Total pages in book: 96
Estimated words: 92368 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 462(@200wpm)___ 369(@250wpm)___ 308(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 92368 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 462(@200wpm)___ 369(@250wpm)___ 308(@300wpm)
And competitive too.
Zach shoots me a quizzical look. “Can you build a tree house?”
It’s a simple question, not a challenge, but I know tonight, I’ll be googling how to build a tree house in a tiny yard in the West Village. “I can,” I say. “But I can also make the best forts ever.”
His green eyes pop wide open. My eyes. The kid has my eyes. The first time I met him it was eerie to see the similarity. Now, it’s just…cool.
“Can we make one tonight?” he asks as we reach Nick’s building.
“Sure,” I say. I’m still bad at saying no.
We head inside and he picks up the pace. I shake my head. “Inside feet,” I say. At least I draw the line there.
Zach nods like a good little soldier and resists running across the marble floor. When we reach the elevator, his eyes light up with glee. “Can I press the button?”
Things I don’t understand about kids—the need to be the one to press the elevator buttons. “Were you helpful with your grandmother this weekend?”
“I set the table for dinner,” he says earnestly.
That’s good. “And were you polite with your grandfather?”
“I thanked him for the tree house,” he says.
Stroking my chin like I’m weighing his good deeds, I finally say, “You can press it then.”
“Sweet!” He stabs the penthouse button, and a minute later, we’re off and he’s rushing down the hall to my brother’s home. I should tell him to stop, but fuck it. I ran like a demon as a kid too. I don’t mind seeing his rocket-fueled feet.
He raps on the door three times, but Nick answers on the second one, holding a couple of pool noodles in each hand. “Look what I got,” he says, looking far too pleased.
Dammit. I wish I’d thought of noodles, but Nick’s been at this parenting thing a lot longer than I have.
“Noodles!” Zach shouts, a battle cry for fun. He asks if he can go change, and Nick points to the guest bathroom. Zach scurries off, and I shut the penthouse door behind us.
“Noodles are the way to a kid’s heart, I guess.” I make a mental note.
“Well, pools are too. Hell, your pool in Miami is still the way to my thirty-nine-year-old heart,” he says.
I do like that infinity pool in my second home. Could even see playing a pool guy scene there with my naughty piano player, pretending she owns the place, and I found her sunbathing with her top off, and she begged me to service her…
But I shake off those thoughts.
There’s a time and place for those, and it is not when I’m about to pull on swim trunks.
Since there’s no downtime with a busy seven-year-old, the three of us head to the indoor pool a few minutes later. Nick’s building has one and the price tag reflects it.
Works for me.
Zach jumps in first, all limbs and elbows as he splashes. I’m right behind him, making a bigger splash.
Things I’ve learned in the last few months of trial-by-fire parenting—you can’t walk into a pool with a kid. You must make an epic entrance.
He surfaces, laughing at the big waves, then turns to my brother on the ledge. “Do a cannonball, Uncle Nick!”
Like anyone needs to ask my brother twice. He heads to the deep end and complies, making a tsunami across the chlorinated water. Zach paddles to the edge, grabs his goggles, and yanks in one noodle.
“Takes after me,” Nick says, and he sounds as proud as I am, even though he’s got a kid of his own. But Nick was a swimmer in high school and college, and like me, he’s enjoying finding the similarities between us and this new addition to the Adams family. “It’s still wild to see you with a kid.”
“Yeah, it is to me too,” I say, with fondness for this new life, but some sadness, too, over how it happened.
Last summer, my wife of six years left me. We’d spent years in therapy, so the demise of our marriage was a surprise to no one, including me. The big surprise in life came a few months later.
I was running on the High Line with my buddy Tate when my phone rang with a Westchester County number. I answered it in case it was one of our portfolio clients for the venture firm, but the voice on the line was a stranger.
“This is Candace Irving. Any chance you were in Rome in September eight years ago?”
Startled, I stopped running. The surreal question belonged in the opening scene of a page-turning thriller. The kind where someone’s identity is stolen, his life hacked, his world upended.
I sat on a bench, my heart racing faster. Tate joined me while this woman I didn’t know shared more details, beginning with the fact that she was Nina Irving’s mother.