Page 64 of On His Watch


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“I leaned it against a wall like a stick,” I mutter, annoyed.

“You leaned her against a wall like a man’s wife, Linwood. I saw the angle.”

And I lose it. A bubbled-up laugh gets all the way out.

His grin goes enormous. “There she is.”

I’m still laughing. I’m going to laugh until I cry if he doesn’t stop in the next thirty seconds, and I would die before I told him I don’t want him to stop.

He stops. He sets the stick down against the dresser with enormous tenderness, adjusts its angle, and pats the blade twice.

“Stay there, baby. I’m in a meeting.”

He turns to me with a full grin. I laugh again because he is ridiculous.

“Linwood. Hi.”

I swallow down my laughter, but I still have a smile. “Hi.”

“How are you?”

I bite my bottom lip, trying to contain myself. “I’m okay.”

He drops into my desk chair, still grinning. I can feel that I’m still smiling, and I can’t get my face to stop.

He pulls out his phone, opens the airline app. “Forward me the confirmation.”

I do. He books the same flight in under two minutes.

“Done.”

“That fast.”

“Linwood. I am a man who books flights for a living.”

“You are a man who flies on team charters.”

“I have an instinct for it. It’s a gift.”

He sets the phone on his knee. He’s not done, though. I can see it — his thumb is running along the edge of the case.

I wait.

“So, I bet you’ve already heard that the Ermingtons are flying in to join the Linwoods for Thanksgiving.”

I blink. “What?”

“Yeah.”

I’m going to be sick.

“Your dad?” I ask.

He nods. “And my mom.”

“At my parents’ house. For Thanksgiving.”

“Correct.”