mine as he brushes a piece of my hair behind my ear, then finally nods and follows Mia out of the room.
I take a long, deep breath before hanging the rest of the clothes, holding my breath so I don’t inhale Landon’s sexy, manly scent, damn him, and then return to the main living area, which now smells like pizza, which is much better than cardboard.
Also, there’s safety in numbers in here.
“I’m hungry,” I announce, and help myself to a slice of Hawaiian. “Hot!” I hide my mouth behind my hand as I breathe around the scalding-hot pizza in my mouth, and then Landon takes my wrist in his hand and pulls my pizza to his mouth, taking almost half the slice in one bite. He’s touching me again. And I can smell him, and see his square jaw flex as he chews.
Where’s that grip when I need it?
“Just right.” He winks and walks into the kitchen, humming as he puts glasses in a cupboard.
It’s a good thing my mouth is full right now because otherwise I’d be stammering. But the weird thing about all of this is, although he still makes my pulse speed up, my reaction to his nearness is . . . different.
I enjoy him, that’s for sure, and he’s as much a hottie at thirty-something as he was at twenty. But I realize that he no longer makes me nervous.
I guess we’re all adults after all.
And the best part is, he’s relaxed too. The sadness hasn’t left his blue eyes altogether, but he seems much happier than when he first arrived in town.
“Your hair is pretty like that,” Landon says quietly from across the kitchen island. I glance up to see him watching me.
“It’s just in a braid,” I reply. “But thank you.”
“You usually wear your hair down.”
“Unless I’m cleaning or working out,” I say, and take another bite of pizza. “So far, this qualifies as both.”
“Do you go to the gym?”
“Not if I can help it,” I reply with a grin. “Addie makes me go sometimes, and I’m pretty sure it’s because she hates me.”
“I don’t hate you!” Addie calls from the living room before returning to her conversation with Mia about a new walk-in freezer for the restaurant.
“So you don’t go to the gym but you work out?” Landon asks with a smile.
“I go for walks. I shovel my sidewalk in the winter. I carry Christmas decorations down from my attic.”
“That’s all considered working out?” Landon asks.
“I have a lot of decorations,” I mutter with a frown. “I jump over the cat.”
“Wait. You have a cat?” Mia asks. “Since when?”
“About a month ago,” I reply. “And I didn’t get a cat, the cat got me.”
“I’m so confused,” Addie whispers.
“He came in my house and he won’t leave.”
“I’ve dated a few of those,” Mia says with a laugh, then sticks her tongue out at her brother when he scowls.
“I’ll make them fucking leave,” Landon growls.
“Can you make Scoot leave?”
“Who’s Scoot?” Addie asks.
“The cat,” Landon replies as he crosses his arms over his chest and keeps his gaze level with mine. “And no. He loves you.”
“He won’t let me touch him,” I counter. “That doesn’t scream love to me.”
“Just come to grips with the fact that you have a cat. He’s cute.” Landon brushes his knuckles down my cheek, but I barely notice. I’m still deep in thought about the damn cat. “Like you.”
“He lets you touch him,” I remind him, and roll my eyes and pull myself out of my own head. “What needs to be put away next?”
“These boxes are empty,” Mia says.
“That’s it, then,” Landon says. “I’ll finish up the kitchen.”
“You are not to hang that horrible owl in the kitchen,” Mia says, wagging her finger under his nose. “It’s ugly as hell.”
“It’s my house,” he reminds her. “I’ll hang whatever I want in the kitchen. Maybe my underwear.”
“Ew,” Addie and I say in unison. “Do you hang your underwear in the kitchen?” Addie asks me with a laugh.
“I don’t wear underwear,” I remind her. “But if I did, they wouldn’t hang in the kitchen.”
“I can’t even believe we’re related,” Mia says with disgust. “Mom raised you better than that.”
But Landon isn’t listening to her. He’s watching me. His eyes are narrowed, just a bit, and his hands are clenched on the countertop. His jaw ticks.
“Landon.” Mia waves her hand over his face, getting his attention.
“What.”
“We’re done. We’re going to leave now.”
Addie and I gather up the pizza box and our napkins and