Holding the Dream Page 0,114
isn't typical day-to-day. There was the dead woman in 803."
Josh grimaced. "I hate when that happens."
"Heart attack, died in her sleep. She was eighty-five, led a full life. Gave the maid a hell of a start."
"How long did it take you to calm her down?" Susan asked.
"After we caught her? She went screaming down the hall. About an hour."
Thomas topped off the wine, lifted his glass. "It's a relief for Susie and me to know that California is in good hands. Some people believe that running a hotel means sitting up in the fancy office and pushing paper - and people - around."
"Now, Tommy." Susan patted his arm. "Peter's no longer our problem. We can hate him for strictly personal reasons now." She beamed at Byron. "But I agree. We'll go back to France at the end of the week knowing things here are well looked after." She tilted her head. "Professionally, and personally."
"I appreciate that."
"Our Kate's looking very happy," Thomas began. "Very healthy and fit. Are you making plans?"
"Uh-oh, here it comes." With a grin, Josh leaned back, shook his head. "Sorry, By, I'm just going to sit here and watch you twist in the wind."
"It's a reasonable question," Thomas insisted. "I know what the man's prospects are, obviously. I want to know what his intentions are."
"Tommy," Susan said patiently, "Kate's a grown woman."
"She's my girl." His face clouded as he pushed his plate aside. "I let Laura rush off her own way and look what that got her."
"I'm not going to hurt her," Byron said. He wasn't as offended as some might have expected by the probing. After all, he'd been raised in the old school, where family interest and interference went hand in hand. "She's very important to me."
"Important?" Thomas tossed back. "A good night's sleep is important."
Susan sighed. "Eat your dessert, Thomas, You know how you love tiramisu. Working for Templeton doesn't require you to answer personal questions, Byron. Just ignore him."
"I'm not asking as his employer. I'm asking as Kate's father."
"Then I'll answer you in that spirit," Byron agreed. "She's become a major part of my life, and my intentions are to marry her." Since he hadn't fully understood that himself until this moment, Byron fell silent and frowned into his glass.
"Well, then." Pleased, Thomas slapped his palm on the table.
"It'll be news to her," Byron muttered, then let out a breath. "I'd appreciate it if you'd let me deal with your Kate in my own way. I haven't quite worked it out."
"I'll have him out of your way in a few days," Susan assured Byron. "Six thousand miles."
Thomas forked up creamy cake. "But I'll be back," he warned and shot Byron a wide grin.
He was a detail man, after all, Byron reminded himself when he let himself into his house. He knew how to handle sensitive problems. Surely he could handle something as basic as a proposal of marriage to the woman he loved.
She wouldn't want anything flowery, he decided. Kate wouldn't go for the down-on-one-knee routine. Thank God. She'd prefer the direct, the simple. It was all in the approach, he concluded and tugged off his tie.
He wouldn't put it as a question. Phrasing something as "will you" opened up too much leeway for the answer to be no. Better to make it a statement, being certain to keep it short of a demand. Because it was Kate, after all. And it would be wise, because it was Kate, to have at the ready a list of rational reasons why it would be sensible.
He only wished he could think of a single one.
He'd pulled off his shoes before he realized something was wrong. It took him another minute to pinpoint it. It was the quiet. The dogs always set up a greeting din when he pulled into the drive. But there was no barking. When he raced to the deck door, wrenched it open in panic, he saw that there were no dogs.
He called, whistled, hurried down the steps to check the fence that kept them safely in the backyard. His frantic mind whirled with the possibility of dognappers, newspaper articles about stolen pets sold for experiments.
The first happy bark weakened his knees. They'd gotten through the safety gate, he thought as he strode toward the beach steps. That was all. Somehow they'd gotten through and gone for a run on their own. He'd have to give them a good talking-to.
They topped the stairs at a run, tails waving flags of devoted joy.