always accompanied them. What was she doing this warm April night, he wondered…
But then Egon whimpered in his sleep, and Carey's mind came back to Nice.
CHAPTER 10
S o are you going?”
“Of course I'm going. Would I miss the gossip session of the decade?”
“
“We had a
“No kidding. Remember Bucky and Tess at the beach the day after graduation? They were quite entertaining…”
“Or Rod… or Billy? Lordy, what a fun day, but I'm getting too old to drink forty-eight hours straight anymore.”
“We're only twenty-eight, Molly.
“Speak for yourself. I have my moments when my energy levels are zip.”
“You're working too hard.” Georgia's concern was evident as she gazed across the luncheon table. Molly was almost too thin at times, her eyes large in her fine-boned face. In a way, Georgia had always envied the classic bones and willowy body, especially considering her own predisposition to put on weight just looking at a piece of chocolate cake.
“Gotta make a living,” Molly replied with a quiet ferocity, her dark blue eyes flashing.
“Especially after Bart stole your last business,” Georgia retorted, censure heavy in her tone.
“
“Aren't they all?” Georgia casually remarked, a cynic about the joys of matrimony. “How
“I don't see much of him, but presumably that smile is still making secretaries' hearts flutter.”
“Every man's dream,” Georgia commented, “the office harem.”
“That didn't bother me so much as the selfishness, the pure arrogance that his behavior was acceptable because he was a man. It came as a great shock and irritation to Bart when
“Chauvinism is alive and well as we march into the twenty-first century,” Georgia remarked dryly. “Give it another thousand years or so, and maybe we can dilute it with careful breeding. And then again,” she sardonically added, “maybe we can't. In the meantime, save me, dear God, from ambitious men. They always feel they can tell you what to do.”
“Amen to that. Bart always felt his career success somehow offset all his liabilities, like never coming home, putting work first, second, and third above his family, which somehow ranked just below his weekly haircut. For Bart a wife was only supposed to be pretty and agreeable, children quiet and agreeable, the house clean, meals miraculously on time regardless of his arrival… Don't ask me why I put up with it. You know as well as I because Larry wasn't a scrap better.”
“
“Lecher,” Molly said with a grin.
“Come in, the water's fine,” Georgia drawled.
“Carrie's too nosy for me to bring two nineteen-year-olds home.” It wasn't the real reason Molly wouldn't bring them home, but she could be blasй, too.
“How is Carrie?” Georgia probed in a kindly way. “Still stable as Mount Olympus? Any sudden missing Dad?”
“You know Bart's idea of fatherhood-Christmas, birthdays, and ask me later, I'm busy right now. He actually prided himself on never having changed a diaper. And he couldn't even remember Carrie's age, for God's sake. What's to miss? Actually, I think she's adjusted better than I. I'm struggling with a fledgling business and edgy as hell at times.”
“She's a darling.”
“I know.”
“Modest mother.”
Molly smiled. “She's smart, too, and as of yesterday has pierced ears. I could kill her.”
“Get with it, modern woman.”
“I'm trying, but she's only eight.”
“And so,” Georgia teased, “what are your views on makeup for eight-year-olds?”
“Don't get me on the subject.” Molly stabbed at a chunk of her chicken salad.
“Kids grow up faster today.”
“So I'm told. Call me old-fashioned.” She chewed thoughtfully, wondering if she was the last mother in America who disapproved of eye liner for eight-year-olds.
“Speaking of old-fashioned. Been getting anything lately?”
Molly choked a little, not because she was prudish, but because Georgia's blunt delivery still threw her. She should have been familiar with it by now. Georgia had been eight when she asked Molly one warm summer day as they sat in her tent under the maple tree in the backyard, “Do you know what fucking is?” Twenty years later, Georgia was still capable of asking startling questions between “Pass the butter” and “Do you think the Democratic Party has lost its credibility as a working man's party?” Molly swallowed before she answered, “Don't start, Georgia.” She smiled in a winsome way that made her look much younger than twenty-eight. “Not after my fiasco with Grant last weekend.”
“Did you chicken out?”
“Didn't have to. I was saved by the bell.”
“Why the hell would anyone want to be saved from Grant Duncan?”
“Don't ask me. I haven't the money for analysis. I had actually gone out on his boat Saturday with the thought that a handsome, solicitous charming date was what I needed to blow the cobwebs out of my psyche.”
“And? I adore gory details…”
“We sat in the sun while we cruised on the St. Croix, and then early in the evening we pulled into his slip. Thought we'd have another drink or so… maybe go out for dinner, maybe eat there…”
“Maybe eat each other,” Georgia blandly proposed with a lift of her dark brows.
“The thought,” Molly mildly replied, “had occurred to me. Anyway, he brought out a bottle of wine he'd gotten at auction last month because he knew it would enchant me, and the wine was absolutely heaven in a bottle. I was planning on staying the night, Carrie was set at Mom and Dad's. Everything was perfectly orchestrated as a be- good-to-Molly weekend, because frankly, I was beginning to fear for the soundness of my mind apropos men turning me on. Now anyone should be thrilled to go to bed with Grant, right?”
“He's definitely a thrill,” Georgia bluntly agreed.
“And you should know,” Molly teased. “When will you be moving into the ranks of the Guinness Book of