6.
Jill looked at the little faces, diligent in their task. The Sunday school class was balm to her soul, second-grade children of dedicated families with no problem worse than an occasional runny nose. It was especially healing after last night's fiasco. The smell of Crayola crayons and newsprint mingled with the cheese crackers on napkins and the tart apple juice she poured into bathroom-size Dixie cups.
After today's lesson she'd given them time to draw their favorite Bible stories. With the snack laid out and ready, she walked around to see their progress. Emily drew stick figures well below grade level, but Jill was not there to assess potential learning difficulties. She wanted these children to know their faith, to learn the Bible and all the wonderful truths it held. To know Jesus.
She felt closest to that herself when she was with them, more so than when she sat upstairs for the service or even when she prayed alone. In this class with these eager little lives she could almost remember how it had been for her before everything went wrong.
Stop it. Don't think about it. Don't wonder how Kelsey had looked before the cancer, how she might have huddled over a page with crayons in her hand.
Jill stopped over David's picture. She stooped down and engaged him at face level. "David, did you understand these were supposed to be pictures of your favorite Bible verse?"
He nodded. "It is."
She looked down at the picture of bubble-eyed monsters.
"It's what Pastor talked about today."
Jill racked her brain to put sense to the picture in light of the youth pastor's talk on loving everyone even when they were different. He rubbed his fist into his cheek. "The aliens. The verse said to love the aliens among you."
Jill glanced quickly into his eyes, caught the sincerity, and contained the humor and joy that exploded within her. She barely controlled a laugh but smiled unashamedly. "It's wonderful, David." She stood up and continued around, full of the gift of that child's innocence. Thank you, Lord. And she laughed silently. That's just what I needed. She worked with too many problems every day, and now her own had caught up with her. But there was David's picture, and she buried it in her heart.
She carried the joy home with her after the service, but it faded when she walked inside to change clothes. Her black sheath lay across the chair where she'd tossed it after running home like a scared Cinderella. But Morgan had been no prince. She pulled on Lycra shorts and a baggy T-shirt, socks and running shoes, and walked over to Shelly's. Together they headed for the running paths through the woods behind the complex.
"I don't know why I agreed to walk with you." Shelly panted, holding her side. "You have track legs that hurdle everything in your path and make my poor stumps into jelly."
"I'm sorry." Jill slowed her pace. Frustrated not to be running, she'd unconsciously strode out.
"Synonyms for walk are words like amble, stroll, saunter."
Shelly was not Dan. "Sorry, Shell."
Shelly sucked air into her lungs in two long draws. "I'll forgive you if you tell me about last night."
Jill did not want to talk about it. She was ashamed of leaving in tears just because Morgan Spencer snubbed her. If Morgan chose to hate her, that was his business. It was the other emotional pressure: fear for Kelsey and having her daughter suddenly in her life at all. And maybe a little bit of Dan. Those were a lot of stress factors. Any test would say so.
"Hello? I'm the short, chubby friend you're walking with?"
"You're not chubby." She wasn't, just solid.
"About last night ..."
Jill sighed. "It was all right. I didn't stay long." She'd agreed to walk after church with Shelly instead of running or biking with Dan. Now she wondered if Dan wouldn't have been an easier choice. But she did not want to miss church. She needed grounding right now. Shelly slept in late on Sundays and was just about rallied by the time Jill's service ended.
"Are you going to the picnic today?"
Jill shook her head, unconsciously picking up her pace, then realized Shelly was dragging. She slowed down again.
"Why not?"
"It's just not important to me, Shelly." Why give Morgan a fresh target and Babs more ammunition? What had once been precious was broken past repair.
"You need a social life."
"I have friends." Though none as close as Shelly. The members of her team at school were not kindred spirits, and they clashed so much professionally that Jill spent most of her time trying to keep peace between one faction or another.
"You need a love life. If you won't accept Dan ..."
Jill turned, caught Shelly's hand. "Let's make a pact. You don't nag about my love life, I won't nag about your weight."
"I'm working on my weight."
Jill didn't have a ready reply. "Well, good." She started walking again.
"Was he there?"
Jill's breath shortened. "Who?"
"Morgan Spencer."
"Yes." She picked up her pace. It would do Shelly good to work a little.
"Bald?"
"He looked terrific. Want to jog the downhill?"
"Want to do CPR?"
Jill laughed.
"Did you talk to him?"
"Briefly." So briefly her head still reeled. "You've satisfied appearances. Don't let me keep you." In other words, get lost; I can't stand the sight of you. It shouldn't matter, but it did. She didn't hate him. She had as much cause, didn't she? Why would he bear her such malice all these years?
"Come on, Jill. What did he say?"
"We didn't really talk. We were interrupted." By too much pain.
"Then go to the picnic and get reacquainted."
"There's no point, Shelly. He doesn't live here anymore." The memory book listed a P. O. box in Santa Barbara.
"You never know."
Oh, but she did.
Morgan cracked his eyelids open, and pain from the sunlight sliced into his brain. A shadow moved across the window and settled in front of his face. He risked a quick peek again. Rick's chest and a steaming mug that smelled like coffee. Morgan groaned. "That better be spiked."
"Try it this way." Rick held out the mug.
Morgan rolled and raised himself up on one elbow. He took the mug and slurped. Not bad, even if it would do nothing for the pounding in his head.
"Starbucks fresh ground." Rick studied his face.
Morgan could guess what he saw. He sucked in another swallow and tried to sit up. What was Rick doing in his bedroom? He usually left him to sleep it off and went about his morning chores like the responsible citizen he was. As far as Morgan knew, he had induced the only hangover Rick had ever experienced.
Rick sat down. "Is it bad?"
"Yeah." Morgan set the mug on the corner of the nightstand where Rick sat.
"Noelle's worried."
"Sorry." He sort of remembered seeing her last night. Probably made a fool of himself.
"She said you saw Jill."
Morgan leaned back and groaned. "It's too early for this."
"It's past noon. We've been to church and back hours ago. You've missed breakfast and lunch."
Morgan's stomach recoiled. "Good." Especially at the thought of Noelle's fare. He reached for the mug and gulped, then sent a sideways glare at Rick. "Two subjects are off limits, little brother. Food and Jill."
"How was she?"
Morgan shook his head.
"Married?"
"No." Though why on earth not, he had no idea. Any man alive would find her attractive, adorable, addicting.
"You were supposed to go, Morgan. I know it."
"Fine. I went." The coffee coursed down his throat. It needed a shot of Johnny, but at least it was strong.
"I wish you could have worked it out."
"I did." Morgan replaced the mug on the night table and straightened enough to know his head was in truly sorry condition. "If I never see Jill Runyan again-"
"Morgan." Something in Rick's tone stopped the thought in Morgan's mind. "Look at you. You're a wreck."
"Thank you very much."
"You have more natural ability, more God-given talent, and Lord knows the lion's share of the Spencer looks."
Morgan stared at his brother. Where was this going?
"And you've spent the last fifteen years trying to destroy yourself."
Morgan cleared his throat. "I've found a little success along the way."
Rick huffed, shaking his head. "More success than you needed professionally and financially. I know what you've accomplished, in spite of yourself."
"Does this have a point?"
"How long are you going to let this thing with Jill drive your life?" Morgan stretched his fingers over his forehead. "This thing with Jill ended a long time ago."
"No it didn't. Face it, Morgan."
Morgan rubbed the back of his neck and ignored him.
"You thought Noelle could make you forget."
"All right!" The force of the words through clenched teeth sent pain rippling through his head. "Do you know what it's like to see the woman who killed your child? To feel the visceral poison of the attraction you once had, still have? The wanting, the hating." He swallowed hard and cursed Rick.
Rick gripped his shoulder. "If you don't forgive her, it will destroy you."
Morgan slapped his hand off. "Get out." He threw off the sheet and tried to stand, then collapsed back on the bed.
"I know how much you love her, Morgan. I know how it hurts. You pulled me out of the pit when Noelle left."
"That's my job." Morgan felt drained. "I'm the big brother."
"Well, maybe it's time you listened for a change. You're lucky you didn't die last night, driving up here in your condition. Is that it, Morgan, a death wish?"
Morgan didn't answer. Let Rick say his piece.
"You owe God more than that, and somewhere inside you know it."
"The Lord made a bad investment in me." Morgan shrugged. "He can sell it off anytime."
"But He won't."
Morgan closed his eyes. Definitely easier on the head that way.
"Accept it, Morgan."
He didn't want to know what.
"Peace and forgiveness. That's what you need."
Peace. That sounded good right about now. If he didn't open his eyes, would Rick go away? Pain thrummed. And not just in his head. Seeing Jill had awakened the ugliest parts of him. Maybe he should get out, go somewhere else. Paris-the Champs-Elysees. Australia. Norway. Antarctica. Would any place be far enough?
He opened his eyes at the tap on his door. Rick had left it open and Noelle peeked in. "Are you decent?"
His mouth quirked. "If I'm not, it's your fault." He vaguely recalled her pulling back the sheet so he could collapse into bed last night.