“Of course not, Rose, when you’re tired, you just tell me.” Ronnie looked over at the computer, groaning inside at the thought of the work that had been piling up all week waiting for her. “Will the keyboard bother you if I do some work?”


“Oh no. Go right ahead. It won’t bother me at all.” Rose did not know if it would or not but she was not about to tell Ronnie that she could not do her work in her own office in her own home. Tabitha seemed quite content to lie down on the heated bed and soon fell asleep.


Sleep did not come as easily for Rose, however. The clackity-clack of the keyboard drew her attention to Ronnie working hard only a few feet away. There were computers at the public library and she knew how to use them to look up the location of books but little else. Even from this distance she could see that Ronnie was looking over some kind of spreadsheet. Though the sculptured face was turned away from her, Rose had no doubt that the head of Cartwright Corporation was frowning. A pencil with the end well chewed found its way into Ronnie’s mouth again and again. When it was not being gnawed at, it was being bounced up and down on the desk, an apparent nervous habit. Every so often an incongruous expletive would spew forth from the cultured woman’s mouth and the screen on the computer would change from one spreadsheet to another.


Ronnie stood up and walked over to the file cabinets, pulling out wads of computer generated reports. “What the hell are you doing, Tommy?” she asked the air before returning to her seat and comparing the information on the paper to what the screen was telling her. Through half-closed eyelids Rose continued to watch her new friend struggle to make sense of what she was looking at. Several times Ronnie leaned back in her leather chair and let out a frustrated sigh. It was those times that Rose could see her face, brow furrowed with thought, lips pursed, jaw clenched. The young woman finally fell asleep wishing that she could do something to ease Ronnie’s problems the way the gentle woman had eased hers.



* * *

Ronnie shut the monitor off and turned in her seat to find Rose sleeping, Tabitha by her side. The orange and white feline was busily cleaning her paws and did not even bother to look up when the executive left the room.


“How is the poor dear?” Maria asked when Ronnie entered the kitchen.


“She’s sleeping right now. I’ll wake her up when dinner’s ready.” She reached into the cupboard and retrieved a glass before taking a beer out of the fridge. “I really appreciate you staying late today to do that.”


“Oh, it’s no problem at all, Ronnie, you know that,” the older woman said. “What happened to her?”


“She was hit by a car. She has no family and no one else to take care of her. She’s going to stay here until she’s completely healed and I don’t need my mother and sister knowing about this,” Ronnie warned, wanting to avoid any family discussions.


“I take it she is Tabitha’s mother?”


“Yeah.” She took a sip of beer and sniffed at the oven. “Smells good.”


“Uh huh and it will be good once it’s done. Don’t even think about sneaking in there and taking any.” Maria remembered far too many times when forkfuls of dinner were found missing by the time she removed it from the oven. “You didn’t tell me what she liked so I made a pot roast.”


“Oooh. Sounds good.” Ronnie’s eyes lit up. “Hope you made plenty.” She took another sip of beer and looked around at the rows of cabinets. “Do you know where that tray is that we used when Mom was sick?”


“Of course I do. Unlike you, I know my way around the kitchen.”


“Hey, I know where things are. I found the beer with no problem.” Ronnie grinned.


“Always the smart aleck, aren’t you, Veronica Louise?”


“Only with you, Maria,” the tall woman replied, leaning over and giving her beloved housekeeper a peck on the cheek and ruffling the salt-and-pepper hair. “I’ll take my dinner in the office with Rose. If you need help just give me a yell.”


“Considering that I served your entire family when everyone lived here I think bringing two dinners into the office won’t be a problem.” She opened the oven door and poked at the roast and potatoes with a large fork. “Now you go see to your guest. Dinner will be at least another half hour.”


Once she was alone again in the kitchen, the smile left Maria’s face. She walked over to the sliding glass doors and peered out into the night. The large sodium lamp illuminated the garage…and the battered Porsche sitting inside it. “Oh Veronica…” she whispered. “What have you done?”



* * *

“That was delicious,” Rose said for the umpteenth time, putting her fork down on the empty plate. “I never cared much for carrots but those were terrific.”


“I think Maria puts some sugar on them while they’re cooking,” Ronnie replied, taking the tray off of the blonde’s lap and setting it on the desk. “You ready for dessert?”


“Dessert?” Green eyes lit up.


“Dessert. I know she has fresh brownies out there and if I look real hard there might be some ice cream to go with them.” The look of utter delight on Rose’s face brought a smile to her own.

“You keep that up and Maria will make you as big as a house. Nothing pleases her more than seeing people enjoying her cooking.” She glanced at the young woman still in her blue and white hospital gown. “Of course you look like you could use a little meat on your bones, so that might not be such a bad thing. While I’m at it, I’ll get you something a little more comfortable to wear than that thing.”


“Oh, well I guess it is a little drafty,” Rose replied, tugging the material up over her shoulder.


“I don’t think I have any pants that are big enough to go over those legs but I’m sure I have a nightshirt somewhere. I’ll be right back.” She picked up the empty plates and left the room.


“Meat on my bones?” Rose queried Tabitha once Ronnie left. “I feel like I’ve gained ten pounds from all the food I’ve eaten the last few days.”


“Mrrow?”


“Yeah, you look like you’ve been enjoying some of Maria’s cooking too,” she grunted when the orange and white cat climbed over her thigh to rest on her lap. “I don’t understand it.” She scratched absently behind Tabitha’s ears while voicing her thoughts. “She finds me on the street, takes me to the hospital, and that should have been it. Instead she takes care of both of us like we were the most important things in the world to her.”


“Mrrow?”


“Oh, heaven forbid I stop scratching you, your majesty.” She resumed her gentle scratching.

“You I can understand.” She lifted Tabitha up to her chest and nuzzled the soft fur. “You’re so adorable. Anyone who sees you falls in love with you.” She listened to the soft purring for a minute, taking comfort in holding her precious kitty. “Nope, I don’t understand it at all. I’m grateful but I don’t understand it.”


“Here we go,” Ronnie said as she entered the room. Each hand held a dessert plate with a large brownie and a scoop of vanilla ice cream pierced by a spoon while a pale maroon nightshirt was slung over her shoulder. She set the plates down on the desk and handed the nightshirt to Rose.


“Dartmouth?” The young woman asked, holding the shirt up in front of her.


“Yeah. I got my Bachelor’s from there and my Master’s from Stanford,” Ronnie said as she handed one plate to Rose. “It’s old and faded but I still love it.”


“What are your degrees in?”


“Mmm, good brownie. Let’s see…I have a Bachelor’s in Business Administration with a minor in Marketing and my Master’s is in Business Management.”


“No wonder you’re the president of your company.”


“Well, that and I’m the oldest,” Ronnie grinned. “When it comes to Cartwright Corp., nepotism will get you everywhere.”


“I’m sure it took more than that to get where you are,” Rose replied, spooning the tasty dessert into her mouth.


“It did, but if I were with any other company I’d just be middle management. My father died less than three years after I graduated and I took over the reins then.”


“Oh. Were you close to your father?”


“I guess.” She shoved the last piece of brownie into her mouth. “I was the oldest and for a long time the apple of his eye. You know, it’s funny, no matter how busy he was, he always found the time to attend every parent-teacher conference, every play, even made all of my little league games. Not many men in his position would do that.”


“Sounds like he loved you very much.”


“He did. I was a hell-raiser and he was always trying to keep me out of trouble.” Ronnie set her plate down and leaned back in her leather chair. “I remember more than one time when one of Mother’s antique vases would get broken with my roughhousing and he would take the blame.” She smiled at the memory. “Only once did I get hurt and he couldn’t cover for me. I was sliding down that banister out there and fell off. Broke my arm good. Mother grounded me for the whole summer.”


“If you grew up here, why doesn’t your mother still live here?”


“Well, after Dad died, she did live here for a while. Eventually she started spending more and more time with her canasta friends. They all live in a retirement community nearby. She figured that if she was spending all of her time there why not just live there, so we bought her a condo and I took over the family home. It makes sense, though. She is pushing sixty and doesn’t need such a big place anyway.”