Roach really is out to get me. Is he really out on bail?â
âLetâs not panic. We donât know for sure. Didnât fit the Roachâs description.â
âCould be one of his friends.â
âCould be.â
âWas there any damage to the car?â
âNothing noticeable.â That was a lie. The man had written âDeath to the Dog Ladyâ in spray paint on the side of the car.
âWell, thatâs a relief. And Iâm glad youâre taking this so calmly.â She pushed the back door open and carried the chips outside. âI guess I overreacted. Not much we can do about it anyway, is there?â
âWe can take you out of the traffic car.â
Daisy put the chips and salsa on the picnic table. âHavenât we had this discussion before?â
âLast time we yelled at each other. This time we need to talk.â
âOkay. That sounds fair. Go ahead and talk.â She straddled a picnic bench and opened the bag of chips. âPut the hamburgers on the grill first. Iâm starved, and Bob looks desperate.â
âThereâs a remote possibility that this guy meant to harm you. I think we need to take precautions against that.â
âWe did take precautions. We hired Elsie.â
Steve groaned.
âWell, okay, so sheâs not some big macho guard, but sheâs very dedicatedâ¦and your hamburgers are on fire.â
Steve smacked at them with the spatula, but they kept burning.
âMust be your flame is too high,â Daisy said.
He fidgeted with a few knobs and the flames subsided.
âIâve never barbecued before,â he said, examining the charred hamburgers. âYou think these are too done?â He slid a spatula under one and it crumbled and fell into the fire. The next one slipped off the spatula and fell onto the grass and Bob ate it. The third one made it to a bun, but nobody wanted to eat itânot even Bob.
âI donât think I have the knack for barbecuing,â Steve said. âMaybe Iâm not cut out for this suburban stuff.â
Daisy patted his hand. âOf course you are. Weâll try it again tomorrow. Whereâs your peanut butter?â
An hour later they were stuffed with peanutbutter sandwiches and were making their way through a quart of chocolate-chip ice cream. It was eighty-seven degrees outside, but theyâd built a fire in the fireplace and were sitting in front of it, eating from the ice-cream carton.
They sat on the floor with their backs to the couch because Bob had claimed the couch first and was now stretched the length of it. At least thatâs the excuse they made for sitting on the floor. The truth is the floor seemed less threatening. There were no cushions to mark boundaries on the floor. They could sit side by side, and the invasion of personal body space wasnât so noticeable.
Daisy stole a glance at Steve as he dipped his spoon into the ice cream, then handed the carton to her. The sun was setting, and they hadnât bothered to turn on the lights. His face was lit by the fire and seemed extraordinarily sexy. His eyes were shadowed, the line of his mouth drawn firm as he followed secret thoughts, and she found she was still a little frightened of him when he looked like this. Or maybe it was the proximity that was frightening. They were so close that if she leaned toward him ever soslightly, theyâd be touching. It was a tantalizing thought, and it sent a dark sort of thrill racing through her.
âLast scoop of ice cream,â Daisy said. âYou want it?â
âWouldnât touch it. You eat the last scoop of ice cream and youâre destined to become an old maid. My Aunt Zena told me that.â
Daisy ate the last scoop and set the carton aside. âI donât have an Aunt Zena so it doesnât count for me.â
âIt counts for everyone. Youâre in big trouble.â
âI like to live