Page 3
We barely make it outside when Gabe is rushing through the door behind us.
"Where are you going?" Gabe asks.
"We're walking home?" I cock my head slightly at him, wondering why he's asking. He just stares back until it dawns on me. "Oh, yeah. I guess I should probably give you the address."
"Or…" he drags out the word and lifts a key fob to unlock a car nearby. A mini van, actually. "You can be smart and let me drive you home instead of walking through this heat again. Before you argue, I have a car seat Owen can use. Perks of having nieces and nephews."
"Oh, we can't do that." I look from Gabe to Owen. His cheeks are already red and, despite being adamant he wanted chocolate milk, he downed two kiddie cups of water in the short time we sat in the diner. Even just a couple minutes’ walk back doesn’t seem all that appealing.
"Daddy, please? It's hot." Owen looks between the two of us and my shoulders sag.
Gabe's friends are loitering by their cars already, waiting for me to make a decision.
I love Owen with every fiber of my being but having to make all the decisions and constantly weighing pros and cons is not my favorite thing in the world.
I had to grow up fast at home on top of Owen being a surprise.
To be a kid again , I think.
"Sure, buddy." I give Gabe a short smile. "Only if you're sure and you have the right car seat for him."
"I have all three stages. My youngest niece is only a couple of months old and my oldest nibling is around Owen's height, so he should be able to use that one. Come on."
The blast of cool air when Gabe turns on the car is more than welcoming. The car is nice, a newer model. Definitely different from my 2010 Toyota. Not that there’s anything wrong with my car. It is reliable and easy to maintain; something that's necessary when you're a single dad.
Owen is buckled up, asking a hundred questions to Gabe about whatever he can see while I point directions.
It's really just two short turns and then pointing out the house with the moving truck in the driveway. My car is currently with Lauren’s parents, Owen's maternal grandparents. They let me leave it at their place two weeks ago when I came out to sign for the house. Owen has never officially met his mom’s parents since she passed away; outside of the job offer, knowing they would be close by seemed like another tick in the plus column for moving here.
Gabe pulls into the driveway next to the moving truck. "This place is nice. Good neighborhood too."
"Do you live around here?"
"Not too far," Gabe says. He turns the car off and climbs out, my cue to drop that line of questioning. Despite the random invitation for him to help me unload the truck, we know nothing but each other’s names .
Owen is already unbuckled and waiting for me to open the back door. He hops out without my help, something that sends a small pang through me. He's growing up too fast.
Gabe's friends are parked along the road, and we all meet at the front door.
"I would offer you all a beer or something for the trouble, but I only have tap water.
" I was never one to host events or anything.
I had friends that would come over, some with their own kids, but most would just invite me out.
Half the time I had to decline because I didn't have anyone to watch Owen.
They never really made the effort to do things where kids could be included, and I couldn't blame them.
Your twenties are supposed to be a time to have fun and go out to meet people. Small children get in the way of that.
"Beer in this heat would mean trouble," one of the guys says as we walk into the empty house. I want to ask them to take their shoes off, but we'll be going in and out for a couple of hours at least. I'll just have to mop once everything is settled.
"Gabe! Want to see my room?" Owen takes Gabe's hand and leads him through the house before the guy can even answer.
I'm grateful that Gabe stops just at the door frame and looks back at me with a nod.
It relaxes my nerves a bit that I can keep my eye on him.
I might be inviting these guys into my house, but I don't know them enough to let them out of sight with my kid.
Gabe and his friends seem trustworthy enough, but the world can be a cruel place.
I hate that my brain goes there.
"He's great with kids," one of the others says, like they just heard my thoughts. There are three of them, and they're big. Their muscles are on full display in their short sleeve shirts and shorts. The same guy holds out his hand. "I'm Israel. Izzy for short."
"Noah," the second guy says.
"And I'm Marshall."
“Marshall?” I hear Owen's voice behind me and can't help the smile that tugs my lips upward. I shake Marshall's hand.
“I hope you know your Paw Patrol," I warn him.
“Oh, do I ever!" Marshall turns to Owen, who is now leading Gabe back to where they're standing. Marshall squats down to Owen's eye level and points to my son's shirt. "That dalmatian right there is Marshall. Rubble. Chase. Skye. Zuma. Rocky. Then there's also Ryder and Mayor—”
"Okay, that's enough." Noah cuts Marshall off with a hand on his shoulder. "How about you save your knowledge for after we move everything in?"
"Are you also a firebiter?"
"Firefighter, Owen. Fighter." I find it endearing the way he mixes up his words sometimes, but I try to make sure he knows what the actual word is without belittling him. I grew up in a household like that and don't want Owen to feel any less than the smart kid he is.
"Fighter," he corrects himself, smiling up at me and then back to Marshall.
"I'm not, Owen."
"Doesn't stop you from roleplaying," I hear Gabe mutter under his breath next to me. I look over at him and he looks like a deer in the headlights when he realizes he said that out loud. I hide my laugh behind a cough. "How about we get to unpacking?"
"Let's get my trucks!" Owen says and rushes to the door. It's still open, letting out what cool air had filled the space while we were gone. I hang back, letting Owen have his fun while watching the four men I'm blindly trusting.
We make a game plan on how we're going to get everything out.
I have to move the truck forward a bit so we can put down the ramp.
Izzy and Gabe hop into the truck and hand boxes to me, Noah, and Marshall.
Owen is given toys or much smaller, less breakable things to carry as well.
We all joke and laugh while moving boxes.
Marshall is quite funny. Noah is quieter, but he hits the mark with perfectly timed one-liners.
Gabe, like he's claimed a few times, is great with Owen.
I watch them interact, and there's something genuine in Gabe's expression every time Owen calls his name.
By the time we're down to just the big furniture, it's been over an hour.
The boxes are sitting in each room and they will probably take at least a week to go through.
Someone (me) forgot to label what exactly was in each box as I taped them up.
The most they say is the generic room they'll need to go in.
I watch Gabe—and the others—pick up the furniture and maneuver it inside.
They are dripping with sweat, and I feel bad that I don't even know where my cups are.
Labeling boxes with their actual contents didn't seem like an important step when I was packing everything.
I pull out my phone as they're setting the couch in the living room to order some groceries to the house.
"Everything okay?" I recognize Gabe's voice without looking up.
"Yeah, just ordering some water and popsicles from the store a couple miles away." I don't know the store, but it's Phoenix so there are plenty of delivery services around. "Should be here in half an hour."
"I could have just driven you," Gabe says. "Save your money."
"I'm good," I say. I'm not hurting for money, and starting the job at the college soon is going to be a serious pay bump as well. "I'll be going to the grocery store tomorrow to stock the kitchen, so this is just to get us through the heat today."
"Do you have a car?" I watch the guys walk back outside to the truck.
Izzy gives Gabe a knowing look, one that asks, 'why are we doing all the work?
'. Owen is most likely making a mess in his room already.
Marshall was commandeered to help Owen put his bed together.
Last I checked on them, Owen was talking Marshall's ears off about his favorite animals. They’re keeping the door open at my request.
"I do," I say. "It's at Owen's maternal grandparents' house. They live in Phoenix, which is one of the reasons we chose to move here from Virginia. They're supposed to be coming by tomorrow to meet Owen. They haven't seen him in person before."
"Oh wow, big difference in climate." We move toward the front door and walk out to look in the truck. There's really just my bedroom furniture left.
We stop that conversation when Izzy and Noah hand off the headboard of my bed frame.
It takes a bit of maneuvering, but we get it through the front door and down the hall.
Owen runs out when I call for him, holding a beloved toy truck in each hand.
I sigh, knowing that it's going to be next to impossible to organize his room.
"Can you open the bathroom door, buddy?"
"You're putting your bed in the bathroom?" He tilts his head, but does as I ask.
Gabe is the one to answer that question since he's closer to Owen. "We have to open the door so we have more room to turn sideways and get this into Daddy's room."
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3 (Reading here)
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
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- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38