Chapter 26

Cali woke to the smell of coffee brewing and something warm and sugary.

When she turned over, she realized Ethan wasn’t beside her.

Instead, Catsby was curled against the pillow where his head had been, and Max was tucked at her feet, purring softly into the comforter.

She stretched, then reached for Ethan’s dress shirt on the floor, wrapping his scent around her as she buttoned it up.

“Good morning,” she said, padding into the kitchen and perching on one of the high-top chairs. “Whatcha making?”

“Pancakes.” He glanced over his shoulder, wearing nothing but his underwear—and for a moment, Cali had to remind herself how to breathe.

“Simple, I know. But then I realized you had all these apples, and your apple pie spices were still sitting out. So I folded some grated apple into the pancake mix and used the rest for a warm topping. Should be ready in just a bit.”

She got up, kissed his cheek, and let her fingertips linger on the dip of muscle just above his waistband. He set the spatula down, turned, and kissed her back—deeply enough to kick up her pulse.

“You look cute in my shirt,” he whispered, trying to restrain himself. “But if you touch me like that again before we eat, I might burn breakfast.”

“Wouldn’t want that,” she whispered back. “But how about some coffee first?” She reached past him for the drip pot.

“Already on it.” He jutted his chin toward the opposite counter, where a homemade version of her favorite Oat Couture latte sat, steam curling up from the rim.

She took a sip as he finished, the scent of cinnamon and butter filling the kitchen.

This was just what she’d hoped for, what she imagined it could be.

Slow Sunday mornings, him cooking a delicious breakfast, the cats lounging in the sunlight as it scattered through the windows.

Who knew what else they might stir up together today?

They had all the time in the world now. Together. She bit her lip imagining it.

What amazed her most wasn’t just how right it felt, but how easy. How the idea of belonging—and trusting she was wanted—no longer scared her at all.

Catsby suddenly got the zoomies, and Max chased after her, the two playing like they’d been littermates from the start.

Ethan sauntered over to the table and set down their pancakes, warm and golden and glistening with syrup.

Almost too good to cut into. As they ate, they reminisced about the gala and Ethan’s growing list of handyman requests around town.

Cali told him about the upcoming Twelve Books of Christmas reading festival and how it was Russell’s and Bernadette’s turn to dress as Mr. and Mrs. Claus.

Though this year, they were switching it up—her in a sparkly red suit and him as a snowflake.

Cali would start their measurements next week.

When Ethan finished his last bite of pancake, he reached for a measuring tape sitting among the mugs and spices.

“Where on earth did you get that?” she asked. “Do those things just follow you?”

He grinned, kneeling by the window as the tape snapped open.

“Oh, no,” she said. “Please tell me you didn’t find something else to fix already. I’ll be embarrassed—or you’ll have to start charging overtime.”

“Nope. Just seeing where a second cat tower might fit. Looks like there’s room for two right here.”

“But what if we get more cats?” she teased.

“Guess we’ll have to keep measuring,” he said, tugging her close. “Are you done with those pancakes already or what?”

She placed one more bite in her mouth, savoring it, chewing slowly while holding his gaze. Then she put her fork down. “Done.”

He scooped her into his arms and buried his face against her neck as she let out a delighted laugh.

“Finally,” he said.

“You mean breakfast or me?”

“Both,” he murmured, kissing her again.

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