"We're fine," Daniel says, standing in the doorway of a dead woman's house with her six-year-old daughter asleep against his shoulder. "I have everything under control."
He does not have everything under control.
Daniel Cray is thirty-one years old, has never owned anything with a lease longer than twelve months, and has just inherited a house in a small Washington town - along with the responsibility of raising his niece, Lily, after his sister Renee's sudden death. He arrives in March with a truck full of his belongings, a handwritten list that starts with thermometer, and the quiet certainty that he is about to ruin everything.
Reid Calloway shows up the next morning with a casserole dish and no expectations. He is Lily's kindergarten teacher, Daniel's next-door neighbor, and the kind of steady, unhurried man Daniel has never known what to do with - the kind who hands over a casserole and leaves without requiring anything in return for it.
What follows is a year in the life of a house. Tuesday dinners that become ritual. A running argument about whether Soundgarden or Nirvana defined a decade that is really an argument about something else entirely. A six-year-old who sets three places at the table without being asked and announces, with devastating six-year-old logic, that Reid should simply move in because his presence is more efficient. A junk drawer that quietly fills with evidence of someone who has been coming back, and coming back, and coming back.
Daniel has spent his adult life leaving before he can be left. He has spent eight months learning how to stay. Now, standing on the edge of something real, he has to decide whether the story he's been carrying about himself - that he's the kind of person who ruins things - belongs to him at all.
Everything He Owns Fits in a Truck is a slow-burn contemporary romance about grief and guardianship, the surprising architecture of found family, and what it means to finally stop moving long enough to find out where you are.