The Reality of Everything Flight & Glory Read online Rebecca Yarros

Categories Genre: Angst, Chick Lit, New Adult, Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 151
Estimated words: 145823 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 729(@200wpm)___ 583(@250wpm)___ 486(@300wpm)
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“Hi, Miss Morgan!” Fin grinned up at me, and I couldn’t help but return it. She was like living, breathing joy—the contagious kind, and even I wasn’t immune.

“Well, hi there, Miss Finley! You got here just in time to help me look at paint colors!” I pulled Steve’s vacant stool over and gave the seat a pat.

“I can help?” Fin asked, already climbing onto the stool and setting a bright orange walkie-talkie on the table.

“Well, I get the final say, but I could definitely use your opinion, seeing as you’ll have to see it every day, too!”

“Hmm…” She touched her chin thoughtfully as she flipped through the laminated pages of colors. “I like the bright ones!”

I looked over her shoulder to see swatches of bright pastels in yellow, purple, teal, and blue. “You don’t think we should go with something like your house?”

A quick glance confirmed my memory—Jackson’s house was white with thick, gray trim, and the man himself was walking toward the back gate with a bag slung over his shoulder. My belly fluttered, and I put my hand over the waistband of my shorts.

Not for you, I reminded myself and jerked my eyes away from his retreating frame. Going to his barbecue had been good for me—even Dr. Circe said so—but I wasn’t about to let myself start needing the reprieve being around him somehow gave me.

“My bed is yellow. Like happy sunshine! Your house could be sunshine, too!” She nodded enthusiastically.

“A lot of the houses out here are bright colors you don’t find in the city,” Steve agreed.

I eyed the teal swatch. The color was gorgeous, but what would Will have—

“Calling Fin Montgomery, this is Daddy Montgomery, over,” Jackson said through Fin’s walkie-talkie. Even his voice was attractive, clear and deep. He wasn’t in the yard anymore, so where was he calling her from?

Fin grabbed the device and grinned. “Hi, Daddy!”

“You didn’t say over, over,” he teased.

She giggled, and the sound slipped inside my heart.

“Don’t forget your mission, over,” Jackson said.

“Oh! Right…over.” She turned to me with expectation in her eyes. “I’m supposed to tell you that it’s low tide, so come eat.” She nodded with a smile, satisfied that she’d delivered her message.

“Eat at three forty-five in the afternoon?” I questioned.

“I like snacks,” she told me matter-of-factly.

“Good point. Where are we supposed to go?”

“To the beach. Daddy’s there.”

The fluttering in my belly quickened, and I mentally cursed myself. It had only been four days since I’d seen Jackson at the barbecue. He’d been at work when I’d stopped by to check on the house, and I didn’t attempt to stalk him or make myself obviously available.

Because I wasn’t.

Even joking with myself that I might be available was cruel. But I didn’t have the heart to deny those big brown eyes looking at me beseechingly. Guess I was a masochist, because I stuck my hand out to take Finley’s.

“Okay, we’ll go.”

“Yay!” She pressed the button on the side of the walkie-talkie. “Daddy Montgomery, she said yes! Over!”

“Good work, Fin! See you soon, over!”

“When do you need my answer on the colors?” I asked Steve as Fin hopped down from her seat.

“If you want us to throw the siding on before the Frisco job, then I’ll need it in the next couple of days so I can get everything here.” He smiled at Finley. “Say hi to your dad for me.”

“Sure thing!” she answered.

“I’ll think it over,” I told him, my eyes drawn back to the teal even though I knew that was the most ridiculous, ostentatious choice I could make.

We said our good-byes as Steve headed toward the cranes hovering over my house. Hand in hand, Fin and I steered clear of the construction, then crossed over the dune to the beach.

Jackson had a blanket spread out on the sand, anchored at the corners with a small cooler and a few rocks.

Stop getting all gooey. It’s not a date.

Ugh. Did he have to look so good? He walked over to meet us, barefoot in swim trunks, the wind ruffling his hair and plastering his T-shirt against his carved-by-Michelangelo body.

“You made a picnic?” I asked, hoping my voice didn’t sound as breathless to him as it did to me. What the hell was wrong with me? He wasn’t the first attractive man I’d been around since…everything happened, but he was the first I was attracted to, that was for sure.

“Don’t get excited. It’s just snacks.” He shrugged with a little smile that did inappropriate things to my stomach.

“Pickles, and strawberries, and Skittles!” Finley raced over to the blanket.

“And low tide,” I said softly. He’d remembered his promise, and damn if that wasn’t more attractive than his looks.

“And low tide.” We stood there staring at each other for a moment longer than neighborly friendliness suggested. “So, how has your week been?” he asked, leading me to the blanket.



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