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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“Well, yeah. I’m not the one who hit the ball or dropped a cooler on her foot.” She glanced down and then looked at me like I was an idiot. “Are you okay?”

That explained why the toes on my right foot were a little pissed off.

“Perfectly fine.” I grasped the plastic handles of the cooler and got it off my foot. Sweet relief swept over the little digits when the pressure was removed. Luckily, the sand had taken most of the impact.

“Doesn’t look like anything’s broken, but I’m not exactly a doctor,” Morgan drawled as she dropped down to examine my foot.

“I’ve been through worse.”

“Well, thank you,” she said, coming to a stand. “But I’m sorry you got hurt.”

“Perfectly fine,” I repeated like a puppet with a pulled string.

“Those are some serious reflexes you’ve got there,” she said as we walked the rest of the way to the grill where the sand firmed up.

“Having a five-year-old daughter will keep you on your toes.” I deposited the cooler in the sand and slapped Moreno on the back. “How about I take over, and you can go give Garrett and Sawyer a hand? They’re getting their asses kicked.”

Moreno laughed but handed over the spatula. “Yeah, I’ll go save their precious little egos. You got this?”

“Absolutely.” I opened the cooler and fished a beer out of the ice as Moreno joined the volleyball game. “Want one?” I asked Morgan.

She peeked around my shoulder at the selection.

“I’d love a Coke, please.”

I plunged my hand into the ice again and pulled out a Coke, brushing off tiny bits of ice from the top before handing it over.

“Thank you,” she said quietly, popping the top as I used the bottle opener I’d installed on the edge of the grill. “So, where is Finley?”

A smile tugged at the corners of my mouth. Most women who ended up at our barbecues never thought to ask about my daughter unless she was actually there. “She’s with her grandmother.” I took a swallow of the cold beer and flipped over the first row of hamburgers.

“Oh.” Her forehead wrinkled as she watched the game, rotating the silver tab on her soda from side to side.

I nearly laughed—she looked so conflicted.

“You can ask, you know. I’m pretty open,” I offered, flipping the second row of burgers.

“Is she with her grandmother often?” She chanced a look at me.

“Vivian takes her a weekend a month. It gives them some girl time.”

“And you a little off time?” she asked, no judgment in her tone.

“Yeah, I guess. Lets me get stuff done, take a weekend shift at work—”

“And have Sunday barbecues,” she noted with a smile as she reached for the package of cheese slices on the grill’s side table. “Want me to unwrap?”

“That would be great, thanks.” I glanced past Morgan to see Sawyer and Garrett headed this way. “Okay, forgive whatever comes out of these idiots’ mouths. They know not what they speak, but they are my best friends,” I warned before they appeared on either side of her.

“Got it.” She nodded, already placing cheese slices on an empty plastic plate.

“You couldn’t help us out there?” Sawyer accused me, then promptly assessed Morgan while she wasn’t looking.

Asshole.

“Hey, I sent Moreno,” I answered, bringing his attention back to me.

“Ignore him. He’s whiny today,” Garrett said, pointing to Sawyer. “Burgers smell good, though.”

Morgan glanced at them both and finished peeling the cheese. A tiny—okay, huge—pang of satisfaction smacked my chest that she hadn’t lingered on either of my friends the way she had when I’d run past her that first morning.

“Garrett, Sawyer, this is my new neighbor, Morgan,” I introduced them.

“Nice to meet you.” Her voice was soft, but her smile was fake. She was missing the little crinkles next to her eyes that had appeared when she’d smiled a few minutes earlier.

“Nice to meet you.” Sawyer poured on the charm. “Where did you get that delicious accent?”

“So subtle,” Garrett mumbled.

“Isn’t it the same as around here?” she asked.

“Not even close,” I answered and was rewarded with her attention. “Yours is deeper. Don’t give me that look—it’s not a bad thing. It’s pretty great, actually.”

She smiled, the crinkles appearing at the edges of her eyes, and I mentally fist-pumped.

“Southern Alabama,” she answered. “I guess I never realized it was that much stronger. Y’all don’t even have accents.”

“That’s because I’m from Oregon,” Sawyer said, like it made him foreign or something. “West Coast.”

For fuck’s sake, it was Oregon, not Brazil.

“And you?” she asked me.

“Maine.”

“My God, could you get any farther north?”

“Not without becoming Canadian.”

“Or Alaskan,” Sawyer suggested, stepping closer to Morgan.

“That would still be American, jackass,” Garrett interjected.

The two started trading insults, and Morgan stepped backward and picked up her beach bag. “You know, that water looks pretty great. I’m going to sneak away, if that’s okay with you boys.”


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