Time to find out.

Cecilia brushed her hands off and walked into the hall, striding forward to time her hand hitting the knob of the door as the first chime dis-turbed the silence of the house.

“YOU ALL RIGHT?” Kerry asked softly, as they came up the driveway.

“Yeah,” Dar replied, desperately glad her lover was there with her.

She owed Kerry big on this one. “Shouldn’t take long.” Her eyes went to the white, neatly painted townhouse with black and gold trim. “She Eye of the Storm 87

might ask you to leave.”

Kerry’s eyebrows lifted. “Is it okay for me to tell her to kiss my ass?”

she inquired mildly.

Dar couldn’t help smiling. “It’s all right. She doesn’t know you, and God knows, she might have something she wants to say in private.” She paused. “Then again, probably not.” They got to the door and Kerry exhaled, then rang the bell.

The door opened as it sounded, and Dar’s mother stood there, dressed in a pair of soft, white cotton drawstring pants, and a silk shirt, with a delicate rose embroidery on one shoulder. She was barefoot, and even Kerry felt large next to her.

“Mother.” Dar’s voice was cool and even, with its best boardroom cordiality.

“Come in.” Cecilia pulled the door open and stepped back. “Ms. Stuart.” She inclined her head towards Kerry, who decided to kick her friendliness gene in its recalcitrant butt.

“Hello.” She let the door close behind her and looked around. “Wow.

What a nice apartment.”

“Thank you,” Dar’s mother responded politely. “Please. Sit down.”

She led them into the living room and indicated the couch.

Kerry circled the room instead, gazing at the walls. The precisely placed art hanging there had a certain geometric appeal and she decided she liked the colors. “That’s your work, isn’t it?” she asked Cecilia, not missing her lover’s slightly raised eyebrow.

Ceci had stopped on her way towards the other couch and regarded Kerry with a mildly surprised expression. “Yes, it is,” she murmured.

“Are you in the art trade, Ms. Stuart?” Her voice held a note of bemusement.

“No.” Kerry returned to Dar’s side and seated herself on the couch.

“I’ve spent a lot of time in Washington. The Museum of Art is a favorite spot of mine.” Dar’s eyebrow lifted a notch further. “You had a mini exhibit there last year.”

Cecilia felt very unsettled. “Yes, I did.” She decided to move the scene along. “Well, I would love to discuss art with you, Ms. Stuart, but there’s something I need to discuss with Paladar, so if you’d excuse us for a moment? There’s some ice tea on the porch if you’d like.” She watched the exchanged looks between the two of them, then Kerry rose.

“Not a problem,” she replied. “Dar, I’m going to go check my mail.”

“Check mine,” Dar responded, folding her arms over her chest.

Kerry walked out and the door closed behind her, leaving them looking at each other in silence.

Dar waited, having learned patience over the years and the value in letting others speak first. She studied her mother’s face, noting the new lines and the added silver in her hair, and withstood the same searching look in return.

“There’s no point in my going into long preambles, Paladar.” Ceci chose her words precisely. “I was asked by the family to speak with you 88 Melissa Good and, for reasons I can’t begin to understand, I agreed, though I certainly have no idea what good they thought it might do.”

Dar chose not to answer. She merely tilted her head to one side.

“Aunt May’s estate.” Ceci paused. “It gets signed over to you in total today.”

It was the last thing Dar expected to hear from her mother. “And?”

She injected a bit of puzzlement into her voice.

“There’s a concern. The estate might pass out of the family.” Her mother bit the words off. “To someone who is, perhaps, taking advantage of you.”

Dar blinked, going over the words two or three times. “Is that a reference to Kerry?”

“I would suppose.”

Dar felt anger easing the nervous dread out of her gut. She stood and walked to the fireplace, turned and leaned back against it. “In the first place, you can tell them from me, that I can leave my net worth to a tap dancing muskrat and they’ve got nothing to say about it.”

“Mmm.”

“In the second place, unlike Uncle Mike’s six bimbos, Kerry’s not a passing fancy.”

Dar’s mother glanced at her hands and pursed her lips.

“In the third place, her damn trust fund is four million dollars.”

Cecilia stood up, regretting getting involved to an enormous degree.

“Well, that’s the point, Paladar. It’s a large amount of money, and frankly, I would have a concern regarding your involvement with that myself.” She took a breath to continue when Dar did something very surprising.

She laughed.

Ceci gazed at her in surprise. “What exactly are you finding funny?”

“The idiocy of people who are too stupid to do some basic research.”

Dar’s amusement disappeared and she let her anger steady into a dull burn. “The incredible arrogance of you to ask me here, after not bothering to talk to me for how many years? And worry about what I’ll do with a lousy inheritance, or who I share my life with.”

“Paladar.”

“You can kiss my ass, Mother, and tell the rest of the family they can do the same.”

“It was a justifiable concern.” Her mother’s voice rose.

Dar flipped a card through the air, watching it hit her mother in the chest. “Not if you’d bothered to find out who I am now.”

Cecilia glanced impatiently at the piece of white cardboard, then stopped and read it more carefully.

Chief Information Officer? Paladar. No. She exhaled softly. Dar Roberts. Goddess. Richard must have known. I’ll have his head for not telling me.

She tasted the knowledge that she’d made a fairly huge mistake.

Question was, should she acknowledge it, or let it pass? After all, there were just so many levels of hate Dar could feel for her, right?


Eye of the Storm 89

Her eyes lifted to met a cold, angry stillness looking back, but her sense of fairness won out, and she lowered her gaze, and her voice.

“You’re right,” she finally admitted, quietly. “I’m sorry, Paladar. I should have checked before I took on the responsibility. I wouldn’t have bothered to ask you to come here.”

Ceci expected an sharp retort, something spiteful. Something nasty.

Instead, her daughter leaned back against the mantel and crossed her arms over her chest.

“It’s funny,” Dar remarked. “When you called last week, Kerry speculated that maybe you were using this whole thing as an excuse to get back in touch.”

Cecilia drew in a soundless breath.

“And I told her it was too late for that.” She paused. “I was right.”

Dar pushed off the wall and headed for the door. “Goodbye, Mother.”

Let her go. A voice advised her in mental echo. “Paladar.”

Dar kept walking, taking the two steps up in a smooth motion.

“Dar.”

Her hand on the doorknob, Dar turned and waited.

“I don’t expect you to understand what I did.” Cecilia put her slim hands on the back of the chair.

“Maybe that’s the problem,” came the soft, bitter reply. “You never thought I was capable of understanding.”

Her mother came forward, anger starting to surface. “You have no idea. You can’t begin to realize what I went through…what is it to lose half of yourself.”

“No,” Dar replied, her nostrils flaring. “But I do know what it felt like to lose the only friend I had in the world.” Her voice deepened. “The only person I could talk to. Who accepted who I was.” She paused, needing a breath. “Who loved me.” She tried to relax the lump in her throat.

“Is that good enough on your scale?”

Goddess. Cecilia suddenly felt very tired. I don’t want to deal with this. I don’t want to deal with her. Just let her go and forget about all this. Let it fade out like everything else. It was so much easier that way. “I’m sure you think so,” she murmured. “I hope for your sake, Dar, that you never find out any different.” She was too tired to dissemble. “It was cruel to you. I know that.” Her eyes lifted and met blue eyes so hauntingly familiar she had to look away. “But it was the only way I could survive.” A quiet regret settled over her and she forced herself to look back at Dar’s face, seeing a serious quietude there that unexpectedly made her see past the common stamp of her features and through to the person her daughter had become.

This was not her beloved, this tall, strange creature, who smelled of sun-warmed cotton and a light, spicy scent.

Perhaps, even that echo was gone.

“I’m sorry,” she finally said.

There was a long pause, as her daughter studied her. “So am I.”

They were quiet then the door opened and Kerry slipped inside, 90 Melissa Good blinking at the silent tableau before her. Dar reached out blindly and brought her closer by pure reflex.

“Hey.” Kerry glanced from one to the other, a hand on Dar’s back revealing an almost unbearable tension. “Everything okay in here?”

“Yeah,” Dar answered. “Seems my…family was worried you might be sponging off me.”

A blonde brow lifted. “They should hear us arguing about who gets to pay the grocery bill, then,” she remarked, slipping an arm around her lover and leaning against her. “I’m going to hurt you if you don’t stop switching that card.”

The tension relaxed a little. Cecilia sighed. “Let’s…ah, please sit down.”

“Sure.” Kerry started towards the couch, tugging Dar along with her.

They all moved down the stairs, the atmosphere uncomfortable and strained.

“So. Did you two meet at work?” Ceci fished around for something to say.

“Actually,” Kerry smiled, “Dar showed up to fire me. I managed to talk her out of it and we’ve been friends ever since.”

“Really?” the older woman murmured. “Well, I’ll go get that tea.”

Cecilia walked quickly to the kitchen and sanctuary.

Kerry watched her go, a thoughtful look on her face.

SHE STOOD WITH her eyes closed and her hands on the counter while the tea steeped. It had been worse than she’d expected, but in a curious way, better at the same time. She’d thought to find Dar cold and remote, her feelings locked down tight away just like they’d always been since her teenage years.

Instead, she’d halfway seen a glimpse of a child she’d thought long lost. Part of her—most of her—wanted to forget that and she felt a definite urge to send Dar on her way and allow her life to return to its sterile peace.

Surely, it would be better for both of them. It wasn’t like Dar was in need. She’d done well. Better, to be honest, than Ceci had ever dreamed she would. She had a good life, a nice home. She seemed happy with her companion…

Footsteps made her open her eyes and turn her head to see Kerry enter the kitchen. The blonde woman paused a few feet a way and studied her.

“Can I help with that?”

Kerry’s voice was, Ceci noted, gentle and cultured, with a Midwest note in the vowels. It went with her wholesome good looks and was at distinct odds with the gleam of intense intelligence glinting off the interesting green of her eyes. “All right.”

Kerry took that as permission to approach and did so, setting a few blue tinted glasses on the small tray Ceci had taken out and adding the Eye of the Storm 91

pitcher to it.

“So.” The older woman went to the white refrigerator and retrieved some ice in a separate pitcher. “What makes you hang around the Capi-tol, Ms. Stuart?”

“My father,” Kerry replied quietly. “He’s a senator.”

Cecilia blinked, then her brows creased. “Not Roger Stuart, surely?”

Kerry nodded. “Yes.”

“Interesting.” Gray eyes studied Kerry’s face curiously. “Does he know about you and Paladar?”

Another nod. “He does.”

Ceci’s lips twitched briefly. “Not his year, hmm?” She took the pitcher and walked out, leaving Kerry to follow her with the tray.

She did with an almost silent sigh, turning the corner to see her lover standing at the window, peering out, her hands clasped behind her back.

Dar turned as they entered and leaned against the sill, the sunlight back-lighting her tall form and throwing her face into shadow. Kerry poured two glasses and picked one up, brought it over and handed it to her.