in the community. I don’t want her in my house.”
That brought Laura’s head up and erased any thought of placating him. “It’s my parents’ house,” she tossed back with fury sizzling in every word. “We’re there, Peter, because they wanted it to be lived in and loved. I know my mother and father would welcome Margo, and so do I.”
“I see.” He folded his hands on the desk. “That’s a little dig you haven’t tried in some time. I live in Templeton House, work for the Templeton empire, and sleep with the Templeton heiress.”
When you bother to come home, Laura thought, but held her tongue.
“Whatever I have is due to the Templeton generosity.”
“That’s certainly not true, Peter. You’re your own man, an experienced and successful hotelier. And there’s no reason to turn a discussion of Margo into a fight.”
Gauging her, he tried a new tack. “It doesn’t bother you, Laura, to have a woman with her reputation around our children? Certainly they’ll hear gossip, and Allison, at least, is old enough to understand some of it.”
The flush rose to her cheeks, then died away. “Margo is Ali’s godmother and she’s my oldest friend. She’s welcome at Templeton as long as I live there, Peter.” She straightened her shoulders, looked him dead in the eye. “To use words you’ll understand, those terms are nonnegotiable. Dinner’s at seven-thirty if you’re able to make it.”
She strode out and controlled the urge to slam the door.
Now, alone in her room, she fought back the resurging temper. It never did her any good to lose it, only made her feel foolish and guilty. So she would calm herself, put on that smooth false front she was growing so accustomed to wearing.
It was important to remember that Margo needed her. And it was becoming painfully clear that her husband did not.
“Can I try your perfume, Aunt Margo? The one in the pretty gold bottle. Please?”
Margo looked down at Kayla’s hopeful face. If they were casting angels, she mused, this one with her soft gray eyes and winking dimples would win the role hands down.
“Just a couple of drops.” Margo took the stopper out and dabbed a whisper behind each of Kayla’s ears. “A woman doesn’t want to be obvious.”
“How come?”
“Because mystery is a spice.”
“Like pepper?”
Ali, three years superior to Kayla’s six years, snorted. ButMargo hauled Kayla up on her lap and nuzzled her. “In a manner of speaking. Want a dab, Ali?”
All but salivating over the fascinating bottles and pots on the vanity, Ali tried her best to sound nonchalant. “Maybe, but I don’t want what she has.”
“Something different, then. Something . . .” Playing it up, Margo waved her hand over this bottle and that. “Bold and daring.”
“But not obvious,” Kayla chimed in.
“That’s a girl. Here we are.” Without a thought, Margo sacrificed a few dabs of a two-hundred-dollar-an-ounce scent. It was Bella Donna’s new Tigre. She probably had twenty of the gorgeous handblown bottles in her Milan flat. “You’re growing up on me,” she accused and tugged the gold curls spilling to Ali’s shoulders.
“I’m old enough to have my ears pierced, but Daddy won’t let me.”
“Men just don’t understand these things.” Because she did, perfectly, she patted Ali’s cheek before shifting Kayla on her knee. “Decorating ourselves is a woman’s privilege.” Giving Ali a bolstering smile in the mirror, she went back to perfecting her makeup. “Your mom’ll talk him into it.”
“She can’t talk him into anything. He never listens.”
“He’s very busy,” Kayla said solemnly. “He has to work and work so we can stand.”
“So we won’t lose our standing,” Ali corrected and rolled her eyes. Kayla didn’t understand anything, she thought. Sometimes Mama did, and Aunt Kate always listened, but she had hope, great new hope that her glamorous and mysterious Aunt Margo would understand
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