of marriage unless I meet someone who treats me like Dad treats Mom, and he treats her like a queen. And then the guy would have to adopt Chloe as his daughter. Bit of a tall order, huh?â The clipped, emotionless words rolled from her tongue. Sheâd evidently rehearsed them a time or two. âHow about you?â
He shrugged and swallowed his first bite. âJust not particularly interested, I guess. Mmm. This is the best apple pie Iâve ever tasted. Well, since weâre on the same wavelength here, I vote we can be friends without all the other rigmarole. I mean, Iâll fix whatever you need around the place, and you can feed me.â
âItâs a deal. Tammyâs welcome, too. Iâm sorry she couldnât come tonight.â
âMm-hmm.â He felt unguarded with Lia already. She was easy to talk to, comfortable to hang with. But he wasnât about to honestly relay Tammyâs reaction to Liaâs invitation. His girlfriend wasâ¦prejudiced. No two ways about it. And it didnât take a rocket scientist to figure out how she got that way.
While he was installing the doorbell earlier in the week, Tammyâs mother had overheard Lia invite himâand Tammyâto dinner. Later Dot had raised her brows, made fun of Chinese food, and declared she still believed that Chloe was Liaâs daughter. Tammy had flat out refused to come, but he had already accepted and said he would go without her.
And now, he wasnât sorry that he had.
A short time later they stood in the kitchen as she drained the coffeepot into a traveling mug for him. She glanced at him out of the corner of her eye. âDare you to go tell the girls goodbye.â
âUhââ
âDouble dare.â
âHow about I clean up the kitchen instead?â
âTheyâre just short people, Cal.â
He turned on his heel, marched down the hallway, and rapped his knuckles on Chloeâs open door. The kids looked up from where they sat on the floor, playing with the little black kitten. âGoodbye, girls.â
Mandy, a tiny version of her mom, Anne, waved. âSee ya, Cal.â Like mother, like daughter. Casual and familiar.
âWait!â The little china doll climbed onto the bed and stood up, motioning to him.
He stepped beside her. âWhat?â
She wrapped her arms around his neck and squeezed. âThanks for coming over.â
Feeling awkward, he patted her shoulder. âUh, youâre welcome. Bye now.â
He rejoined Lia in the kitchen, accepted his coffee mug and a foil-covered pie dish. âStrange girl youâve got there, Lia. Normal kids donât hug cops.â
âHa! She hugged you?â
âYeah. You really should teach her not to go around hugging strangers.â
âOh, Cal, youâre not a stranger. Besides, donât you want children to feel safe with you rather than afraid?â
âSafe, okay, but hugging? Give me a break.â
Lia slipped an arm under his and around his waist. He held up the dish and mug as she leaned her head against his shoulder and gave him a quick hug. âOf course hugging. Thatâs what teddy bears are for!â
âIâm supposed to be a tough cop, not a stinking teddy bear.â Cal shook his head, but couldnât help grinning as he climbed into his truck. Both the china dolls were strangeâ¦a nice kind of strange.
He drove from the alley behind the pharmacy and around the block to the front of it. Although he was on his way home to get ready for work, he decided to play the tough cop first and visit the video store housed in the same old brick building as the pharmacy. Much of the block had been built in the early 1900s. A florist was on the other side of the video store, also part of the same building. The post office butted up against that. Next, a narrow walkway leading to the alley separated the post office from the hardware store on the corner.
He parked
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