to roam, inching downward. âAlmost as much as I love your breasts.â
âI appreciate the thought,â I said. âBut your timing stinks.â
His hand was still moving. Now the other one had joined it. One by one, the Poodles came trotting back. This time, Tar had the ball. He dropped it at Samâs feet. Sam kicked it hard and they raced away again.
âNah, this is just a little warm-up for later.â
âKind of like a pregame show?â
âCareful now,â Sam murmured, his lips close to my ear. âMen get turned on by sports metaphors.â
I insinuated my hips into his. âI thought you were alreadyââ
âHey, Sam-Dad, look!â
We jumped apart like a pair of guilty teenagers. Samâs hands fell away. He cleared his throat, yanked on his waistband. We both looked up.
Then abruptly I realized what Davey had said. âSam-Dad?â
âYeah.â Davey grinned. He was lying on the boards, looking down at us over the rim of the tree house floor. âSam said I could call him that.â
âHe did, huh?â
I glanced sideways, my eyes suddenly moist. Sam was looking awayâperhaps purposelyâhis eyes following the trajectory of the ball heâd just lobbed again. A minute earlier Iâd felt desired, but now my heart swelled with emotion. I couldnât imagine ever loving a man more than I loved Sam right that moment.
When I didnât speak right away, he looked back. âMaybe I should have asked you first . . . Thatâs okay, isnât it?â
âItâs better than okay,â I said with a sniffle. âItâs perfect.â
Now he looked embarrassed. âItâs no big deal.â
âItâs a huge deal.â
âItâs a name,â Davey said practically, still watching from above us. âI couldnât call him Dad because . . . you know . . .â
Daveyâs real father lived only a couple of miles away. After being mostly absent for the first five years of his sonâs life, Bob was now making a concerted effort to play a role in Daveyâs upbringing. In fact, the house we were now living inâa spacious colonial on two acres of landâhad belonged to my ex-husband before weâd traded homes in the spring.
âSo I thought of this instead,â Davey said.
âItâs a great name,â I agreed, trying not to sound too watery.
âSo when you guys finally get around to having a babyââ
âDavey!â
âWhat?â He slid back from the edge of the floor, disappearing briefly before popping, legs first, out onto the branch. He shinnied back to the ladder and was on the ground before Iâd even managed to formulate an answer. âSam said that someday Iâm going to have a little brother or sister, but in the meantime I just have to be patient.â
âReally?â My conversational skills seemed to be deteriorating rapidly.
âReally,â Davey confirmed. âI told Sam-Dad I wanted a brother and he said he was trying as hard as he knew how.â
âGood to know,â I said.
âSo . . .â Davey fixed me with a level stare. âI hope youâre trying, too.â
âTrust me,â I said, âitâs a joint effort.â
âWell, hurry up.â
Iâd heard much the same thing from Aunt Peg, Bertie, and just about everyone else I knew. Sam and I had been married only three months, for Peteâs sake. On several occasions, Iâd been sorely tempted to mention that upping the pressure didnât increase fertility. But not to my eight-year-old son.
Instead I looked at him and smiled. âIâll do my best,â I said.
Â
When I finally got around to opening my email I found out that the reception Ben had told me about was scheduled to be held at the Champions Company headquarters in Norwalk on Monday morning. Though the event was billed as a social occasion, a