holding a leash in one hand.
âOoh, what is it?â Sam asked.
Ryan tried to see, but she darted in front of him, blocking his view. He heard a loud squeal that could have come from Sam, but his gut instinct told him the sound was from an animal.
Of the swine variety, if he wasnât mistaken.
âIt canât be,â he muttered.
âIt is,â Zoe retorted.
He hadnât realized heâd spoken aloud.
âAnd you will be nice about it.â She treated him to a forced smile.
He rose and stepped around the couch to catch his first glimpse of theâ¦pig. A tiny, black-and-white pig. Snout and all. âItâs gratifying to know my hearingâs not going.â
âYour mindâs not playing tricks on you, either,â Zoe said helpfully.
âGee, thanks.â
Elena leaned down beside Sam and patted the space beside her. âCome sit quietly.â
Sam did as Elena instructed, both women sitting cross-legged on the floor. Everyone else had grown silent, too, respecting the fact that the tiny piglet was shaking like a leaf.
âSam, meet Ima. Ima, meet Sam,â Elena said, lifting the pig and placing her gently in Samâs lap.
âIma?â Sam asked. She paused, her nose crinkling as she thought about the name. âOh I get it!â she finally said and began giggling.
âI donât,â Ryan muttered.
Every eye in the room turned his way.
âIâm a pig, doofus,â Sam said, grinning. âGet it? Her nameâs Ima Pig.â When Ryan didnât answer right away, Sam rolled her eyes. âSee, Zoe, I told you heâs got aââ
âSamantha!â Elena and Nicholas said at the same time.
Elena gently took Samâs chin in her hand and turned her face toward her own. âBe nice to Mr. Baldwin. Heâs a guest in our home and heâs your elder. In this house we respect our elders.â
Sam glanced down before looking his way, her features contrite. âSorry, mister,â she said, her hands gripping the old keys around her neck.
Ryan struggled for air. She was being reprimanded for being fresh to him while he sat here and lied to her face. It wasnât right or fair. The charade heâd begun had already started to weigh on him and he wondered how heâd manage to play social worker for any stretch of time.
âThatâs okay,â he managed to tell her. âItâs your birthday and youâre excited. I understand.â Though he sensed it wouldnât matter what day it was. Samâs tough exterior had been formed long ago.
Excusing himself, he made his way into the kitchen. Above the whispers of the family, he heard Elenaâs instructions about how to care for the animal, how not to scare it, how Ima would think anyone coming for her from above was a predator and so Sam should always approach the pig from the side. Sheâd obviously done her research on the care and feeding of pigs. If her actions with Sam were any indication, Elena Costas was a loving, caring parent and the thought scared him spitless.
But he was Samâs uncle. Her flesh and blood. Surely that counted for somethingâ¦didnât it?
Â
S ITTING IN HER FAMILY HOME and watching Sam unwrap gifts reminded Zoe of past birthdays and holidays. All involving family fun and unbelievable presents. Zoe remembered the dog sheâd been given for her tenth birthday. Ari had received a cat. And somehow, maybe because the Costases had said so, theyâd all gotten along, she recalled. This feeling of family made her whole and she wanted the same for Sam.
Thatâs why Zoe had let Ryan watch her family interact with the teenager for a while before sheâd come up beside him, and why she gave him a few minutes alone in the kitchen to think things over before joining him in the other room. She wanted him to realize how well Sam fit in with them.
âHey there, Mr. Social Worker, howâs it