When We Found Home. Susan Mallery
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Now he sat in front of his computer and pulled up the numbers for the soup and drink division. Something was wrong and he was going to find out what.
But before he’d gotten much past the first layer of numbers, Malcolm walked into his office.
“What did I miss?” his boss asked, taking the visitor’s chair by his desk.
“Nothing much. The quarterly meeting went well. We’re up 4 percent. I’ve emailed you the summary reports, just let me know if you want to get into more detail.”
“Any surprises?”
“Soups and drinks are down. I’m looking into it.”
Malcolm rubbed his forehead. “Thanks. I don’t think I’d be much help right now.”
“You have a lot going on. How’s Keira?”
“Physically? Healing. She sees her doctor tomorrow. As for the rest of it, I have no idea.”
Malcolm was gifted when it came to business and a hell of a good friend, but he was not equipped to deal with a twelve-year-old girl. He wasn’t relaxed around kids and he didn’t trust easily. Whatever progress had been made on that front had been undone by Rachel nearly two years ago, Santiago thought, mentally calling Malcolm’s ex-fiancée every crappy name he could think of.
Malcolm looked at him. “There was a kitten. That’s how she got hit by a car. She saw a kitten and ran into the street. Can you believe it?”
“Yes. It’s something Emma would do in a heartbeat. She’s a kid, Malcolm. It was a kitten. What did you expect? That she would look both ways? She reacted.”
“She could have been killed.”
“Yes, but she wasn’t. She’ll recover and hey, now you have a cat.”
His friend grimaced. “Lucky me. I said she could keep it.”
“Good move.” He leaned forward. “You have to relax around her. Pretend she’s a regular person.”
“Thanks for nothing. She is a regular person.”
“Not to you. You act like she’s an unwelcome life force. Kids are tough. Just let her know you care and you’re there for her.”
“I do care about her. I’m just not sure how to make her believe that.”
“Fake it until you make it.”
Malcolm glared at him. “What does that mean?”
“Pretend interest in whatever floats the boat of a twelve-year-old girl. At first you’ll feel awkward and stupid but over time it will get easier. She’s your sister.”
“There’s another one.”
“Another...”
“Sister.”
Santiago stared at him. “You’re kidding. Like Star Wars? There is another?”
“Not funny and yes. Alberto found out about her the same time he learned about Keira, but he couldn’t locate her.” Malcolm hesitated as if he were going to say something, then seemed to change his mind. “She’s twenty-six and living in Houston. We get the DNA test back today.”
Santiago whistled. “Two new sisters. Any others out there lurking?”
“Not that Jerry knew about. Those were the only two mentioned in his papers.”
“If the DNA test is a match, then what?”
Malcolm looked at him. “Guess.”
“Let’s see. Alberto will fly her out here and move her into the house.”
“Bingo.”
“You’re awash in sisters. That’s nice. I would have liked a sister.”
“Take one of mine.”
Santiago chuckled. “I do great with kids.”
“Yes, you do. It’s annoying.”
“I’m a people person.”
“That you are.”
“You’re better-looking but no one notices because you’re such a tight ass.”
Instead of laughing, Malcolm turned away. “Do you know how Keira had me listed in her phone?”
“What do you mean? She had your name wrong?”
“No.” Malcolm looked at him. “On her contact list, I’m her asshole brother.”
Santiago winced. “I’m sorry, Malcolm. She’s having a tough time making the transition. It’s still all new to her.”
“Yeah, I know.” He rose. “You’re in her contacts, too. Under your real name. Hell of a thing.”
“It’ll get better.”
“You sure?” Malcolm shook his head. “Never mind. I’ll figure it out. Thanks for covering the meetings for me.”
“No problem.”
He watched his friend walk away and wished he knew how to fix the problem, or at least mitigate it. Maybe if he talked to Keira or...
No, he told himself. Malcolm had to figure out Keira in his own way. Santiago stepping in to play hero wouldn’t help anyone, or so his brothers had told him about five thousand times.
Delaney had lived in Seattle all her life and still wasn’t the least bit familiar with the area where Keira and Malcolm lived—probably because if the world were separated into haves and have-nots, she would definitely find herself on the side of the latter.
The closer she got to Lake Washington, the larger the homes and lots got until she was pretty sure they were called estates rather than something as pedestrian as houses.
She checked street numbers on mostly closed security gates and was surprised to find herself turning onto a gate-free driveway. The house in front of her was huge—massively tall and wide, with dozens of windows and double front doors that were suited for a modern castle. As she drove along the curved driveway to park in front of the house, she caught sight of the lake beyond.
Lake Washington was a long narrow lake only a couple of miles wide but over twenty miles long. It was beautiful, offered plenty of lakefront living but created a traffic nightmare for the east side of the metropolitan area. Finding one’s way around traffic jams could be challenging when there was