and all of them talking a mile a minute.
She laughed, hitched Murphy up, managed to kiss the top of Liam’s head and run her hand over Harry’s.
“Man Night, huh? Well, we’ll have to . . .” She looked up at Beckett as he came down the stairs. Blinked. “Ah, hi.”
“Hi. How’d it go?”
“Really well. Um, how’d it go here?”
“Good. We just played some poker, drank a six-pack.”
“Naturally. You boys have to go up and brush your teeth. I’ll be up in a couple minutes. Say good night to Beckett.”
He got high fives from Harry and Liam, a down low and leg hug from Murphy.
“We’re gonna have a sleepover,” Murphy told his mother. “Bye, Beckett. Bye!”
Clare set her purse aside as they raced upstairs. “So, everything’s okay?”
“Sure.”
“You didn’t have to give them baths.” She tapped the side of her nose when Beckett looked blank. “They smell like their bath soap.”
“Oh yeah, well . . . There was a little spaghetti incident.”
“I see. Is that why you’re not wearing a shirt?”
“Oh, right.” He glanced down. “Forgot. I tossed the shirt in the washer with their clothes. They’re drying. Ah, there was also some minor flooding, so I dumped the towels in the wash.”
It was her turn to look blank. “You did laundry?”
“Sort of. I deserve a reward.”
“I guess you do.” She stepped to him, kissed him on one cheek, then the other before laying her lips softly on his.
His bare skin was warm and firm, his arms strong as they wrapped around her.
“You smell like an orange smoothie,” she murmured. And wanted to lap.
“Sorry?”
“The bath wash I use on the kids. It’s different on you. Beckett—”
“Mom!” Liam’s shout made her jump. “We brushed our teeth. Harry’s got the book.”
“Okay. Be right there. Sorry, it’s bedtime, and I try to read to them for a few minutes most nights.”
“I’ll get going. I’ll pick you up at seven tomorrow.”
“You can’t go out without a shirt.”
“I don’t think anything of yours will fit me.”
“But—”
“It’s still warm out.” He gave her another quick, light kiss.
“Well, thanks.” Flustered, she stepped back. She’d actually started to ask him to stay—until his shirt dried. Maybe have a glass of wine with her. Maybe . . .
“Mom!”
“No problem. I had fun. See you tomorrow.”
She sighed, locked up behind him. “Coming,” she called when Liam shouted again. Probably better this way, she thought. She could hardly—maybe—with Beckett while her kids were right upstairs.
BECKETT PULLED INTO his slot in the parking lot behind Vesta.
When he started down the walkway to the stairwell, Brad, their plumber, called down from his seat on the dining porch. “Hey, Beck! Rough night at the poker table? Lose your shirt?”
“You don’t know the half of it.”
In his apartment, he went directly to the fridge for a beer, then switched on the TV, flopped on the couch.
“Good God.” He felt like he’d just finished running the Boston Marathon.
How did she do it? How the hell did she do all that every day, and probably a lot more? But just the dinner, the squabbles, the mess, the sheer volume of stuff that needed to be remembered, done, handled with three kids. It was mentally and physically exhausting.
Fun, he admitted, but exhausting.
And she’d have to get up in the morning, get them up, dressed, fed. Then go to work. After work, she’d replay—basically—what he’d just done. And with all that, she still had to maintain the house and run a business.
Did women have superpowers?
Regardless, he was sending his mother flowers in the morning.
“WHEN I HEARD he came home shirtless, I thought, that Clare. She’s a wild woman.” Avery leaned back on her elbows on Clare’s bed.
“More like wild boys.”
“Flying meatballs, bath floods.” Avery shook her head. “And he’s still taking you out tonight. Shows character.”
“Once I convinced Murphy to make me an honorary man, he spilled his guts. Plus I found a couple spaghetti sauce handprints Beckett missed.” She picked up the earrings Hope had selected. “He did great, really, and got out fast. Didn’t even wait for his shirt to dry.”
“Is that code?”
“Not entirely. Though I was going to ask him to stay awhile, maybe open a bottle of wine.”
“You are a wild woman.”
“You know you can put men and sex on the back burner.” To test the earrings, Clare tipped her head from side to side. “In fact, you can take them off the stove altogether. It’s not easy to fit them into the schedule anyway. But . . . once I started thinking about Beckett that way,