Swing (Landry Family #2)(56)



Climbing in the passenger’s side, I laugh. “Whatever you say.”

“Speaking of women, did you bring Danielle?”

Her name sparks a warmth inside me. “Yeah. She’s inside with Mom and Sienna.”

He flashes me a look. “Is that safe?”

The car slides down the driveway towards the house. “Why wouldn’t it be?”

“Um, Linc. Your normal girlfriends make Sienna want to brawl. Remember the one that wore fishnets to Barrett’s birthday party?”

“She wasn’t a girlfriend,” I scoff. “Don’t give her too much credit.”

“You brought her.”

“Kind of. I kind of brought her,” I say in defense. “Seriously, why do we always bring her up?”

“Because it’s so easy,” he chuckles. “Just like I’m guessing she was.”

“Dude, she used to take my—”

“No. Just no,” Graham laughs as the car comes to a stop in front of the house.

“Pussy,” I wink.

We exit the car and I breathe in a lungful of clean, Savannah air. It smells different this time. Tastes different. Feels different.

Cleaner, maybe? Crisper? I can’t figure out what it is, exactly, but something seems like a page has turned.

“What?” Graham asks, furrowing his brow as we climb the steps to the house.

“What what?”

“You’re thinking something.”

“How do you know?”

“Because you only have one face you make when you are thinking about something. And because you rarely think, it’s a look all its own.”

“Fuck off,” I laugh, opening the door. Graham goes in first and I hesitate a moment before stepping over the threshold. I wait for it, anticipate it, and the door isn’t closed behind me before I feel it: the sense of being home. It’s the same feeling I’d get when I was a little boy and had been to baseball camp two too many days. It only happens here, at the Farm. It’s the warmth of the lighting, the perfect temperature, the smell of cinnamon and vanilla, like a fleece blanket has been draped over me.

This is what I compare every place I’ve ever lived to. My college apartment. The little place I had in Milwaukee right before I was traded to Memphis. The starter house I had there before I moved into the one, deemed safer by my agent, I have now. They never come close.

Although I’ve seen them a million times, I take in all the little things as I pass by. The photographs of my siblings and I peppered on the walls, the glass of marbles my grandmother collected sitting on the mantle. The ding right above the baseboard as we enter the hallway, a mark from a wild toss one day that was intended to hit Ford in the head but missed, both regrettably and thankfully.

Graham disappears around the corner in front of me, yet my feet falter. I uptake a quick breath, feeling like the time Sydney Fettingberg was my date for junior prom. She was the “it girl” of school and I felt like I had scored a grand slam when she agreed to go with me. I did hit a grand slam later that night, but it wasn’t all I thought it would be. I ended it a couple of weeks later.

This is that on steroids. Danielle’s laughter blending with my mom’s and sister’s, hearing Graham introduce himself to her, makes my chest feel like it’s going to explode.

I could stand here all night and listen to them. It feels better than any homerun I’ve ever hit, any ridiculous catch I’ve ever made in center field. This is better than any accolade I’ve gotten from the baseball league or any magazine cover I’ve been on and this isn’t even about me. It’s about her.

Maybe. Maybe it’s about me and her. Maybe it’s about us in a way that’s feeling more real with every passing minute.

“Hey,” I say, turning the corner. Everyone stops and looks at me. I see Mom first, a twinkle in her eye. Sienna gives me a thumbs-up. Graham looks slightly impressed and Danielle looks beautiful.

She’s sitting at the bar, Graham to her right and Sienna across from her, as naturally as if she’d been here a million times. She gives me a soft smile, an ease in her shoulders that makes me want to grab her and kiss the fuck out of her.

Walking up behind her, I put my hands on her shoulders and give them a gentle squeeze. “What’s happening?” I ask.

“I’ve made an order from Hillary’s House for dinner. It should be here in an hour or so,” Mom says. “How was your talk with your father?”

“Good,” I laugh. “What do y’all think of my girl?”

Dani stiffens under my touch, but I massage it out of her. I wish I could see her face, but I can’t.

“You don’t ask that in front of me,” she says, swatting at my hand.

“Normally he shouldn’t,” Graham agrees. “But I think he’s safe this time.” My brother looks at me and winks. “I have no idea how you’ve managed to convince this one to like you, but you should keep her.”

“I plan on it,” I say, kissing the top of her head. “Now, if you guys are done, I’d really like to show her around.”

“Sure. Thaaaat’s what you’re wanting to do,” Sienna laughs, getting a tap on the leg from Mom.

“Go ahead,” Mom says. “Enjoy yourselves.”

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