she had just been offered and refused, that she wanted to scream.
Josh sat in the wing chair near the fire, the pretty lights from the flickering flames playing over him and his sleeping son. Laura, her younger daughter at her feet, poured coffee into pretty china cups. Margo snuggled on the end of the couch with Ali so they could pore over a fashion magazine together.
"Kate." Laura glanced up with a welcoming smile. "You're just in time for coffee. I bribed Josh to bring the baby over with one of Mrs. Williamson's honey-glazed hams."
"He might have left a few scraps," Margo added. "If you're hungry."
"I only had seconds."
"You had seconds twice, Uncle Josh," Kayla pointed out, and got up, as she had every few minutes, to peek at the baby.
"Stool pigeon." He tweaked her nose.
"Aunt Kate's mad." Ali straightened up on the couch in anticipation. "You're mad at somebody, aren't you, Aunt Kate? Your face is red."
"So it is," Margo drawled when she took a closer look. "And I think I hear her teeth grinding."
"Out." Kate pointed a finger at Josh. "You and I, we're going to go round later, but right now, go away and take your testosterone with you."
"I never go anywhere without it," he said easily. "And I'm comfortable right here."
"I don't want to see a man. If I do see a man in the next sixty seconds, I'll have to kill him with my bare hands."
He sniffed, feigning insult. But he rose. "I'm taking J.T. into the library for port and cigars. We're going to talk about sports and power tools."
"Can I come, Uncle Josh?"
"Of course." He gave Kayla his free hand. "I'm no sexist."
"Bedtime in thirty minutes, Kayla," Laura called out. "Ali, why don't you go keep Uncle Josh company until bedtime?"
"I want to stay here." She poked out her bottom lip and folded her arms over her chest. "I don't have to leave just because Aunt Kate's going to shout and swear. I'm not a baby."
"Let her stay." Kate made a grand, sweeping gesture with her arms. "She can't learn too early what men are really like."
"Yes, she can," Laura corrected. "Allison, go into the library with your uncle or go upstairs and have your bath."
"I always have to do what you say. I hate it." Ali stormed out, stomping up the stairs to sulk alone.
"Well, that was pleasant," Laura murmured, and wondered yet again what had happened to her sweet, compliant Ali. "What cheerful note would you like to add to that, Kate?"
"Men are pigs." She grabbed a cup of coffee and downed it like whiskey.
Chapter Twenty-one
"And your point is?" Margo said after a long moment.
"What do we need them for, anyway? What possible purpose do they have other than procreation, and with advances in technology we'll be taking care of that in a lab soon."
"Very pleasant," Laura decided and poured another cup. "Perhaps we don't need them for sex, but I still depend on them for large-insect disposal."
"Speak for yourself," Margo put it. "I'd rather kill spiders than give up sex. What crime did Byron commit, Kate, or do we get to guess?"
"The sneak, the conniving son of a bitch. I can't believe I was idiot enough to fall into a relationship with a man like that. You never really know a person, do you, never really know what's behind their beady little eyes?"
"Kate, what did he do? Whatever it is, I'm sure it's not as bad as you think." As Kate tore off her coat, Laura's gaze settled on the bruises. She was on her feet in a blink. "Dear God, Kate, did he hit you?"
"What? Oh." She dismissed the bruises with a wave of the hand. "No, of course he didn't hit me. I got this bumping into something warped at Bittle. Byron wouldn't hit a woman. It's too direct an approach for someone like him."
"Well, what for Christ's sake did he do?" Margo demanded.
"I'll tell you what he did. I'll tell you what he did," she repeated as she stormed around the room. "He asked me to marry him." When this was met with silence, she whirled. "Did you hear what I said? He asked me to marry him."
Laura considered. "And he has, what, a closet full of the heads of his former wives?''
"You are not listening to me. You are not getting it." Struggling for calm, Kate breathed deep, pushed at her hair. "Okay, he cooks, pushes vitamins on me, gets me working out. He gets my