Название: What Family Means
Автор: Geri Krotow
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781408950425
isbn:
Blair whistled.
“Miss ‘I’m-not-bringing-kids-into-this-harsh-world’ is going to have a baby?”
Angie looked at Blair and Stella and felt like the most unsympathetic sister possible.
“I didn’t want to tell you—I was hoping you two, um…”
“Oh, honey, don’t worry about us! We’ve just started trying, and I am younger than you, you know,” Stella chided Angie lovingly. “Come on over here and give us a hug!”
Angie accepted Stella’s hug, and the tears spilled down her cheeks. She drew back and wiped at her face with her hands.
“Here.” Stella handed her a napkin from the breakfast bar.
“Thanks.” Angie sniffled. “I didn’t want to tell you guys—I know you’re trying, and here I go and get pregnant without even planning.” Angie and Jesse had always been meticulous about birth control. She knew her ovulation cycle inside out. With the effects of top-shelf champagne and the holiday season she and Jesse had enjoyed themselves on the rug next to their Christmas tree. Without protection. She’d thought she couldn’t possibly get pregnant at that particular time. The baby inside her was proof that she’d been wrong.
“My doctor says we’re both perfectly healthy—it’s just a matter of time.” Stella put her hand on Angie’s forearm. “This is so exciting! Our kids will grow up together.”
Blair stood in the kitchen, staring at Angie.
“What?”
“You haven’t told Mom and Dad yet, have you?”
“No, I haven’t—but I will. I just haven’t had time alone with them.” She let the little white lie hang there. She hadn’t told Jesse yet, but that wasn’t any of her family’s business, was it?
“Wooo-wee. Mom’s going to go nuts! When she thought we were thinking about trying, she flipped—even asked if we had a nursery theme picked out.”
Angie laughed.
“Mom’s always in the thick of it with us, you have to admit.”
“I’m not used to this. My family isn’t as hands-on.” Stella sipped her coffee. “Hands-on” was a polite way of describing what they often saw as Debra’s overinvolvement with her kids’ lives. But they all knew the reasons for it, too.
“Your mom didn’t have the interracial thing to deal with.” Blair looked at Stella, her dark skin a testament to her African-American heritage.
“No, but she had plenty of her own worries.”
“Like you marrying me?” Blair smiled sardonically. Stella’s parents had been shocked to find out that his family was mixed—Blair and Brian both had dark skin like Stella. But they’d taken it in stride.
“Knock it off, tough guy.” Stella swatted Blair on the arm.
“Mom loves us, and she’d be hurt if she heard us talking like this.” Angie felt a need to defend her mother. “I’ll tell her to give us some space.”
“Yeah, tell her to focus on Brian.”
“She can’t, he’s in Colorado.”
“Yeah, but I’ve heard he’s dating the same gal from last summer.”
“The blonde?”
“Seems so.” Blair smiled and hugged Stella quickly. Angie observed their profiles, both slim and tall. They were very open to each other, their marriage the stuff of dreams.
“I gotta go, baby. Dad’s out of town and someone needs to keep the ship afloat.” Blair kissed Stella full on the lips.
“See you at dinner, as long as we don’t have too many walk-ins.” Stella kissed him back.
In Stella’s office, walk-in referred to anything from a split lip to lost teeth.
“Do you get a lot of walk-ins this time of year?” Angie asked.
“Hockey pucks.” Stella smiled and pointed at her front teeth.
Angie winced. “Ouch. I think I’ll stick to analyzing weather patterns.”
Stella laughed, then immediately grew solemn.
“Don’t worry, Angie. We’re all here for you.” She looked at her watch. “I’ve got to go, too. Let’s try to get together soon, okay? And no more nonsense about who got pregnant first!”
Angie laughed. “Deal.”
CHAPTER FOUR
Present Day
Buffalo, New York
ANGIE LOWERED the car window and let the crisp air wash over her face. For the first time since she’d returned home, she was grateful for the cold. It took her mind off her heaving stomach.
Off her life.
She turned into the parking lot of Koffee Klache. Mom said she’d come over right around two, after she’d checked in on Grandma Violet.
Angie looked at the car’s digital clock. One forty-five. She had fifteen minutes to pretend she wasn’t pregnant, that her life hadn’t taken such a major detour.
Her stomach felt otherwise. She shoved open the door and threw up on Koffee Klache’s slush-covered blacktop. When she was done, she leaned back in the seat and tried to will her nausea away. She wouldn’t be able to have a coffee, much as she might wish she could. But she didn’t want to meet Mom at home. This was more neutral territory.
After several minutes she hauled herself out of the car and into the coffee shop.
“Hi, Angie! The usual?” Molly the barista smiled her welcoming grin. Angie managed to smile back, despite the acrid taste still in her mouth.
“Hey, Molly. Uh, no, not the usual. I’ll have an iced ginger tea, please, with some honey.”
“You got it.” Molly didn’t question Angie’s choice of “iced,” even though it was freezing outside.
The tinkle of the bell above the entrance was followed by the scent of her mother’s perfume, which made Angie’s stomach roil yet again.
Maybe she should’ve waited until tonight to meet with her mom. Evenings seemed to be her best time as of late.
“Hi, honey!”
Angie turned around and practically fell into her mother’s warm hug. The fuzzy yarn of her mom’s scarf tickled Angie’s cheeks. She gave Debra a hug back and hoped to pull away as quickly as possible.
But the touch of her mother, the softness of the scarf, even the scent of Debra’s perfume, СКАЧАТЬ