work boot, and he toed it with a frown. “That one’s always been a problem.”
Even at my age I saw what this did to Dad’s posture. He was an easygoing metro guy, but Mr. Nick’s casual familiarity with the property immediately pushed some macho rigidity into his spine.
“I can fix that,” Dad said, voice uncharacteristically deep as he leaned on the creaky step. Eager to reassure me that every tiny problem would be corrected, he added quietly, “I’m not wild about the front door, either, but that’s easy enough to replace. And anything else you see, tell me. I want it to be perfect.”
“Dad,” I said, nudging him gently, “it’s already perfect. Okay?”
While the Petropoulos boys wandered down to the moving truck, Dad fumbled with his keys, finding the right one on a ring heavy with keys for other doors, for our other life seventy-three miles away from here.
“I’m not sure what we’ll need for the kitchen,” Dad mumbled to me. “And there’s probably some renovations to come . . .”
He looked at me with an unsure smile and propped the front door open. I was still evaluating the wide porch that wrapped around to the side, hiding some unknown view of the thick trees beyond the side yard. My mind had drifted to goblins and tromping through the woods looking for arrowheads. Maybe a boy would kiss me in those woods someday.
Maybe it would be one of the Petropoulos boys.
My skin flamed with a blush that I hid by ducking my head and letting my hair fall forward. To date, my only crush had been Jason Lee in seventh grade. After having known each other since kindergarten, we’d danced stiffly to one song at the Spring Fling and then awkwardly burst apart, never to speak again. Apparently I was fine on a friend level with nearly everyone, but add in some mild romantic chemistry and I turned into a spastic robot.
We created an efficient line of arms passing boxes, and quickly emptied the truck, leaving the furniture to the bigger bodies. Elliot and I each grabbed a box labeled Macy to carry upstairs. I followed him down the long hallway and into the bright emptiness of my bedroom.
“You can just put that in the corner,” I said. “And thanks.”
He looked over at me, nodding as he set the box down. “Are these books?”
“Yeah.”
With a tiny look toward me to make sure it was okay, Elliot lifted the flap on the box and peered inside. He pulled out the book on top. Pay It Forward.
“You’ve read this?” he asked dubiously.
I nodded and took the beloved book from him and placed it on the empty shelf just inside the closet.
“It’s good,” he said.
Surprised, I looked up at him, asking, “You read it, too?”
He nodded, saying unselfconsciously, “It made me cry.”
Reaching in, he grabbed another book and dragged a finger across the cover. “This one’s good, too.” His large eyes blinked up at me. “You have good taste.”
I stared at him. “You read a lot.”
“Usually a book a day.”
My eyes went wide. “Are you serious?”
He shrugged. “People come to the Russian River on vacation and a lot of times they leave their holiday reads here when they go. The library gets a ton, and I have a deal with Sue down there: I get first crack at the new donations as long as I pick them up on Monday and bring them back on Wednesday.” He nudged his glasses up the bridge of his nose. “One time, she got six new books in from a family that was visiting for the week, and I read them all.”
“You read them all in three days?” I asked. “That’s insane.”
Elliot frowned, narrowing his eyes. “You think I’m lying?”
“I don’t think you’re lying. How old are you?”
“Fourteen, last week.”
“You look younger.”
“Thanks,” he said flatly. “I was going for that.” He blew his breath out, puffing his hair off his forehead.
A laugh burst free of my throat. “I didn’t mean it like that.”
“How old are you?” he asked.
“Thirteen. My birthday is March eighteenth.”
He nudged his glasses up. “You’re in eighth grade?”
“Yeah. You?”
Elliot nodded. “Same.” He looked around the empty space, surveying. “What do your parents do? They work in the city?”
I shook my head, chewing my lip. Without realizing it, I had really enjoyed talking to someone who didn’t know that I was motherless, hadn’t seen me broken and raw after I lost her. “My dad owns a company in Berkeley that imports and sells handmade ceramics