ridiculous.â Before a fight ensued between Madison and Katie, Liam stepped into the den. âI hope youâre hungry. Thereâs nothing left for seconds.â He set the bowls in front of them and took the chair across from Sarah. Katie held up her poster. âThereâs nothing wrong with this.â âPink will catch a personâs eye.â Sarah held her hand out for the paper. âIâll print the information on it while you make another one.â Madison snorted. âWell, Iâm gonna do the correct color.â Liam inspected the two sheâd done so far. âThose are nice. Letâs try to do about ten tonight. Weâll make a few more tomorrow and then hang them up to see if anyone comes forward.â For the next hour Liam worked with Madison while Sarah helped Katie, who insisted on putting glitter all over the poster. His eldest niece grumbled a couple of times under her breath; otherwise the conversation was dominated by Katie telling Liam everything sheâd done to help Sarah today. He glanced at his watch near eight. âItâs time to call it quits for the day. We did even more than I thought we would. Weâre a good team.â âSome of us are.â Katie glared at Madison. âIâd like one for the salon. Iâll put it where everyone will see it when they come in. The problem is picking one. Theyâre all great.â Madison shot to her feet. âIâm going to bed.â She snatched up her bowl and stomped out of the room. Katie giggled. âThat means you can take mine.â Sarahâs gaze latched on to Liamâs. âSince there are extras, is it possible if I take two of them? One of Katieâs and one of Madisonâs? I canât decide between them, and I have two places they can go.â He wanted to applaud her answer. Heâd been trying to come up with a way that would leave both girls happy. This parenting thing made him feel as though he was trying to find his way through a smoke-filled buildingâprogressing slowly, not sure of where he was going. âGo ahead. We can always make more if we need to.â âIâm glad youâre using the pink cat.â Katie stood, took her bowl and left. âIâm sorry about Madison. Lately instead of adjusting better, sheâs getting worse. She gets angry at the smallest thing. Aunt Betty told me both girls used to be so close. She doesnât understand this change, especially with Madison toward Katie.â âSuppressed grief will sometimes have that effect on a person. Has she seen a counselor after her father died?â âA couple of times, then she refused to go. Counseling isnât effective if the person doesnât want it. Iâll let her know that option is still available.â âThatâs all you can do. Iâd better go.â She started to grab her bowl. âIâll take care of it. I really appreciate your help this evening.â Liam pushed to his feet at the same time Sarah did. âIâll see you out.â When he stepped onto the porch, he peered around. âWhereâs your car?â âAt home. We walked here from my house.â Liam stared at the darkness that surrounded them, except for the dim illumination on the porch and the streetlights. âI donât like you walking home alone without Gabe.â She chuckled. âIt isnât that far, and Buffalo is different from big cities. Iâm safe. When I canât swim for exercise, Iâve walked before at night after work, and Iâve never been afraid.â âIf youâre sure. I can get the girls down hereââ She put her hand on his shoulder for a second. âIâm sure. Thanks for offering, and for these.â She waved the posters. Although sheâd removed her hand almost instantly, his heartbeat revved into double time. Since coming to Buffalo, he