murmured.
Dana Sue poured, then grinned. “Helen?”
“Make mine a double. I have to go see my mama tomorrow.”
“Oh, boy,” Dana Sue murmured, exchanging a look with Maddie. “You didn’t say anything about that earlier.”
“Because I didn’t even want to think about it,” Helen said, explaining about the call from the hospital.
“Maybe we should go down there with you,” Maddie said. “At least one of us.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” Helen said. “I can handle this. I’ll make a few calls, look at a couple of rehab places and get her settled. No big deal.”
“I don’t question your ability to cope with the details,” Maddie said gently. “It’s the compassion that concerns me. You tend to be the tiniest bit impatient, and Flo’s probably in pain and not at her best, either.”
Helen scowled at the too-accurate assessment. “Thanks for the vote of confidence.” Her frown deepened when she noted her still-empty glass. Dana Sue still hadn’t poured her another drink. “I’ll take that margarita now.”
“Don’t you need to go down there tomorrow with a clear head?” Dana Sue asked.
“I’d rather not,” Helen said, lifting the glass in a gesture that commanded Dana Sue to fill it to the brim.
“Flo’s going to be just fine,” Maddie said. “A broken hip will heal in no time.”
“At her age?” Helen asked skeptically. “What if it doesn’t? What if she can’t be on her own anymore?”
“Then you’ll deal with it,” Dana Sue said. “You can handle anything. We’re all in awe of you.”
“That was the old me,” Helen bemoaned. “The current me is still trying to figure out how to get a few more hoursinto the day. Way too many of them vanish without my having a clue where they went.”
Jeanette had been listening to the exchange in silence. She’d only recently resolved some of her own family issues. “What about bringing your mom back here to recuperate?” she asked eventually.
Helen stared at her in horror. “Bite your tongue.”
“Well, it just seems like it would be easier to keep an eye on things if she were right here in Serenity,” Jeanette persisted.
“Not going to happen,” Helen said sharply. “Her life’s in Florida now, and that’s where it’s going to stay.”
Maddie gave Jeanette a commiserating look. “Don’t mind Helen. She and her mother have issues. They get along best when there’s some distance between them.”
Unfortunately, since her reconciliation with her own parents, Jeanette wanted all of the world to follow suit. “If there are issues, what better way to fix them than to be right here together while she’s getting back on her feet?”
“Fortunately, my mother will side with me on this,” Helen said with confidence. “She was glad to see the last of Serenity.”
“But it’s her home,” Jeanette stressed.
“It’s the place where she nearly worked herself into an early grave,” Helen contradicted. “Now she’s living in style with every comfort she could possibly want.”
“You and her granddaughter aren’t there,” Jeanette replied, then frowned when Maddie scowled at her. “I’m just saying…” She sat back, looking chagrined. “Oh, never mind. It’s none of my business.”
She looked so upset by the possibility that she’d overstepped that Helen patted her hand. “It’s okay. You are notthe first to think the Decatur women should be reunited in blissful harmony. I get the same thing from Erik all the time.” She grinned. “I also tell him to butt out.”
Jeanette laughed. “Well, in that case, I don’t feel so bad.”
“Have another margarita,” Dana Sue encouraged. “Then you won’t feel anything. I haven’t felt my feet for the past ten minutes.”
Maddie blinked. “Me, neither, come to think of it.”
Helen stared at the two of them. “Oh, sweet heaven, am I going to have your husbands over here yelling at me for sending you home damaged? I’d better make