Total pages in book: 72
Estimated words: 70900 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 355(@200wpm)___ 284(@250wpm)___ 236(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 70900 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 355(@200wpm)___ 284(@250wpm)___ 236(@300wpm)
Everett looks past me to the glitter-covered floor of Keats’s office. “Good luck with that.”
Chapter 13
Keats
What’s that bullshit about the best-laid plans?
I had my day planned out to the last second, but that was blown to hell when Berk called as I stepped out of the shower. He asked if I could watch Stevie because she had a mild fever when she woke up, and he didn’t want to send her to school. The regular sitter had an appointment booked. I’m next on the list, so I lucked out.
Instead of spending my day chasing after new clients, I played video games with my niece while she teased me about the glitter she saw in my ear. I cooked a frozen pizza I found in Berk’s freezer for lunch, and I sneezed my way through Sully taking a nap in my lap before I piggybacked Stevie to my townhouse for the afternoon.
Berk would have taken the day off to be with his daughter, but he had a meeting with Nicholas Wolf and his agent. The novelist is looking for a new publishing house to work with, and Berk made the shortlist. I’m proud to say that my friendship with Nicholas’s brother, Liam, played a part in that. Signing Nicholas would take Berk’s business to the next level. I want that for him.
I told my brother to make sure he got his ass home before six because I have plans at seven. Once he assured me he’d be home at least two hours before that, I sent Maren a text telling her she had the day off.
I told her to meet me at Nova at quarter to seven.
Securing a table at one of the most popular restaurants in Manhattan at such short notice is easy when you’re friends with the owner. Tyler Monroe launched Nova a few years ago, and it’s found its niche in the crowded culinary market of New York City.
It never hurts to have connections in the hospitality industry when you make a living wining and dining elite athletes.
“I wish someone would convince my dad to get me a phone.” Stevie tosses me some serious side-eye from where she’s curled up in a chair next to the fireplace.
She made a mad dash for the library as soon as she kicked off her sneakers after we bolted inside.
In addition to this library and the massive living room with attached dining room, this townhouse has a chef’s kitchen, three bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a self-contained one bedroom unit on the upper floor.
I purchased it when Layna was first diagnosed because I thought my brother and his family could live on the lower two floors while I took up residence on the top floor. I wanted them close.
It never dawned on me that Berk would use the money he inherited from our grandfather to buy a townhouse a few blocks away. Layna had a dream to decorate her own home, so Berk made it happen. He moved his family out of the cramped two-bedroom apartment they were renting.
They made memories in the five-bedroom home that Berk and Stevie live in now.
Living on the Upper West Side in a house that’s way too fucking big for me was never on my life’s plan list, but I like it here.
Stevie drops her gaze to the Hemingway book in her hands. I stocked up on short stories about zombies and curious kid detectives, but Stevie always goes for the classics when she visits me.
I have no idea if she’s reading the book or admiring the dust jacket.
“Your dad said no to a phone because he thinks you’re too young,” I remind her. “Give it a few months and then ask him again.”
She turns to face me. “If you asked him for me, he might say yes.”
“In what universe would Berk say yes to me and not you?” I lean back into the soft leather of the couch I’m sitting on.
“He said yes when you wanted to buy me a piano.”
This kid has an answer to everything, and in this instance, she’s right.
“I wanted to teach you how to play,” I point out. “Your dad was pissed that you snuck out and came here to practice, so I had to buy you a piano, Stevie.”
“You swore.” A smile brightens her face. “You owe a hundred to our charity.”
Our charity.
There isn’t an eight-year-old kid on this earth who should be as invested in raising money for an organization as Stevie is. The Layna Morgan Foundation is co-run by Layna’s parents and my brother. It offers financial help to women battling cancer.
I have no doubt that Stevie will be at the helm as soon as she’s legally old enough.
“I’m good for it.” I smile.
She bounces her foot in the air. “Do you think I’ll always remember her?”
My gaze wanders to a framed picture of Berk, Layna, and Stevie on the mantle. It was taken a year before Layna died. “You’ll always remember her.”