I stood at the door with a nervous kind of anticipation. It had been months since I’d last seen him, back at Christmas when he barely spoke and stayed tucked into the background like a shadow no one quite noticed.
Nolan was my sister’s boy, and after she died, he’d been passed from one temporary place to another.
He was the sort of kid people described as “easy,” when what they really meant was invisible. I wanted this summer to be different for him. I wanted him to breathe. To rest. To just be fifteen for once.
When I opened the door, he was standing there with a backpack that looked too small for a whole summer and a duffel bag that looked too heavy for someone his age. But what caught my attention immediately were the gloves. Tight black leather gloves. In June.
“Nolan,” I said, pulling him into a quick hug before he could recoil. He was tall and bony, all elbows and caution, hunched in a way that made him seem like he was apologizing for taking up space. “You made it.”
“Yes, sir,” he said automatically, then flinched. “I mean… Uncle Ryan.”
I gave a small laugh. “No need for that here. Come inside.”