much it would mean. “Wouldn’t you be more comfortable with some nice pastels?”
“You have a nasty streak, Savannah. I like it.”
She laughed, enjoying him. “Let’s see what your sister-in-law comes up with first. Then we’ll talk.” She walked back into the kitchen to put on water for the pasta.
“Fair enough. Why don’t you drop by the inn, see what she and Rafe have done there?”
“I’d love to get a look at the place,” she admitted.
“I could drive you over after dinner.”
“Homework.” She shook her head with real regret. “I have a feeling I’m going to be doing long division.”
“In that case—” he picked up the wine and topped off both their glasses “—let me offer a little Dutch courage.”
She hadn’t expected him to stay after the meal was over. Certainly hadn’t been prepared for him to wind things around so that he was sitting beside her son at thekitchen table, poring over the problems in an open arithmetic book.
She served him coffee as he translated the problems into baseball statistics. And why, Savannah wondered, as her son leaped at the ploy and ran with it, hadn’t she thought of that?
Because, she admitted, figures terrified her. Schooling terrified her. The knowledge that her son would one day soon go beyond what she had learned was both thrilling and shaming.
Not even Bryan knew about the nights she stayed up late, long after he slept, and studied his books, determined that she would be able to give help whenever he asked her for it.
“So, you divide the total score by the number of times at bat,” Jared suggested, adjusting his horn-rims in a way that made Savannah’s libido hitch.
“Yeah, yeah!” The lights of knowledge were bursting in Bryan’s head. “This is cool.” With his tongue caught between his teeth, he wrote the numbers carefully, almost reverently. After all, they were ball players now. “Check this out, Mom.”
When she did, laboriously going over the steps of the problem, her smile bloomed. “Good job.” She brushed a kiss over Bryan’s tousled hair. “Both of you.”
“How come I didn’t get a kiss?” Jared wanted to know.
She obliged him, chastely enough, but Bryan still made gagging noises. “Man, do you have to do that at the dinner table?”
“Close your eyes,” Jared suggested, and kissed Savannah again.
“I’m out of here.” Bryan shut his book with a snap.
“Out of here, and into the tub,” Savannah finished.
“Aw, come on.” He looked beseechingly at Jared.
“Actually,” Jared began, “I believe my client is entitled to a short recess.”
“Oh, really?” But Savannah’s dry comment was drowned out by Bryan’s whoop of delight.
“Yeah, a recess. Like an hour’s TV.”
“With the court’s indulgence.” Jared shot Bryan a warning look, laid a hand on his shoulder. “What my client means is, thirty minutes of recreational television viewing is appropriate after serving his previous sentence and taking steps toward rehabilitation. After which he will, voluntarily and without incident, accept the court’s decision.”
Savannah hissed a breath through her teeth. “Lights out at nine-thirty,” she muttered.
“All right!” Bryan pumped his fist in the air. “You should have gone for the hour,” he told Jared.
“This was your best deal. Trust me, I’m your lawyer.”
A grin split Bryan’s face. “Cool. Thanks, Mr. MacKade. ’Night, Mom.”
“Very fast, fancy talking,” Savannah said under her breath as her son dashed upstairs to the little portable in her bedroom.
“I couldn’t help myself.” Feeling a little sheepish, Jared tucked his hands in his pockets. “He reminded me of what it was like to be a nine-year-old boy and desperate for another hour. Are you going to hold me in contempt?”
She sighed, picked up the empty coffee cups, took them to the sink. “No. It was nice of you to stand up forhim. Besides, he’d have wrangled the half hour out of me
Brittney Cohen-Schlesinger