The Last Field Party – The Field Party Read Online Abbi Glines

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Romance, Sports Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 65
Estimated words: 60933 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 305(@200wpm)___ 244(@250wpm)___ 203(@300wpm)
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I let out a sob, then nodded my head, unable to say anything just yet.

West took the ring from the box and slid it onto my finger, then he stood up and cupped my face with both his hands. “You’re gonna have to stop crying on me, baby. It’s messing me up.”

I smiled through my tears. “They’re happy tears,” I told him.

“They fucking better be,” he said just before his mouth pressed against mine.

Everything else fell away. It was just us at our tree. Kissing once again.

BRADY AND RILEY

Ten months ago: Bryony’s seventh birthday

CHAPTER ONE

BRADY

“Why are we stopping at Grammy’s?” Bryony asked when I pulled into my mother’s driveway. My dad’s SUV was here. That was why we were stopping. This wasn’t normal. My parents weren’t enemies. Time had passed, and they got along well enough. I’d found a way to forgive him, but that didn’t mean I trusted him.

He shouldn’t be at this house. It was Mom’s house. He may have lived here with us before, but he had chosen another path. This wasn’t his home anymore. I glanced down at Bryony.

“Boone is here,” she said then, recognizing his vehicle.

“Yeah, he is,” I replied. I had never allowed him to have her call him anything other than his name. There were times I wanted to call him Boone. Times I wanted to punish him by not calling him Dad.

“Are we here to see him?” she asked with obvious excitement in her voice. Dad was good with Bryony. She adored him. He told her stories and always gave her money that she thought I didn’t know about when she saw him. At first I’d not wanted her to know him, but Riley had made me see how that wasn’t healthy for me or Bryony.

“Not exactly,” I told her. I didn’t want her going inside with me, but I doubted I was going to be able to stop her from that. She loved both my parents, and she wouldn’t understand my asking her to stay in the truck.

She didn’t ask any more questions and opened the door to hop out and run for the house. I sighed, knowing this confrontation would be more difficult with her there. I would have to be careful what I said and what she heard. The kid was smart. She picked up on things I often wished she didn’t. The older she got, the sharper she became.

“Come on, Daddy!” she called after me when she was at the front door. After flashing me her mother’s smile, she opened the door and went inside without knocking. Which was what my mother expected. Bryony treated my parents just like she treated Riley’s. There was no difference in her attentions or affections. She loved them equally. That humbled me almost as much as her calling me Daddy.

Bryony had been my mom’s salvation during the hardest times of her life. When I had been falling in love with Riley, I’d had no idea what a large part her daughter, our daughter, would play in my life. Riley had given me more than I deserved. I had gotten the best damn package deal a man could get.

When I reached the house, I walked inside through the door, which Bryony had left open for me. My dad had picked Bryony up and was swinging her around in a circle while she laughed.

“How’s my girl today? Are you ready for the big birthday party?” he asked her.

“YES!” she shouted happily.

“I got you the biggest present. You just wait and see,” he told her.

I doubted that, since Riley and I were giving her the purple sparkly bicycle she’d been begging for since January.

“What is it?” she asked with excitement lighting up her eyes.

“You’ll just have to wait a few more hours to see,” he teased her. “But what about we go sneak one of the cookies Grammy is decorating for your party?”

Bryony hugged him tightly. “YAY!”

Finally, my dad shifted his gaze to me. “Hello, son,” he said, still smiling as he set Bryony down and she went running toward the kitchen, where the smell of sugar cookies wafted. Mom was in charge of making the sunshine-, tower-, and number-eight-shaped cookies and decorating them for Bryony’s birthday party this afternoon.

“Dad,” I replied with a nod.

I wasn’t normally so formal with him, but this was the first time I’d found him here. In this house. With my mother, since the divorce. He wasn’t supposed to be here. The house he had bought for him and his second wife was still his home, even though she’d divorced him after just two years. He had been smart enough to have her sign a prenup. The house had remained his.

It was after the divorce that I’d been okay with Bryony visiting him at his home. I didn’t want Bryony around the woman who had been the reason for my parents’ divorce. Before that, I had required he go to Riley’s parents’ house to see her. But never here. I didn’t want him here with Mom. She had survived. She was doing great. Mom’s heartbreak was healed.



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