This simple action made her freeze for a moment.
Seemingly aware that he was looking for cigarettes, Song Yi turned back, fetched that pack of cigarettes, and opened the box to pull one out.
She handed it in front of Tang Si for him to smoke.
With fox-like eyes observing his emotions, Tang Si looked at the cigarette offered by the woman in front of him, with a faint look in his eyes, lips pressed lightly, then suddenly smiled: "Can I smoke it?"
This time, without waiting for Song Yi to answer, he continued: "Better not, secondhand smoke is bad for your health."
Tang Si's Adam's apple bobbed: "Put the cigarette back."
She didn't expect Tang Si to have such a reaction; he had always been calm and collected, yet he could express himself when agitated.
When Tang Si asked her to put the cigarette back, she was slightly stunned, the atmosphere inexplicably becoming somewhat eerie.
And this cigarette was, for his family, a way to relieve emotions.
