water-sprinkling schedules. Still. Mike should realize the guy was just a pompous wannabe bullyâ¦not a real problem.
In the meantime, though, she couldnât be the one to calm him down.
She definitely had her hands full with Molly.
Her daughter submitted to a bath, willingly changed into pink baby-doll pajamas, but after that, she folded her arms across her chest with a major diva scowl. âI want some mommy time and I want it now. â
It wasnât as if Amanda hadnât been through this before. She put a fluffy blanket on the deck. Brought out the tray of nail polishes. Molly brought her doll-size tea set. The teapot was filled with milk.
âDaddy tricked me!â was the dramatic opening to Mollyâs tirade.
âHow, honey?â
âHe was real nice and real nice and real nice. Only, then we got to his house. And there was a lady there. A stupid lady.â
Across the way, Amanda could see lights popping on and off at Mikeâs house. Her attention was on herdaughter, but a thick clog seemed to have settled in her stomach. Mike was probably doing exactly what she was. Dealing with a child wounded by their divorce. Through no fault of their own, his Teddy and her Molly were both still reeling from the mistakes of their parents.
Molly, temporarily, stopped her rant to study her hands, which had been soaked and filed and were now ready for the fun part. Color. âCan we do our toenails after our hand nails?â
âSure.â
âI want yellow for my toenails.â
âIâm pretty sure we have yellow.â Amanda didnât actually look at the basket of polishes, but since color was always a major issue for her daughter, she was almost positive they had the whole crayon set of choices.
âAnd I want different colors for every hand nail.â
âOkay.â Amanda had learned a long time ago never to sweat the small stuff. âNow tell me more about your day.â
âShe had on this big fakey smile. Like grown-ups use for kids. And she says, âHow would you like to go shopping with me?â And I say, âNo, thanks, Iâm here to see my dad.â And she says, âIf we go shopping, I thought Iâd get you an American Girl doll.â And I say, âNo, thank you, my mommy gets me all the American Girl dolls I could possibly want.ââ Molly looked up with stormy eyes. âOkay. So that was a lie. Andit was really hard to say no, because I really, really need another American Girl doll. But she was being a pain.â
âHoney. Sweetheart. Now, think a minute. It doesnât sound like she was being a pain. It sounds as if she was trying very, very hard to be nice to you.â
âNo. She just wanted to give me a doll so Iâd like her. And Iâm never going to like her. She had three boxes of games. And grape Kool-Aid. So fine. I played some games with her. But you know what?â
âWhat?â Amanda finished one of her daughterâs hands, then started on the other.
âDaddy wasnât even there half the time. And he didnât play any games with me. But when he was there, you know what he did?â
âWhat, honey?â
âHe and that lady took me to the back of the house, opened the door and said, âTa da!â And there was this room where Iâm supposed to sleep when Iâm there. It had a big white chair. And a big white bed. And shelves that already had books in them. And lots of stuffed animals all over the place.â
Amanda felt her heart clutch. âIt sounds very pretty.â
Molly glowered at her mother. âI know itâs pretty. Thatâs not what was wrong. What was wrong is that I donât sleep there . Which I told them. Daddy said, âBut you will.â And the woman said, âAnd when youcome and stay with us, we want you to have your own special place.ââ
Molly started blowing on both hands, trying to dry the polish
Humberto Fontova
Suzanne Downes
Chloe Cole
Sandra Brown
Amber Garza
Elizabeth Lee
Joe R. Lansdale
Tori Carrington, Leslie Kelly, Janelle Denison
John Marsden
Marliss Melton