Katherine Lamontagne isn't Celeste Barnes's mother, but ever since Celeste graduated high school and her parents abandoned Hidden Harbor, Maine, she's acted the part. At twenty-two, Celeste worked at Katherine’s bakery, and hoped to buy the business once Katherine took early retirement. But when Katherine reconsidered that decision, Celeste fled to culinary school in New York—only to return two months later, a shadow of the girl who’d stormed out the door.
Katherine knows the signs of secret heartbreak. Years ago, she gave up her baby son for adoption—a regret she’s never shared with either her ex-husband or Celeste. She longs for Celeste to confide in her now. But it will be a stranger in town—an engaging young wanderer named Zach Fitzgerald—who spurs them toward healing. As both women are drawn into Zach’s questioning heart, they also rediscover their own appetites for truth and for love—and gain the courage to face the past without being imprisoned by it.
Uplifting, emotionally rich, and deeply satisfying, A Measure of Happiness illuminates the nature of friendship, motherhood, hope—and the gifts of second chances. Advance Praise
“In this absorbing, emotional novel about family secrets, Lorrie Thomson demonstrates that having the courage to open our hearts to love is the true measure of happiness.” --Holly Robinson, author of Beach Plum Island and Haven Lake
“A Measure of Happiness is about many things – finding home, facing fears, and making choices among them. But more than anything, it’s the book you’ll reach for when you want to recall that perfect love can still be found in an imperfect world.” – Therese Walsh, author of The Moon Sisters
Release date:
August 25, 2015
Publisher:
Kensington Books
Print pages:
320
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At four o’clock in the morning, Katherine Lamontagne drove through the darkened streets of Hidden Harbor, Maine, and angled into her spot in front of Lamontagne’s Bakery, her pride and joy. She filled her lungs with the familiar sweet brine of the ocean, the scent of hard-earned serenity.
The first smoky hint of changing leaves singed the air. Along Ocean Boulevard, the summer’s maple leaves gave way to reveal underlying bursts of warm gold and orange, evidencing the vacation town’s reluctant slide into autumn. On the radio, the DJ’s voice droned on about the upcoming Y2K and the associated crash of every single computer in the country, as though no one had thought to prepare for a future beyond 1999. In case anyone missed the DJ’s dire hyperbole, REM’s “It’s the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine)” intoned in the background, driving home the point.
Katherine cut the engine, but the song still hummed through her brain like an auditory afterimage of doom. She leaned across the passenger seat and rolled up the window, savoring the stretch, the elongation of her spine. She flexed her fingers. Then she fashioned her long, dark hair into a work-ready chignon, slid her purse onto her shoulder, and stepped into the darkness.
When she passed beneath the streetlight’s soft umbrella of light, an involuntary shiver contracted her shoulders, raising tiny hairs on the back of her neck. She furrowed her brow and glanced in either direction down the empty sidewalk. Silly-me grin on her face, she gave her head a clearing shake and turned her key in the lock. Above Lamontagne’s door, the bell jingled its welcome. One hand clasping the door handle, she angled inside the bakery and switched on the lights.
She blinked once, twice. But her sight refused to clear.
Her pinewood tables and chairs lay on their sides, as though an early autumn storm had gathered strength at sea and unleashed its torrent across her café. Beneath the unforgiving lights, shards of jagged glass and hills of sugar glistened and glowed—all that remained of her sugar dispensers. Scattered napkins ringed the floor in front of the coffee station. Gray sneaker tread footprints stomped across their white perfection. Swirls and jabs of spray paint blackened her pale-blue walls and snaked across one of her canary-yellow booth seats, the design as chaotic as her childhood. Trick of memory, in her smoke-free bread- and pastry-redolent café, her father’s stale cigarette smoke narrowed her breathing passages. The corners of her eyes stung.
Who would do this to her? Why? What had she done wrong?
Katherine’s hand shook the door. The jingle bell dinged, like the wail of a burglar alarm. She pried her fingers from the door handle and wrestled the key from the lock.
For twenty-five years, she’d awoken the citizens of Hidden Harbor with their first cups of freshly brewed coffee. She’d nourished them with daily breads. She’d sweetened their birthdays, anniversaries, weddings, and graduations with made-to-order cakes. Golden yellow or French vanilla? German chocolate or devil’s food? Their preferences she knew by heart. Their life events marked her calendar. Their voices she recognized on the phone. Everything in her adult life, good and bad, had started at this bakery. Everything she’d loved and lost. Everything she still hoped to recover.
Celeste.
What if she’d come in early again, determined to wow Katherine with a new recipe? What if Celeste had interrupted the vandal? What if the intruder had found her first? Katherine tried taking a breath, but the inhalation caught in her throat. And an off-beat pulse hammered from within her gut.
“Celeste!” Katherine’s voice echoed in her ears half a second before rational thought returned. Dear, sweet, infuriating Celeste had left her employ weeks ago, gone to culinary school in New York to rid herself of Hidden Harbor, Lamontagne’s, and Katherine.
Thank God Celeste wasn’t here to witness this disaster. Then why did Katherine wish she were?
Don’t panic, don’t panic, don’t panic.
Exactly what you told yourself when you were clearly panicking.
Katherine chewed the inside of her cheek. Her ragged breath sounded in her ears. She tiptoed through the debris. Glass crunched beneath her clogs and ground into the treads. Balled-up napkins covered the coffee station counter, as though a child had pitched a cookie tantrum. Strawberry goo smeared across her checkout counter. A handful of PB&J cookies lay in a crumpled heap, sans the jelly. The trays of leftover black-and-white, M&M, and sugar cookies were empty.
She didn’t give a damn about the pastries.
The register sat open and empty, exactly as she’d left it at closing time. Every night, she counted out $150 for her register bag. Profits too late for a bank run went into a larger zipped pouch. She secured both bags in the back in her combination safe.
She didn’t give a damn about the money.
In the kitchen, Katherine hit the light switch. The overhead fluorescents flickered to life, illuminating her clean worktables, her shining stainless steel sinks. Katherine nodded at her ancient Blodgett oven, the kitchen’s workhorse. While waiting for her bread dough to rise, she could bake forty-eight pies in the faithful machine, a dozen per rack. Oven trouble meant bakery trouble.
At the moment, Katherine didn’t give a damn about the Blodgett.
Katherine tiptoed across her clean floor and into her stockroom. Proof boxes. Rolling ladder and wheeled bins of flour, oats, nuts, and dried fruit. The top shelf displayed a row of mason jars filled with specialty flours. The chest freezer hummed against the left-hand wall. On the right, a paisley skirt hung beneath a narrow marble work counter.
Katherine dropped to her knees and lifted the skirt.
The combination safe was locked. Crazy, irrational, but she had to know for sure. Her palms pulsed with perspiration, and her fingers slid on the wheel. She spun the lock to the right, missed the first number, took a steadying breath, and began anew. Three tries later, the dead bolts gave and she swung the door on its hinges. She pushed aside the register bag, heavy with change. Her earnings pouch? Okay, she cared a little. She checked the bills against the tally sheet. All there. The stack of singles she kept separate from the two bags would’ve done little to tip a scale, but they weighed heavy on her heart.
At the far end of the safe, a plain white dishcloth secreted her prized possessions. She held the cloth to her nose, inhaled. Her fingers twitched, her cheeks heated, her heart hurt. Time hadn’t dulled the power of memory.
“I’m sorry,” she said, the same apology she’d offered her ex-husband when she’d failed to provide him with a good-enough reason for wanting a divorce. The empty words that failed to salve Celeste’s rage. The brokenhearted send-off for the one person incapable of questioning Katherine’s motives.
She unfolded the dishcloth and ran her fingers across the hospital bracelets she kept as reminders, touchstones of all she’d lost.
Not for the first time, Celeste Barnes’s mind-body connection failed, a betrayal she took personally.
Celeste sneaked back to her own dorm, washed up in the bathroom, peeled off last night’s jeans, and changed into her chef whites. She race-walked across the New York campus of Culinary America, hoping against hope that movement and the nip of autumn air would revive her fogged-in memory. Tuesday’s first class, Fillings and Icing, didn’t start for another half hour, but Matt had headed out from his dorm room while she was still in his bed, and she was determined to chase him down. She didn’t want to make a big deal about last night. But they needed to talk.
High-noon glare highlighted the maple and oak leaves’ past peak colors. Last week’s gold had turned to brown mustard. Tangerine-orange had, seemingly overnight, darkened to rust. Sun slanted off the redbrick buildings and jabbed a finger into the headache pulsing behind her left brow bone. When she’d first arrived on campus two months ago, she’d worried she’d stand out, starting a degree at twenty-two instead of eighteen. But in the world of baking and pastry arts, she needn’t have worried about her age.
Some students had come here straight from high school. Others, like her and Matt, had taken a more circuitous path to pursue their life’s dream. She’d survived six years as an assistant baker at Lamontagne’s. Six years when she’d worked her ass off to try to please she who could not be pleased. Celeste was better off without her. Culinary America was the best thing that had ever happened to her.
Celeste should really call Katherine to tell her so.
Matt had come from a background in food styling, creating and photographing treats that delighted the eye but not the palate. Want to make a heavy cake into a lightweight? Create a false bottom. He taught Celeste that the secret to making no-melt ice cream was scooping a well-crafted mixture of frosting and powdered sugar. Not ice cream at all but a clever, convincing imposter. According to Matt, food photography was all about lighting, framing, and exposure.
They both fought to prove their worth. Celeste because she’d never gone to college, never ventured from her tiny hometown, the job she’d worked since high school. Matt was an even easier student target. You had to try that much harder to prove yourself real when your expertise came from faking it.
They commiserated about the other students. Their petty rivalries. Their overblown egos. Their backstabbing backroom wagers. A sidelong glance in Matt’s direction or a hand signal under the table conveyed their wordless language. Matt was like a brother to her. The white cotton of her pants swished between her legs, roughing her thighs, and, shit, she was sore.
What the hell had happened?
A chill ran up Celeste’s sleeves, the cotton of her chef whites lousy defense against the changing winds. She hunched her shoulders, blew out a breath, and considered taking a nap on a tree-side wrought-iron bench. She really needed a shower.
Less than an hour ago, she’d awoken in Matt’s shade-darkened dorm room, the ghost of a forgotten dream slipping from her consciousness as soon as she’d opened her eyes. Matt was sitting in the chair by the window, as though waiting for her to wake up. His forearms leaned on his jostling thighs, and he waved a pencil before him, keeping time to a silent beat. Two hours before their first class, his shoulder-length brown hair was pulled back in a ponytail and he was a vision in chef whites.
She was completely naked.
“What happened?” she’d asked him, hastily covering herself with his thin sheet, as though she were an actress in a romantic comedy, as though she hadn’t known the meaning behind the pinched ache between her legs, the strain of an inner thigh stretch. The musty mushroom smell coming from his bedside trash can.
“You’re a lightweight, Celeste,” Matt had said, regret narrowing his features. “And I’m not much better.”
No, she wasn’t.
She hadn’t been that out of it, had she? She hadn’t had that much to drink. She hadn’t intended to boink Matt. Her good buddy. Her platonic friend. She’d never felt any attraction toward him, no overblown stirring of the nether regions when she’d caught his wrist to halt him from overmixing a batter, no do-me-now lust when he’d lean close to show her how to frame a stylized puff pastry within her camera’s lens. But it had been a long time since she’d had sex. And even though Matt had never inspired her specific lust, she’d admit to a general persistent stirring. Even though her memory refused to surface, she understood the gist of the deed, if none of the details.
Might as well yank up her big-girl panties.
Celeste hoisted her backpack on her shoulder, ducked into the side door of Barnstead Hall, and clomped up the metal stairs leading to the shiny, bright practice kitchen. The front entrance brought you past an ornate reception area with glass and mirrors, and the largest of several demonstration kitchens. The place where they entertained famous chefs, bowed down before their superior white pant legs. But she preferred the older side of the building, the winding hallways, a smaller building within a mammoth structure. You could take the girl out of the small town—
The foreign tone of Matt’s voice halted her in the shadowed hallway, seconds before the words hit her. “Oh, yeah. She needed it bad, and I was glad to give it to her.”
Male laugher carried into the hallway. A deep and guttural whoop echoed off the top-of-the-line stainless steel appliances. A spoon banged against a stainless steel bowl. Celeste’s eyes blinked with every hollow clang. Her hairline prickled with perspiration.
“Details, brother. We need details.” Drake’s voice now. Last night’s party host was the Neanderthal who’d asked her out on the first day of class by telling her she needed to get laid. The joker she and her brother Matt had dissed in private, tolerated in class.
The Matt she knew had two sisters he adored. He respected women in general and Celeste in specific. The Matt—
“Nice body,” Matt said.
“Tell us something we don’t know,” Drake said, his voice taking on an angry edge.
“Don’t you worry. I’ll give you proof,” Matt said.
Celeste shook her head. Her hand shook the strap of her pack. The cotton of her chef whites clung to her underarms. She flattened herself against the wall, willed herself to disappear. Hoped against hope she’d somehow misunderstood what she’d heard. The Matt she knew—
“She’s got the sweetest birthmark, right about there,” Matt said, referring to a heart-shaped mole on a part of Celeste’s body she wouldn’t have been able to examine unless she’d been standing naked in a house of mirrors and double-jointed.
Please. God. Stop.
“She was an animal. Woke me up twice for more . . . a little of this. A lot of that.”
“Three times?” A guy’s voice sounded high-pitched, like a grade school boy telling a dirty joke.
Celeste was the joke.
Celeste slapped her hands over her mouth. Bile pressed the back of her throat and her stomach cramped, like the first time she’d gone down on her boyfriend, Justin, in high school. Like the first time she’d discovered he’d, post-breakup, spread rumors about her appetite for sex. Like every single tortuous day she’d endured snide looks from girls, wolf calls and obscene tongue-in-cheek pantomimes from boys.
Celeste imagined walking into the kitchen with her head held high. They were grown-ups, weren’t they? Equals, consenting adults. She had nothing to be ashamed of. Hey, guys. What’s so funny? Did I miss anything? She imagined the guys’ cheeks pinking beneath her scrutiny, Matt flushing but feigning ignorance. Then she imagined catching obscene gestures in her peripheral vision, words and phrases whispered behind her back. She imagined those same male classmates standing too close and testing her with their eyes, their gazes stripping her bare, examining and dissecting every inch of her body, and reminding her she was less than the sum of her parts. She was nothing.
Less than nothing.
Because she had the audacity to try to forget.
Celeste drove through the night, fueled by strong coffee, a lead foot, and the blue-hot flames of mortification. The fact she’d misjudged her friendship with Matt was bad enough. The fact she’d misjudged herself far worse.
Less than fifteen hours ago, she’d fled campus after having stopped at her dorm long enough to shove clothes in her bedraggled blue-striped tote and grab a blueberry muffin from the mini-fridge. She’d driven around in a daze, attempting to shore up her battered dignity. Then she’d made her decision and headed for home.
She’d crossed from New York to Connecticut, cut through Massachusetts, caught five hours of Z’s at a New Hampshire rest stop, and zigzagged along the Maine coast all the way to Casco Bay’s best kept secret: her hometown of Hidden Harbor. Her dignity had degenerated, and the blueberry muffin had long since rolled beneath the passenger seat, road grit overriding sugarcoating.
In all that time, her memory had refused to resurface.
Minutes before three on Wednesday morning, Celeste parked her trustworthy Cabriolet, Old Yeller, in her parking spot before Lamontagne’s, Katherine’s bakery. The owner’s neighboring spot was vacant.
A week or so ahead of New York foliage, a hint of decaying leaves already mingled with the ocean air. A few solitary leaves rattled across the empty sidewalk, skeletons scratching the concrete. The storefront looked the same as when Katherine had purchased it from the previous owner, 1999 masquerading as 1976, a fact Celeste never hesitated to remind Katherine. The fact Katherine was supposed to have sold the bakery to Celeste months ago, that back in May, Celeste had already mentally cut the time-consuming breads from her menu and planned out October’s pumpkin cheesecake, whoopie pies, caramel apples, and apple strudel, had meant nothing to Katherine.
Katherine’s reneging on their verbal agreement and the associated meaning—she felt Celeste wasn’t ready to run her own shop—meant everything to Celeste.
Yet here she was, in a compromising position, second time in less than twenty-four hours.
Her reflection stared back at her from the bakery’s glass front. Even in the streetlamp’s low light, the hollows beneath her green eyes appeared bruised, shades of the unintentional Goth look she’d sported six years ago, during her junior year in high school. An unseasonably warm breeze caressed her cheek, like a mother comforting a child, and Celeste shook off the misplaced sensation.
Katherine Lamontagne wasn’t her mother.
The fact the baker had acted the part since Celeste’s parents had abandoned Hidden Harbor for warmer shores meant nothing. Katherine had reminded—okay, nagged—Celeste into eating three meals and two nutritious snacks a day because passing out behind the counter would’ve been bad for business. Their arrangement had been purely professional, no blurred lines.
Same as her friendship with Matt.
The coffee in Celeste’s stomach churned in revolt, as though a wand were foaming milk for a cappuccino in her belly. She wiped the sour taste in her mouth with the back of her hand and acknowledged the slightly sore sensation between her legs that hadn’t lessened. That and a few glimmers of memory evidenced her folly.
She’d downed two screwdrivers. She’d accepted Matt’s ride back to the dorms. She’d kissed him good night.
She’d kissed him.
Celeste’s key fit into the lock, and the glass door gave, opening into the café at the front of the shop. The customer-alert bell jingled. Canary-yellow vinyl booths with light-green trim lined two walls, but the seat farthest from the door appeared lighter than the rest. When Celeste went to take a closer look, even the trim was different. Red instead of green trim proved Katherine still needed Celeste to tell the difference between the two colors, if nothing else. She ran her hand along the cushion, free of the permanent center indentation. Why would Katherine have replaced a lone cushion? Baby-blue paint, Katherine’s only other update since her long-ago purchase, made the place look as much a nursery as a bakery. Back of the café, slant-front glass cases housed rows of pastries. The aromas of vanilla, butter, and spun sugar softened the air and wrapped Celeste in a hug she didn’t bother resisting. This warmth and sweetness was her home, her siren song calling, her safe haven. Last time she’d spoken to Katherine, Celeste had told her boss she didn’t need her, her bakery, or Hidden Harbor.
Not the first time Celeste had spoken her mind and regretted it.
Celeste slipped into the kitchen and found her apron on the hook, same place she’d left it upon storming out months ago but without the fuzz of flour and the scourge of deep-set stains. She held the cotton up to her nose and inhaled the baby powder–scented laundry detergent Katherine used on all the dish towels and oven mitts. The smell rattled Celeste’s jaw, rattled her. Celeste’s mother had warned her not to burn her bridges, not to bite the hand that fed her. A mixed metaphor Celeste hadn’t appreciated until today.
Celeste turned on the industrial Blodgett oven, and the bad old girl’s pilot light fired to life. She consulted the master bake sheet, a mammoth blackboard Katherine propped up by the stockroom door. Despite Katherine’s best efforts at erasing, smudges from past weeks’ orders bled through to the present. Nothing a little baking soda and water wouldn’t correct, but Katherine had never been good at taking Celeste’s advice.
When Celeste had worked here, Katherine split the master bake sheet into Celeste and Katherine columns. Now the entire gargantuan list fell to Katherine.
A dull headache thrummed behind Celeste’s eyes. Hunger pains stabbed her gut, but she knew better than to give in to her body’s demands before she’d taken care of today’s business. She knew better than anybody that if you wanted to earn your keep, you’d better roll up your sleeves, rewrite the master bake sheet to include a Celeste column, and get to work.
An hour later, when the front door jingled and Katherine Lamontagne breezed into the kitchen, the bread dough was rising, warming the air with the satisfying aroma of yeast and flour. Inside the mammoth oven, apple, peach, and pumpkin pies baked and browned, and Celeste was hand folding wild blueberries into the muffin batter. Celeste raised her gaze to Katherine Lamontagne’s dark-brown eyes.
Neither woman blinked.
“You’re back from New York,” Katherine said.
“Apparently.”
Katherine’s gaze widened, and her jaw set. “What are you doing here?”
Celeste gave the batter bowl a solitary pat. “Stirring up the blues.”
Katherine shook her head. She turned to shed her peacoat and don her apron. She pulled her thick, dark hair into first a ponytail and then a chignon, her fingers working like magic. No matter how many times Celeste had studied Katherine, she’d never been able to replicate her process. Today, the sight of the back of Katherine’s neck—pale and vulnerable beneath the harsh lights—made Celeste feel like crying.
Probably just sleep deprivation.
Katherine turned around. The slight imperfection of her cowlick only enhanced the do. Her gaze lighted on Celeste’s eyes and softened. “Why’d you come back?”
“Maybe I missed your apple tarts.”
“You were supposed to show me how much you didn’t need me. You were supposed to finally get a degree and open up a shop in New York,” Katherine said, her tone at once accusatory and foot-stomping disappointed.
“I never said New York.”
“Anywhere but Hidden Harbor.”
“Maybe I like it here.”
“You needed to leave.”
“Maybe I wasn’t ready? Maybe you were right to go back on our deal?” Celeste’s cheeks tingled with heat. The sound of her own voice—thin and unsure, every statement a question—made her throat itch.Who was she? She wanted to take inventory, to strip down in front of a full-length mirror and seek the missing smart-ass Celeste. She hadn’t felt this way about herself in years, every failure a certainty, every insecurity exposed. She hung her head, and a chunk of hair sprang from her ponytail.
“Oh, Celeste. I never said you weren’t ready. I said I wasn’t ready to retire at forty-six.” Katherine sighed. She reached into her pant pocket and took out a handful of hairpins. “How many times have I told you to keep your hair off your face?” Katherine swept Celeste’s hair from her throbbing forehead, her hands cool as summer tea. Then she cajoled Celeste’s unruly auburn mop into a bun, snug and secure.
Katherine tipped Celeste’s chin up. “New York didn’t work out?”
A flash of Matt’s face streaked across Celeste’s vision. The expression she’d previously identified as regret now seemed like what? Embarrassment? He sure hadn’t sounded embarrassed when he’d bragged about sleeping with her the way her big brothers used to brag about nailing a bull’s-eye during target practice.Who was she to judge character? Any way Celeste looked at it, she was screwed. “Something like that.”
“Want to talk about it?” Katherine asked.
Celeste slid the muffins into the convection oven, and her eyes dampened. For a nanosecond, she imagined sobbing on Katherine’s shoulder the way she’d cried in her mother’s arms after the Jerk Justin high school breakup that had sent her on the Bad Mad spiral that still lurked.
Hold it together, girl.
You didn’t bare your soul to your employer. You couldn’t get drunk, boink a classmate, have him blab about it to the whole class, and then expect your classmates to take you seriously.
Celeste couldn’t admit what had happened and expect Katherine to take her seriously.
Celeste had only seen Katherine drink once. They’d shared a bottle of sparkling wine after hours when Celeste had turned twenty-one. Freixenet, because Katherine insisted it went best with the Black Forest birthday cake she’d baked for Celeste. Celeste had never seen Katherine lose her head, with the exception of Katherine’s divorce two years ago. And in the middle of last spring’s thaw, her ex-husband, Barry, had started coming in for coffee every morning when the bakery opened at six. Katherine’s excuse? She’d never shown him how to use the coffeemaker.
When Celeste turned around, Katherine’s hands were planted on her hips, her eyebrows raised, as she awaited an answer to her question.
“Not really.” Celeste cleared her throat. “I don’t really feel like talking about what happened.”
“Okay.” Katherine nodded, but her gaze held on to Celeste’s, searching for answers. Then Katherine consulted the master bake sheet and ran her finger down the checked items. “Had anything to eat yet?”
“Does coffee count?”
Katherine let out a small laugh, and Celeste’s heart fluttered at her collarbone. “Not if you picked it up at a convenience store hours ago,” Katherine said.
“Guilty.”
Katherine went into the café and returned with an apple tart on a white stoneware dessert plate. “Eat while I get some proper coffee started.”
Celeste stared at the tart, perfectly proportioned, with golden-brown crust. Light from the overhead fixture shone off the apples. She inhaled the white chocolate of the glaze, and the tang from the apples puckered the sides of her mouth. But when she lifted the pastry to her lips, her throat tightened. She returned the tart to the plate. Her hands shook. “Too much coffee,” Celeste said in deference to the tremble, but they both knew that was a lie.
Ever since the burglary, whenever Katherine was alone at the bakery, she jumped at every sound. The rumble of a truck passing through the center of Hidden Harbor pooled tears at the back of her throat. Errant Dumpster odors slipping beneath the back door had Katherine checking and rechecking the stockroom and restrooms, in case an unhygienic intruder were hiding, biding his time to wield black spray paint against her walls and booth seating. Every morning, she stepped from her car and race-walked beneath the lamppost, blunt-edged key thrust between her pointer and middle fingers like a weapon. Don’t mess with me, or I’ll what? Scratch you silly?
And even though Katherine hated guns, her safe co. . .
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