but the fact is he flirts with every female on staff.â
âIncluding you?â
Eliseâs well-arched brows drew together. âOn occasion, and I can tolerate that as part of his personality. Still, the lab isnât the place for flirtations and stolen kisses.â
âGod, you sound like my mother.â And nothing could have irritated Miranda more. âBut Iâll keep that in mind,Elise, the next time Giovanni and I toy with having wild sex in the chem lab.â
âI have offended you.â Elise sighed, lifted her hands helplessly. âI only wanted to . . . Itâs just that he can be so charming. I nearly fell for it myself when I first transferred here. I was feeling so low, and unhappy.â
âWere you?â
The ice in Mirandaâs tone had Elise straightening her slim shoulders. âDivorcing your brother didnât make me jump for joy, Miranda. It was a painful and difficult decision, and I can only hope it was the right one. I loved Drew, but he. . .â Her voice broke, and she shook her head fiercely. âI can only say it wasnât enough for either of us.â
The gleam of moisture in Eliseâs eyes brought Miranda a hard tug of shame. âIâm sorry,â she murmured. âIt happened so quickly. I didnât think you gave a damn.â
âI did. I still do.â She sighed, then blinked back the threatening tears. âI wish it had been different, but the fact is that it wasnât, and isnât different. I have to live my life.â
âYes, you do.â Miranda shrugged. âAndrewâs been so miserable, and it was easier for me to blame you. I donât imagine the breakup of a marriage is ever one personâs fault.â
âI donât think either of us was very good at marriage. It seemed cleaner and even kinder to end it than to go on pretending.â
âLike my parents?â
Eliseâs eyes widened. âOh, Miranda, I didnât meanââ
âItâs all right. I agree with you. My parents havenât lived under the same roof in more than twenty-five years, but neither of them bothers to end it, cleanly or kindly. Andrew may be hurt, but all in all I prefer your way.â
It was, she admitted, the route she would have taken herselfâif sheâd ever made the mistake of getting married in the first place. Divorce, she decided, was a more humane alternative to the pale illusion of marriage.
âShall I apologize for all the nasty thoughts Iâve had about you in the last year or so?â
Eliseâs lips curved. âNot necessary. I understand yourloyalty to Drew. I admire it and always have. I know how close the two of you are.â
âUnited we stand, divided we rush to therapy.â
âWe never really managed to be friends. We were colleagues, then relatives, but never really made it to friends even with all we have in common. Maybe we canât, but Iâd like to think we could at least be friendly.â
âI donât have many friends.â Too much of an intimacy risk, Miranda thought with a hint of self-disgust. âIt would be foolish of me to refuse the offer of one.â
Elise opened the door again. âI donât have many friends either,â she said quietly. âItâs nice to have you.â
Touched, Miranda stared after her, then gathered her printouts and samples to lock them in the safe.
She snagged Carter briefly, assigning him to check all sources for bronze formulas of the appropriate eraâthough sheâd already done so herself, and would do so again.
She found Richard nearly buried in computer printouts and books. His nose all but scraped along the pages like a bloodhoundâs on the scent.
âFind anything I can use?â Miranda asked him.
âHuh?â He blinked at the page, but didnât look up. âThe villa was completed in 1489. Lorenzo deâ Medici
Angela Andrew;Swan Sue;Farley Bentley
Reshonda Tate Billingsley