’s ingrained into my routine at this point. How about you, Oliver?”

“Same as you. Three times a week.”

“And your diet?”

I blinked. “D-Diet?”

Mr. Aliev narrowed his eyes and tilted his head. “You don’t follow a nutritional plan?”

“I eat whatever my mother decides to bring home,” I said. Honestly, his question had left me a little stunned. I mean, it’s obvious. Your muscles don’t change just because you lift some weights. You need a proper diet to go with it to achieve the results you want. That was when I understood.

I chuckled. “I think mom’s been looking out for that without me realizing it.”

We rarely ate fast foods and we had a good balance of meats, fish, grains, vegetables and legumes. I hadn’t paid attention to it until now. That said, there was likely still something odd there, something to do with whatever had changed my body overnight. But even so…

“Do you get along well with your family?” Mrs. Aliev asked me with a warm smile.

“Ah. Well, yes, thankfully. It’s only my mom, my sister and I. Things… have been getting better lately.”

I kept asking them questions, and they were happy to answer. They told me about their travels and family trips and about their younger son. Mr. Aliev told me a bit about what it was like to be a lawyer and an olympic athlete, and Mrs. Aliev told me she had a garden where she grew some of her own vegetables.

Throughout most of it, however, Mila remained quiet. Did it bother her that I was talking to her parents? Was I making her uncomfortable?

When we were done eating, Mr. Aliev directly addressed his daughter. “Mila, will you drive Oliver to his house or should I?”

Mila answered before I could even say it wasn’t necessary. “No, of course I will!”

Mr. Aliev nodded. We said our goodbyes, but not before Mrs. Aliev told me to come over whenever I wanted.

“You’re always welcome here, you hear? Look after our little girl, please.”

I sheepishly rubbed the back of my neck. “She looks after me more, but I’ll try.”

Mila and I went to her car. She silently put on her seatbelt and drove off.

I genuinely started to get worried.

“Mila? Is everything okay?”

“Do you mind if we take a little detour, Oliver?” she asked me.

“No.”

Mila turned the opposite direction from where my house was.

Comments

written_fantasy

Story discussion ahead. I like Mila's dad, and I hope that people won't hate him too much for his first appearance. He cares a lot about his daughter and is worried about some of her habits (Or lack of some good habits, I guess). I wanted to show how they quickly took a liking to Oliver, seeing him as someone who's probably been a good influence on Mila (even if Oliver himself doesn't see it). I'd like to say more, but doing that would just be explaining the chapter, and that's boring and missing the point. I hope you guys enjoyed the chapters.

Shadracht

I thought Mila's dad came across just fine. He's stoic in that "eastern european" manner, but it's apparent that he cares (at least to another dad). This was a great set of chapters. The only problem was that I wanted them to keep going! The kind of bonding experience that Oliver got with Mila's dad, and then the way that their dinner went, not only does it show Oliver's growth from the boy who couldn't talk, but it also was just a great description of that "first dinner" with your girlfriend's parents. A part of me hopes that Mr. Aliev actually has more interactions with Oliver. He could honestly use a little bit of an older male presence in his life.