guy. I want to get to know him.”
“In the carnal sense, I imagine,” Katie said slyly.
“Katie O’Brien, you shouldn’t say such things,” Maggie protested indignantly.
“Well, if you don’t, you’re crazy.” She handed Maggie the mug of nuked chocolate with four marshmallows jammed on top.
“Let’s drop the topic of Ryan Devaney for the moment,” Maggie said. “What about you? With everyone around, we hardly had a chance to talk over Thanksgiving. Any man in your life?”
“Not even one on the horizon,” Katie said. “It makes Dad very happy.”
“But you like your job, right? You’re happy teaching?”
Katie grinned. “I love the kids, even if Dad does think that teaching kindergarten is little more than glorified baby-sitting. They’re so eager to learn at that age. And the school is small enough that I can really get to know each child and figure out the best way to get through to him.”
“You’re more like Mom than any of the rest of us. You have endless patience and a real knack for making learning fun.”
“Thanks,” her sister said, clearly pleased by the praise. “But it’s going to be way too easy to wind up in a rut. Next thing I know, I’ll be forty and single and wondering what happened. It doesn’t help that most of the people I know these days are female teachers and moms.”
“Oh, please,” Maggie scoffed. “I don’t think you need to worry about that yet.”
Katie regarded her with a knowing expression. “Isn’t that what brought you home? Didn’t you wake up one day and realize that you were dissatisfied with your life?”
Maggie thought about it. “In a way, I suppose. I wasn’t meeting interesting people, and the work was boring. I wasn’t making use of half the skills I learned when I got my MBA. I needed a new challenge.”
“Like I said, you were dissatisfied. Any idea what you’ll do next? Will you go back to Maine?”
“I’ve kept the house for the time being, but I don’t know. It’s going to be hard to find the kind of work I really want.”
“Which is?”
“Something where I can make better use of my degree and my people skills.”
“Like running a pub?” Katie inquired slyly.
Maggie laughed, thinking of her earlier attempt to convince Ryan to update his accounting methods or even to reorganize his inventory. “If I decide on that, I suspect I’ll have to find someplace other than Ryan’s,” she said wryly. “He balks at the prospect of changing the least little thing.”
Katie laughed. “You’ve already tried, haven’t you? What did you do, start messing with his accounting procedures?”
“I just recommended that he consider computerizing his bookkeeping.”
“And he told you to buzz off?”
“More or less.”
“So, of course, the next time you go, you’ll take along a few sample spreadsheets and show him how simple it would be,” Katie guessed.
Maggie took the joking suggestion seriously. “Actually, not a bad idea.”
“Oh, Mags,” Katie said with a shake of her head. “Telling a man he’s doing something all wrong is not the way to win his heart. Of course, maybe you’d rather have a job than his heart.”
“Why does it have to be an either-or situation?”
“Because he’s a man,” Katie said wisely.
Maggie sighed. “He is definitely that.”
Katie regarded her speculatively. “Have you kissed him?”
At Maggie’s blush, she hooted. “You have, haven’t you? Was it great?”
“Oh, yes,” Maggie murmured. “Better than great.”
“Then forget about the man’s financial system. Concentrate on what’s important.”
“And that would be?”
“If you don’t know,” Katie said with a pitying expression, “then nothing I can say will help.”
She stood up, gave Maggie a peck on the cheek and announced, “I’m going to bed. You coming?”
Maggie shook her head. “Not just yet.”
A worried frown creased Katie’s brow. “Mags, don’t analyze this to death.”
“More advice from the woman who doesn’t have a man in her life?”
“Yes,” Katie said, her expression serious. “Take it from someone who analyzed the love of her life right out the door.”
She swept out of the room before an openmouthed Maggie could comment. This was the first Maggie had heard about her baby sister losing the man of her dreams. Had anyone in the family known? As far as Maggie knew, everyone had assumed Katie was happily playing the field, years away from wanting to settle down, just as their father preferred. Apparently, they were all wrong. None of them had even suspected that she’d met the man of her dreams, much less lost him.
Adding worry about Katie’s unexpected revelation to her already churning thoughts about Ryan’s kiss, Maggie concluded it