The Stepsisters - Susan Mallery Page 0,13

ready?” she asked as she stepped into Ben’s room. He was dressed for soccer and holding a backpack.

“Did I pick the right stuff?” he asked, sounding worried. “Dad said to bring clothes for after practice.”

Her stomach lurched. It had already started—the changes in their routine. What next?

She pushed worry away and smiled at her son. “I’m sure you did fine, but I’m happy to check. The thing is, kiddo, you’re going to be what? Twenty minutes away? You can swing by if you forgot anything.”

He visibly relaxed at her words. “You’re right. I forgot.”

“That’s why you have me.”

She looked inside the backpack. He’d put in athletic shoes, socks, jeans, underwear and a clean T-shirt.

“Perfection,” she told him, ruffling his hair. “Let’s add a couple of bottles of water so you stay hydrated. Remember, if you start to feel woozy or lightheaded, tell Coach. I let him know you’re getting over the flu, so you might not be a hundred percent.”

“I’m not going to faint, Mom.” His tone indicated he found the concept both interesting and horrifying.

“Best if you don’t.”

They went downstairs to where Krissa was in the family room, both dogs stretched out beside her as she carefully tied a large hat on Sheba. Lucky already sported a black bowler hat on his head, giving him a jaunty look. When he spotted Daisy, he gave her a long-suffering look that seemed to say, “Kids. What are you gonna do?”

Daisy smiled at her patient dogs before calling Krissa. “Let’s get going.”

Krissa carefully kissed each dog on the nose, then got up and walked toward her brother.

“Mommy, is Daddy going to remember we need to eat lunch?” Krissa asked.

“I’m sure he will, but you are welcome to remind him.”

“Okay. Can we go somewhere fun?”

“That’s between you two and your dad. I’m sure he wants you to have a good time so if you have somewhere special in mind, you should ask.”

She collected two bottles of water from the refrigerator and put them in an outside pocket of the backpack before opening a drawer and pulling out a cell phone. She waved it.

“I’m trusting you two with this.”

Krissa’s eyes widened. “The family cell phone?” Her tone was reverent.

Being given the sacred family cell phone was a big deal. Daisy had resisted the pressure to let her kids have their own phones. She and Jordan had agreed that twelve was plenty old enough to get a phone and their children weren’t going to be allowed to have their own social media accounts until they were fourteen.

This being Los Angeles, they were driven everywhere, their school had a security system that rivaled any top-secret military installation, and when they were home, it was a good time to decompress. Cell phones seemed irrelevant.

“Just for the day,” Daisy said, putting it into an inner pocket of the backpack and zipping it closed. “If something happens, you can reach me or Esmerelda.”

Not that she expected anything to happen, but then she hadn’t expected her husband of nearly twelve years to move out, either.

She got the kids into the car. The dealership had fixed some electrical problem and now her car was driving just fine. The detail department had done a great job getting rid of the vomit smell, for which she was incredibly grateful.

She drove to the soccer field, finding one of the last parking places. After giving her a hug good-bye, Ben raced over to join his team while Daisy got Krissa settled on the bleachers, the backpack at her feet. About fifteen minutes later, Jordan approached.

“Can you wait here for a second while I go talk to your dad?” she asked Krissa. “I won’t be long.”

Krissa nodded, more interested in what was happening on the field than in what the grown-ups might be talking about. Daisy walked over to meet her husband, careful to keep them out of earshot of the other parents.

“There’s a change of clothes for Ben in the backpack,” she said, pointing to where Krissa was sitting. “If you could help him remember it, I’d appreciate that.”

It was only after she spoke that she thought maybe she should have offered some kind of greeting before jumping into the logistics of the handoff.

“I can do that,” he said easily. “I’ll have them back by five this afternoon.”

She nodded. “Krissa wants to go somewhere fun for lunch. With her, that could mean anything.”

He smiled. “I’ll consider myself prepared.”

They stared at each other, then glanced away. Daisy had no idea what else she was supposed to

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