Everything We Left Behind (Everything We Keep #2)

His son looks up at him. A chip hangs from his lower lip. He wipes it off. “Lo siento, Pa—. I mean, sorry.”

James drags a hand down his face. He kneels beside Marc. “No, it’s my fault. I didn’t mean to snap. Here, let me help.” He cups his palms and motions for Marc to give him the chip fragments. “People have walked all over this carpet. What if they’d stepped in dog doo-doo?”

Marc scrunches his face. “Doo-doo?” He giggles at the funny word, then cocks his head. “What’s doo-doo?”

“Dog shi—” James catches himself with the shake of his head. “Um . . . caca?”

Marc’s mouth stretches wide over his teeth.

“Gross, huh?”

Marc nods vigorously and wipes his tongue on the back of his hand. James laughs. “I think you’ll be fine.”

He tosses broken chips into the trash, then picks up the colored pencils scattered across the table. Marc’s open notepad catches his attention. The sketch of a wolf head is rudimentary, but well beyond the talent of an average six-year-old.

“You did this?” James points at the sketch.

Marc drags the pad toward him and flips the cover closed, sliding it into the open mouth of his backpack.

“It’s very good.” James gives him the pencil case. Marc averts his gaze as though embarrassed by the compliment. He adds the pencil case to his backpack and zips the pack closed.

James sighs, wondering how he’ll ever get through to the kid. Aside from the lack of memory, he’s still the same guy. He’s still their dad. Someday, hopefully, Marc will see that. Julian, too.

James joins Julian at the window. He plucks a few spitballs. Their hands brush.

Julian shifts away. “I’ve got it.”

“Fine,” James replies in the same short tone. Six months living under the same roof together in Puerto Escondido and they were starting to sound alike. Maybe they always did. He lets Julian finish the rest.

His son dumps the soggy wads into the trash, brushing his hands together, then wipes them dry on the back of his jeans. Snatching up his backpack, he leaves the conference room. Marc walks in a wide circle around James and jogs after his brother.

James blows out a breath and grabs Marc’s pack, tossing it over his shoulder. One fun-filled day of parenthood in the States down. A gazillion more to go.



James stands with the boys in the empty hallway of his childhood home. Aside from a few pieces of furniture—his mother’s Henredon & Schoener couch in the living room and the antique Italian walnut table in the dining room—the house is empty.

Julian drops his backpack on the floor and kicks it against the wall. “This sucks. Where are we supposed to sleep?”

Good question. Hopefully there are beds.

It’s past ten. Too late to find a hotel in an area that typically has a 100 percent occupancy rate during the workweek. He leads his sons through the house, tossing the pizza box with their leftover dinner on the kitchen countertop.

Marc sniffs the air and scrunches his face. “It stinks in here.”

Yeah, it does. James noticed the stale, sour “old house” smell he once associated with his dying father as soon as they opened the front door. He also smelled a subtle, powdery aroma as though his mother’s perfume had gone bad. It reminded him too much of growing up here and why he spent so much time at Aimee’s house.

“The house has been closed up for a long time. It’ll go away when we open the windows,” he tells his son.

Marc wanders over to the great room’s French doors and presses his nose and hands to the glass. He peers into the darkness of the backyard. “Where’s the beach?”

“There isn’t one.” Julian flops onto a leather couch. That piece is too new to have belonged to his mother. Thomas must have brought it over from the Donatos’ warehouse. Hopefully he had beds delivered, too.

“There is a beach.” James cuts Julian a look and joins Marc at the door. “But it’s twenty minutes from here. Back there is a forest. I’ll show you in the morning. We can walk the trail. We might see a bobcat if we’re lucky.”

Marc’s fingers curl against the glass. He gnaws his lower lip. James takes it as a sign of interest.

“So, where do we sleep? The floor?” Julian slips on his Beats and cranks up the music on his iPhone.

James sighs. God, he hopes they don’t have to sleep on the floor. Thomas said he stocked the house with the basics. Towels, dishware, milk, a few dry goods. He hopes he remembered sheets and pillows. And beer.

His mouth salivates. He could really use a cold, dark brew after today. They’ve been awake for almost twenty-four hours. The boys caught a few hours of sleep during their layover in Mexico City, but James had been afraid if he closed his eyes, the boys wouldn’t be there when he woke. So, he stayed awake.

Selling their home and his gallery in Puerto Escondido had been an easy decision for him. He would have returned to California sooner if it hadn’t been for his sons. They didn’t want to leave. After he first told them, he only mentioned their “grand adventure” every so often, giving them a chance to get used to the idea. He also had them finish the school year. Better to wait for summer when they had time to get used to their new surroundings. Besides, he had to wait on the boys’ visas and his own identification paperwork.

Soon, Julian and Marcus took to the idea of a big move, until the FOR SALE sign was posted in their front yard. That was when the idea became reality and James became the instant family “bad guy.”

And he’s tired of being assigned that role. All he wants is to get settled and get on with his life. Kids adjust. Eventually they’ll get used to the move, and to him. He hopes.

Marc yawns. James gives his shirtsleeve a gentle tug. “Come on, kiddo. Let’s find a bed for you.”

They find queen-size beds made up with sheets, blankets, and pillows in James’s and Thomas’s old rooms. Marc whines. He doesn’t want to sleep alone. After a bit of prodding from James, Julian reluctantly offers to share a bed with his little brother.

James retrieves the luggage from the car his eco-conscious brother bought him—a freaking Prius—and leads the boys down the hallway. “Which room?” He points to his old door, then Thomas’s.

“This one.” Julian walks into the room on their left. James’s old room. He’s surprised how good that makes him feel, and he doesn’t breathe a word about that to Julian. The kid will just change his mind.

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