right,â Bev said when she came in. âHe canât make it. Says heâs got plans.â
So how come she felt disappointed rather than relieved?
And what kind of holiday plans could a man have who didnât know anybody in town? And how was this any of her business?
Mala shook herself, yanked open the dishwasher to stack another half dozen dishes inside. âSo who was on the phone?â she asked her mother.
âThe phone?â her mother said from the kitchen table. âOh, right. Nobody. A hang up. Which is so rude. Geez. I mean, if you get a wrong number, the least you can do is say âsorryâ or something, yâknow? And when the hell you gonna get Caller ID, anyway?â
Mala just sighed.
Chapter 4
âS o,â Mala said to her sister-in-law as she scraped leftover mashed potatoes into a plastic store ânâ save bowl, swearing softly when a blob landed smack on the front of her new fur-blend sweater, âhowâd you enjoy your first Thanksgiving?â
Amazingly, it was just the two of them in her brotherâs kitchen. Sophie and Mala had combined forces to convince Bev, whoâd done most of the cooking, to go play grandma and let them clean up; the living room reeked of football-crazed testosterone; and the kids wereâ¦elsewhere. The old country house was cozy and filled with laughter and leftover feast smells, and for the moment, Mala could almost believe she was as content as she would have everyone believe.
Raking one hand through her short, ash brown hair, Sophie chuckled. âI think Iâm bloody glad it only comes once a year,â she said in her almost-English accent, ripping off a length of aluminum foil to cover what was left of the auxiliary ham. Her square jaw and angular features prevented her from being pretty in any traditional sense of the word, but her quick smile and the love that constantly radiated from her gentle gray eyes made her as appealing as anyone Mala had ever met. âOtherwise, Iâd be big as a house from overeating. Not that I wonât be that in a few months, in any case.â
She patted her slightly bulging belly underneath the floppy red sweater, then wrinkled her nose, obviously tickled with her condition. Sophie and Steve had only been married since July, but having just turned thirty, the princess was thrilled about her pregnancy.
âAnd with those hips you donât have,â Mala said pointedly to her skinny sister-in-law, âyouâll look like you swallowed a torpedo.â She opened the refrigerator, frowning at the already jam-packed interior. The ceiling shook as many small feet stormed down the upstairs hallway, accompanied by shrieks of varying degrees of intensity. Neither woman so much as glanced up. âI hate to break this to you, honey, but you can either get the rest of the turkey in here, or everything else. Not both. And no, that wasnât a call for help, bozo-hound,â she said to the grinning oversize mutt wagging his entire rear end at her feet. She gently shoved at the dog with her knee. âGo away, George.â
âOh, come here, you big goof,â Sophie said, collapsing into a kitchen chair. Wearing an expression that could only be translated as, âYes!â, the dog pranced across the linoleum floor to gobble down whatever it was his mistress was offering. âYou should really get the kids a dog,â Sophie said, making kissy noises at the beast.
âUh, no, I really shouldnât.â Mala stacked the homeless containers back on the counter, then leaned against it. âSo howâre you feeling these days?â
âOh, fine. The morning sickness only lasted a week or so, thank God. So Iâll be really up for when Alek and Luanne bring the children after Christmas.â
âReally? I canât wait to meet them.â
âThey feel the same way, I gather.â Sophie smiled down at the dog, whoâd plopped his