
“What about you?” Melissa stared at the table as she asked the question.
“I don’t know. If there’s other family, then we’ll have options to explore. If not, then you and Abby will be coming back to San Francisco with me.”
Melissa sprang to her feet. “No. We won’t go. We live here. In Fool’s Gold.” Tears filled her eyes.
Liz rose. “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have said that. Everything is still new and we haven’t even gotten to know each other. Let’s not worry about anything more than today.”
“I won’t go. Neither will Abby.” Melissa looked defiant, despite the tears. “I mean it, Liz. You can’t make us.”
Liz knew that if she ended up with custody of the girls, she could and would, but there was no point in pushing hard now.
“I understand,” Liz assured calmly. “As I said, let me talk to your dad and figure out where we are. I won’t do anything without talking to you first. Can we put this on hold for a bit?”
Melissa looked as if she wanted to argue, but nodded slowly.
Liz took her seat and turned back to the list. “Shampoo and conditioner?” she asked.
Melissa sank into the chair across from her. “We’re out of them, too.”
Liz made a note. “You’ll have to show me what you like. What about makeup?”
It was a bribe, plain and simple, but she figured both she and Melissa had earned the break.
“I, ah, don’t wear that much, but I’d like to.”
Liz smiled. “We’ll get mascara and lip gloss when we go out, but later in the week, we’ll make a serious drugstore run and get some fun stuff to play with.”
Melissa leaned close. “Do you have highlights?”
Liz fingered her layered, wavy hair. It fell just past her shoulders-a length that allowed her to pull it back, put it up or go crazy with the hot rollers and have beauty pageant curls.
“A few. Our hair is about the same color. A bit of reddish gold adds dimension.” Liz shrugged. “You’re pretty without any help, but in a few years, you’ll be looking for more.”
