Chapter 9: The Magic Of The City
The grueling corporate business meetings concluded successfully the following day, leaving Mark and Lily with two entirely free days to explore Chicago together before flying home.
To his absolute surprise, as they were walking out of the final Westfield meeting, Victoria asked if she could join them for a portion of their planned sightseeing.
“I travel constantly, but I rarely take the time to actually see the beautiful cities I visit,” Victoria admitted, looking slightly nervous about intruding on their family time. “I think it might be really nice to finally experience Chicago through Lily’s eyes. If you don’t mind, of course.”
“We would absolutely love that,” Mark smiled, feeling a surge of genuine joy at the prospect.
They spent an incredibly magical, exhausting day at the Shedd Aquarium and Navy Pier. Lily spent the entire afternoon happily alternating between holding her father’s hand and grabbing Victoria’s hand as she aggressively pulled them from one massive exhibit to the next.
Mark honestly couldn’t remember the last time he had laughed so freely, or felt so profoundly present in the current moment. Watching Victoria—the famously stoic, intimidating CEO—crouch down to enthusiastically point out a glowing jellyfish to his daughter was a sight he knew he would never forget.
That evening, as they shared a massive, messy deep-dish pizza at a famous, crowded local restaurant, Lily looked up from her slice.
“Do you have any kids, Victoria?” Lily asked, her face smeared with red tomato sauce.
Victoria carefully wiped her mouth with a napkin, shaking her head. “No, sweetie. I don’t have any kids.”
“Why not?” Lily pressed, genuinely confused by the concept. “You would be a really, really good mom. You explain things really well, and you are incredibly patient, just like my dad.”
Mark started to intervene, panicked by his daughter’s blunt, invasive questioning. “Lily, honey, that is a very personal—”
But Victoria held up a hand, giving Mark a small, incredibly reassuring smile. “It is totally okay, Mark.”
Victoria turned her full attention back to the little girl.
“Sometimes, Lily, life takes us on vastly different, unexpected paths than we originally planned,” Victoria explained gently, choosing her words with incredible care. “I heavily focused on building my big company. And before I really knew what was happening, many, many years had passed.”
“But you are not too old,” Lily insisted stubbornly, taking another bite of pizza. “My best friend Emma’s mom just had a brand new baby last year, and she is definitely way older than you.”
Victoria burst out laughing. It was a loud, joyful sound that turned a few heads at the neighboring tables.
“Well, I sincerely thank you for that generous assessment, Lily,” Victoria laughed, her eyes crinkling at the corners. “You are completely right. It is not impossible. It is just… complicated.”
Later that night, after a thoroughly exhausted Lily had fallen fast asleep in the master bedroom of their massive hotel suite, Mark stepped into the quiet hallway to call Victoria’s room. He desperately needed to apologize for his daughter’s lack of a filter.
“Please, Mark, do not apologize for her,” Victoria said instantly when she answered the phone. Her voice was soft and deeply relaxed. “It was incredibly refreshing to have such an honest, unfiltered conversation. Children have a beautiful way of cutting right through the heavy pretense adults constantly build around themselves.”
“Still,” Mark insisted, leaning against the hallway wall. “She shouldn’t have pried into your personal life like that.”
“Mark,” Victoria said gently, stopping his apologies. “Today was genuinely one of the most purely enjoyable days I have had in years. Your daughter is an absolute delight. And seeing you with her…”
She paused, taking a slow breath.
“It deeply reminded me that there is so much more to life than quarterly reports and endless client acquisitions,” Victoria confessed.