“Can we stop talkin’ about Sierra and bull-hockey and start talkin’ about food?” Dave asked. “I’m hungry. I’m gonna order from that new Chinese place. They deliver.”
“David,” Margot started pertly. “We are not ordering Chinese.” She made a move to get up. “I’ll make lasagna.”
“Mom,” Lance, the only one of her kids left in town (though they all had plans of coming back . . . frequently), cut in, “you’re not making lasagna.”
“Bunny,” Lance’s daughter, Edie, was wandering in the room, “I want Chinese.”
“Then Chinese it is, my darling girl,” Margot declared, reaching an arm out to the nine-year-old.
Edie moved right in, climbed up on the couch and leaned against her grandma.
Dave moved out, hopefully to get a phone and menu. Toby was starving.
Addie leaned into Toby where they were sitting on the couch and whispered to him, “I hope Edie didn’t hear me say the F-word.”
Dawn, Lance’s wife, who sat on the other side of Addie from Toby, leaned into Addie. “If she did, then she’d think you ran in her father’s circles, and I wish I could say I was immune, but these lips are not F-word virgin.”
Addie grinned big at Dawn.
Dawn winked at her.
Dawn also straightened.
Addie stayed leaned into Toby.
But he’d find this wasn’t to offer support after that shit with his biological mother.
It was to be closer to Izzy, who was sitting in the armchair kitty-corner to them.
She got even closer, leaning all the way across the front of him.
“You up for a troll of hotels around Matlock?” she asked her sister. “I haven’t keyed a car in years, but I don’t think it’s a skill you lose.”
“After Chinese, I’d be up for that,” Izzy replied.
Good fuck.
Dawn leaned back into Addie. “I would too.”
Jesus.
“You women aren’t keying any cars,” Toby ordered.
Addie tipped her head back to look at him. “I’m really good at doing stuff and not getting caught.”
“She really is,” Izzy put in.
“You are not keyin’ any freakin’ cars,” Toby repeated.
“Killjoy,” Addie muttered, pushing back to sitting properly in the couch, and since she did, Dawn went with her.
Toby looked to Johnny who was slouched back on the arm of Izzy’s chair.
“What? I don’t mind they key her car,” he said.
“No committing any felonies,” Margot ordered.
“It isn’t a felony,” Addie informed her. “It’s a misdemeanor.” She paused before she finished, “If you’re caught.”
A pad of paper went sailing across the room and hit Lance in the chest.
“Write down orders, would you, son?” Dave asked, returning to the room.
“’Spose I will,” Lance replied, his lips twitching. “Though I need a pen,” he said, pushing up from the couch opposite them.
“I want chow mein,” Dave called at his departing son.
He then offered the menu to his wife.
She waved at him, refusing the menu. “David. You order for me.”
“Shrimp fried rice, chicken with garlic sauce and some of them dumplin’s!” Dave yelled at the door.
“Hang on, Dad!” Lance yelled back. “I’m finding a pen!”
“I’ll help you find a pen, Dad!” Emmett, Lance and Dawn’s eleven-year-old son shouted from somewhere in the house.
“Here, child, you pick,” Dave murmured, reaching across the coffee table to hand the menu to Dawn.
She took it.
Addie snuggled deeper into Toby’s side.
Now that was for support.
Or maybe it was just because she kinda liked him.
Toby felt something, looked to the couch facing them and saw Margot’s gaze on his woman.
It shifted to him.
She gave him a soft smile.
He returned it.
Then she lifted her hand, snapped her fingers at her husband, and demanded, “Order some egg rolls, David. Lots of them. Everyone likes egg rolls.”
“Egg rolls, Lance!” Dave yelled.
“Got it, Paw!” Emmett yelled back.
“Thanks, boy!” Dave returned in another yell.
“Lord,” Margot muttered.
Toby chuckled.
“Lord!” Brooks screamed.
Toby looked down at the floor to see him on his ass, clapping poorly and wobbling because he was giggling to himself.
“That’s on you, sweetheart,” Dave declared, smiling at his wife.
“Lord,” Margot repeated.
“Lord!” Brooks yelled.
And at that, everyone burst out laughing.
It would be at Margot and Dave’s dining room table, where Margot made them sit as a family to eat Chinese, just after Toby took a huge bite of an egg roll, when Addie leaned into him yet again.
“Are you really okay?” she whispered for only him to hear.
He turned his head, chewed, swallowed and replied, also quietly, “Yeah.”
“You sure?” she pressed. “You’re not disappointed?”
“Honey,” he started, “how can I be disappointed?” He indicated the table with the remains of his egg roll. “I’m with my family. The family I wouldn’t have if Sierra stuck around.” His focus shifted, he reached with his free hand for a crab wonton before they all disappeared and muttered before he shoved the last of his egg roll in his mouth, “Shit works out the way it’s supposed to.”
“It’s a journey,” she said.
He turned his head to Addie again.
“Life,” she continued. “A journey to find your place. Your people. You always had your place, your people. You just . . .” she hesitated, “realized it.”
“Yeah,” he said softly, giving her an “I’m okay” grin.
She returned a “love you, glad you’re good” smile.
Then she reached for a crab wonton.
The month-long Christmas food orgy, his woman was filling out again.
Back to Addie.
All good.
In fact, in that moment, at that table, life was as it should be.
Just as it was supposed to be.
Toby was in his place.
With his people.
And his Addie.
Richest Girl in the World
Addie
Five Months Later . . .
I MADE THE turn into Toby’s lane, hit the garage door opener on my sun visor, drove up and coasted into Toby’s bay of the garage, which was now my bay at his demand, since it was closer to the door to the house.
I put the Focus into park and cut the ignition.
Then I did the usual drill.
I turned to the passenger seat, grabbed the mail I’d picked up from the mailboxes at the front of the complex and my purse.
I got out, throwing the strap of my bag over my shoulder, then went around the car to the back-passenger side.
I opened the door.
Brooklyn looked up at me from his car seat and said, “Mommy, peezza.”
“We’ll see, baby,” I replied, unstrapping him, juggling mail and my son to pull him out and put him on my hip.