Part 23 (1/2)
Seth had left Sunday night services with his grandparents, and Missy had gone home with a girlfriend, the daughter of a church deacon, for a sleepover. Since Cathy had spent the day with Donnie, Missy and Seth, she didn't have a way home tonight and had gladly accepted Donnie's offer to escort her. Otherwise she would have been forced to either walk or allow her mother to drive her home.
The day that had begun so badly had actually ended on a positive note. A couple of hours before Sunday night services, Donnie had persuaded Cathy to go with him to talk to J.B. and Mona. She had agreed reluctantly, but much to her surprise, the visit had gone much better than she had antic.i.p.ated.
”I believe you're a miracle worker,” Cathy told Donnie.
When he smiled, shallow dimples appeared in his round cheeks. He was an attractive man in a cute, boyish way. He was one of those people who would look the same at sixty as he had at six, simply older. But what his face lacked in strength and maturity, it made up for in a gentle attractiveness.
Donnie turned to her there in the semidarkness inside his car and smiled. ”You give me too much credit. All I did was intervene between the two of you. I reminded Brother Cantrell that in his zeal to protect Seth, he cannot forget that you are Seth's mother and you love him.”
”And you reminded me that even if I disagree with J.B., which I do, that I owe him and Mona a debt of grat.i.tude for taking good care of Seth while I was ill.”
Donnie spread his arm across the back of Cathy's seat and leaned toward her, his gaze connecting with hers. ”We made progress this afternoon when we stopped by the Cantrells. You showed Seth that you're willing to meet his grandfather halfway, that you and J.B. don't have to be enemies.”
”I hate the thought of making Seth choose between his grandparents and me,” Cathy said. ”But I felt that J.B. was giving me no choice but to take them to court to regain custody.”
”And now?”
”Now, thanks to you, I'm willing to wait a little while longer in the hopes that J.B. will see reason and I won't have to take drastic measures.”
”It could take weeks, even months,” Donnie told her. ”You must be patient. I'll talk to J.B. again.”
”In the meantime, I want Seth to be able to spend the night at my home whenever he wants to while we're trying to settle this problem out of court.”
”Why don't you let me continue talking to J.B.? I can suggest that he allow Seth to join you and Missy and me for dinner and a movie this Friday night. And if he's in agreement, I'll see if he'll consider allowing Seth to spend the night with you.”
Cathy's heart soared with hope. This morning, she had been certain that she had no other alternative than to take her in-laws to court. But tonight, she thought there was a possibility that J.B. might eventually see reason. She was willing to wait, just not forever. Seth had all but said that he had changed his mind and wanted to live with her, but he'd been adamant about not wanting to hurt his grandparents.
”I'm all Nana and Granddad have now that Dad's gone,” Seth had said.
”You're all I have, too,” she'd reminded him.
”I know, Mom, but you're young, and you'll probably get married again and have more kids.”
Surprised by his comment, she had questioned his reasoning. She knew, before he confirmed her suspicions, that he had simply repeated exactly what J.B. had said about her.
Donnie cleared his throat, which immediately drew her back into the present moment. She smiled at him. He looked at her longingly, as if he wanted to kiss her. All she had to do was respond. But did she want him to kiss her? She was sure the experience would be pleasant, but in all honesty, she wasn't attracted to him in a s.e.xual, man-woman way. How could she tell him without hurting his feelings, which she would never do, not for anything in the world. If he kissed her...
Suddenly he moved back and away from her. He cleared his throat again. ”I should walk you to your door and then go home. I need a good night's rest tonight. I'm working all day tomorrow at the community food bank, from seven in the morning until six in the evening.”
”I appreciate the ride home, but you don't have to walk me to the door.”
”Of course I do. What kind of Southern gentleman would I be if I didn't escort you safely to your front door?”
They both laughed.
By the time Cathy opened the car door and stepped out onto the driveway, Donnie was there with his hand extended. She took his soft hand and smiled when he clasped hers tenderly.
There was something about Donnie that reminded her of Mark. Not so much his physical appearance as his demeanor. He seemed to possess a similar easygoing charm and sweet gentleness. And he was a minister of the gospel, a man dedicating his life to helping others. If she were dating Donnie, her in-laws and mother would approve. But if she encouraged a relations.h.i.+p with him, it would be for all the wrong reasons.
He waited with her on the porch while she unlocked the front door. Then, when she eased open the door, she turned to him. ”Would you like to come in for some decaf or a gla.s.s of iced tea?”
He smiled. ”Not tonight, Cathy. Perhaps another time.”
”Certainly.” She kissed his cheek, a simple act of grat.i.tude. ”Thank you for trying to help me with J.B. and Mona.”
His round face flushed a light pink. ”I'll continue doing all I can to help you and Seth and the Cantrells.”
Cathy stood in the open doorway and watched Donnie until he got in his SUV. Then she went inside and closed and locked the door. She felt a sense of hope wash over her. A day that had started off with a trip to the sheriff's office was ending peacefully. Thanks to Brother Donnie Hovater, she felt that it might be possible not only to reclaim her rights as Seth's mother without involving lawyers, but to salvage her relations.h.i.+p with her in-laws.
In all the years they'd been together, Bruce Kelley had never lied to his wife. But today, not only had he lied to her, so had their three children. However, the deception had been for her own good. If they had told her Mirabelle Rutledge would be living with them as her companion and jailer, Sandie would have protested. She wouldn't have understood. In her lucid moments, she tried to deny her illness. And in her incompetent moments, she was incapable of understanding.
”I met Mirabelle when I visited Bright Side recently, and I really liked her,” Kira had said shortly before Kim and Mirabelle arrived. ”She's such a dear, sweet person. I think you'll just love her.”
”This arrangement will be good for you and Dad and for Mirabelle,” Kevin had told his mother. ”She needs a home and-”
”Of course we'll give the poor child a home,” Sandie had said without hesitation. ”Your father and I have worked with foster children in the past, so this won't be very different, except that Mirabelle is a grown woman with a child's mind.”
”Actually, she's quiet intelligent,” Bruce had said. ”I believe she's simply a little slow.” He had reached over and squeezed Sandie's hand. ”She'll want to stay with you all the time, you know, the way a child would with her mother.”
Sandie had smiled. ”And I'll do my very best to be a mother figure for her.”
Later in the afternoon, before Kim left, she had reinforced his earlier comments. ”Mirabelle will want to stay right with you whenever Dad's not around. She doesn't like to be alone.”
As Bruce looked down on a sleeping Sandie, her lovely face peaceful, her slender body covered only by a sheet and lightweight blanket, he swallowed his tears. An hour before bedtime, she had become disoriented and for a few moments hadn't known where she was. As happened occasionally, this evening her mind had wandered back to a time in her own childhood, and oddly enough she had thought Mirabelle was her mother.
The sweet, gentle young woman had helped him with his wife, taking over with an ease that surprised him. She had aided Sandie with as much patience and tender care as a mother would have taken with her own child. And when Mirabellele tucked Sandie into bed and kissed her on the forehead, Bruce had known that bringing this girl into their home had been the right decision. Indeed, it seemed to be a blessing.
”I will stay here,” Mirabelle told him. ”You mustn't worry, Mr. Bruce. I won't leave her. I will sleep beside her. It's all right that she doesn't know who I am. She's happy because she thinks I'm her mother.”
He patted Mirabelle on the shoulder. ”Yes, she did go to sleep happy, didn't she. I'll be in the guest room across the hall. If she wakes in the night or if you should need me...”
”I'll come and get you, Mr. Bruce.”
He gazed into the girl's warm brown eyes and saw beyond the slow mind and into the loving heart. Abruptly, he turned and walked out of the bedroom just as the tears he could no longer control trickled down his cheeks.
The room is dark and quiet. Lying on my back staring up at the ceiling, I see only a glimmer of moonlight creeping through the closed blinds. I feel as if I'm floating on a peaceful black sea. Safe in G.o.d's hands. Nothing bad can happen to me. No one can hurt me. I am surrounded by a cloak of holy protection.
What is that tune humming inside my head? Oh, yes, it's a beautiful hymn that I learned as a child. My earliest memories are of being at church, inside the blessed sanctuary for the righteous, each service a haven for G.o.d's true children.
That's what I am-one of G.o.d's true children. I am not like so many who profess to be brothers and sisters of Christ and yet prove themselves unworthy of the name Christian.
”The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?” The words of Psalm Twenty-seven echo inside my heart. ”When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me to eat up my flesh, they stumbled and fell.”