decisions on what is. ”
“Danny and I are having a baby,” Mary Louise said. “That’s what is.” She aimed a fiercely determined look at Caleb. “And I’m not giving the baby away. It might be hard and scary, but this is what I’m doing and nothing you say will talk me out of it.”
Caleb recognized that level of determination and knew that Amanda had hit the nail on the head. He, too, had to deal with things the way they were.
“Okay, then,” he said. “I’m going to see you and Danny again on Sunday and then afterward I’m going to ask your folks to join us. Let’s see where we stand and what we can do to make sure this baby has not just two parents who will love it, but a whole support system.”
“Really?” Mary Louise said, her eyes wide. “You’re going to marry us?”
“One step at a time,” Caleb warned. “Let’s get Danny and your folks on board first. You don’t want Danny to feel like he’s been backed into a corner, do you?”
“No, of course not. He wants this as much as I do. You’ll see,” she insisted.
Caleb had his doubts about that, but maybe there was a way to bring him around, especially if he could come up with some way to ensure Danny didn’t lose his career dream in the process.
Once Amanda had gotten over her case of the jitters, thanks to that untimely and provocative conversation with Maggie, she’d been able to focus on the young woman Caleb had brought over. She’d totally empathized with Mary Louise’s unshakable optimism in the face of an unexpected pregnancy that threatened to change her life forever. She’d done what she could to explain the harsh realities of marrying and having a family too young, but a part of her had been rooting for Mary Louise to stick to her guns and fight for what she wanted. It was that sort of spunk that would be needed if she and Danny were to have even half a chance of making it.
As soon as Mary Louise and Caleb had left, she’dwilted as she considered the confrontation that awaited with her own squabbling children. With no siblings of her own, she was always taken aback by the battles among her three children. She’d always had this rosy picture of them loving one another through thick and thin. The reality was that there were plenty of times when they barely tolerated one another.
Before she gave them permission to leave their rooms, she fixed a quick dinner of spaghetti and meatballs, one of the few meals they all loved. Maybe that would facilitate peace.
When the food was on the table, she went to the boys’ room first. “Okay, you two, dinner’s ready, but I want you at the table only if you can promise me that there will be no fighting with your sister. You know how I hate it when you gang up on her.”
Larry and Jimmy regarded her with tear-reddened eyes.
“I’m sorry, Mom,” Jimmy said first.
“Me, too,” Larry added. “We really weren’t being mean. We were scared she’d fall out of the swing like she did yesterday.”
Amanda’s mouth gaped. “Susie fell out of the swing yesterday?”
Jimmy nodded. “Twice. She made us promise not to tell, ’cause she was afraid you wouldn’t let her get on the swing anymore.”
Amanda sighed. “Then you were trying to protect her?”
Both boys nodded solemnly.
“Then I’m the one who’s sorry,” she told them. “I should have given you a chance to explain.”
They wrapped their arms around her waist and leaned into her.
“It’s okay, Mom. You were kinda busy with Caleb and that lady,” Larry said.
She looked down into their upturned faces. “How about I make it up to you with ice cream after dinner?”
“We have ice cream?”
“No, but we’ll take a walk and get cones,” she said.
“Susie, too?” Larry asked indignantly.
“Something tells me she’s learned her lesson,” Amanda said. “She was sent to her room, too.”
Both boys seemed to consider that for a moment.
“Okay,” Larry said eventually. “But we get double