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Authors: Robin Lee Hatcher

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BOOK: The Perfect Life
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MIKE
SORENSON
HAD BEEN BROUGHT ON STAFF AT
Harvest Christian Fellowship as the youth leader about thirteen years before. But when the senior pastor fell into poor health and decided to retire, Mike was unanimously approved to step into the vacated position. A large bear of a man with an outgoing, fun-loving nature, he had a room-rattling laugh and a preaching style that was fun and down to earth. His wife, Annabeth, was his complete opposite—petite, soft spoken, serious minded, and shy.

I'm not sure how I felt when Brad and I were ushered into Mike's office and I saw Annabeth seated in a chair beside her husband's desk. Waylaid? She wouldn't be there if they hadn't expected me. Brad must have called Mike.

I sat in the first chair I came to and kept my purse on my lap. It gave me something to hold on to.

Behind me, I heard Brad ask, “Did she call you?”

Mike answered, “Yes.”

Who did they mean? Nicole? Surely she wouldn't call our pastor.

“I told her I had nothing to say to the media.”

Not Nicole. Ms. St. James.

I glanced toward Annabeth. Perhaps I hoped her expression would tell me what to feel or, at the very least, how to handle whatever was about to happen. Her eyes were filled with compassion.

I heard the door close. Brad stepped to the chair beside me while Mike moved to the opposite side of his desk and sank onto the large black executive chair. His gaze moved from Brad to me.

“I'm sorry for the reason for this visit. How're you doing, Katherine?”

I held my head a little higher, sat a little straighter. “I'm all right.” Did I look and sound as brittle as I felt?

“I know this week hasn't been easy on either of you, but I'm glad you came to see us. Perhaps we'll be able to discover what God would have you do. Let's go to Him in prayer, shall we?”

I bowed my head.
What to do? What to do about what? About
Nicole? About Brad? About In Step?

“Father, we come to You with heavy hearts. Brad and Katherine are hurting, Lord, and in need of Your holy touch . . .”

I don't know if Brad's hurting. Maybe it's a pretense. How will
I ever know what's true and what isn't?

“. . . Open our eyes and our hearts to whatever You would have for us. Give us discernment and wisdom . . .”

If I had any discernment, I would've known what Nicole felt
about Brad. I would have sensed she wanted my husband. Stupid,
stupid, stupid.

“. . . Father, direct our words and our thoughts in the coming hour and in the coming days. We ask it in Jesus' name. Amen.”

The prayer was over, and I'd heard little of it. But now that Mike was through praying, it would be our turn to talk. I wasn't ready. Not even close. My stomach churned. My hands were sweaty. I rubbed my palms against my Levis.

Mike leaned back in his chair. “Brad, why don't you start?”

“Sure.”He glanced toward me, but I pretended not to notice. “I already told you what happened the night of the banquet with that reporter. Then there was the complaint filed with the attorney general, probably by Nicole, although I'm not sure we'll be told the source of the complaint.” His voice lowered a notch. “And now there's her claim of an affair with me. I feel like I've been hit by a cannonball.”

Me too.

“The thing is, I'm confident we can prove there are no financial problems at In Step. It may take a while, but I don't believe any laws have been broken. We'll straighten things out with the AG. Stan knows how to handle the legal aspects. I trust him to see us through the mire.”

He fell silent, and I knew he looked at me again.

“What worries me most is what was on the news last night and in the paper this morning, the claims of sexual impropriety. I don't know—”

My head snapped up. There was something in the newspaper? I hadn't thought to look at it before Emma whisked me off to her house.

“—how to clear my name. It's her—”

I interrupted Brad. “What did the paper say?”

He looked at me. “Pretty much what was on TV last night. They interviewed Nicole after the story first broke yesterday morning.” He shifted in his chair. “I was told some magazines have sought interviews too.”

Was Stan right to tell us not to speak to the media? It seemed unfair that only Nicole's story was being reported. Shouldn't someone challenge her, call her a liar, demand a retraction?

Unless, of course, her story was true.

Mike said, “Tell me about your involvement with Ms. Schubert.”

I held my breath, hoping against hope that Brad could explain it all away.

“I hired her as In Step's CFO two years ago last January. She came with great qualifications and stellar recommendations. From the start, everybody in the office liked her. Katherine liked her too and invited her to join us when we went to a play or a concert. Nicole's young and attractive and sharp as a tack. Well, you know what I mean. You met her.”

I couldn't believe my ears. Was he going to sit there and sing her praises in front of me?

“Mike, I promise you, I never treated Nicole any different than anyone else I work with, man or woman.”

Brad knew how to be friends with everyone, from the governor of the state to the guy sweeping the streets. Whoever he was with, he was at ease, no matter a person's gender or age or nationality or creed. He treated each one with the same genuine warmth and respect.

Perhaps his charm and good looks had been his downfall.

“I should've seen it coming.”

I don't know how much of Brad's confession I missed while my thoughts drifted, but those words yanked me to the present.

“I felt like such a fool.” He raked the fingers of both hands through his hair. “Nicole said she loved me and wanted to be with me. She said I'd made her believe I felt the same way.”

My fingernails bit into my flesh as I clutched my hands.

“I told her she was mistaken. I told her I loved my wife. That's when she . . . kissed me.” He kept his eyes downturned, not looking at the pastor, not looking at me. “Katherine walked in a minute or two later.”

I remembered that day I'd seen Nicole, looking flushed, as she left Brad's office. Was that the day she'd kissed him? Was that the day she'd told him she loved him? I tried to remember Brad's expression. Had he looked guilty or upset? I couldn't recall.

Brad looked at Mike. “A week or two later, Nicole came into my office again. She was angry, accusing me again of leading her on, of making her think I wanted her. God knows I've played it all over in my mind a thousand times to see if anything I said or did should have made her think that. But I can't see what. She said my actions would come back to haunt me. I guess she was right about that.”

Mike grunted his agreement.

“She quit later that same day. I haven't seen her since. She tried calling me a couple of times after that, but I had my assistant take messages. I never returned her calls. I thought that was the best way to handle it.”

“And you never told Katherine about any of this?”

“No.”

“Why not?”

Yes, why not?

“I don't know. I guess I should have. But I figured Nicole would come to her senses. I thought with a little time, she'd forget about it.” Brad turned toward me. “I'm sorry I didn't tell you, Kat. But I'm telling you now. I was never unfaithful. I swear it.”

He'd kissed another woman and never told me. Even knowing I'd befriended Nicole, he hadn't told me. Did he have other secrets as well?

How separate our lives had become. Why hadn't I noticed it before this?

As difficult as it was to sit through the hour and a half spent with Mike and Annabeth, it was worse to go home. Worse to be alone with Brad. With him and the gaping silence between us.

After a supper of tuna salad sandwiches and leftover peach cobbler, I kept myself busy in the kitchen. First I cleared the table and rinsed the dirty dishes before placing them in the dishwasher. Then I took a dishcloth and the spray bottle of 409 and cleaned the countertops, the stovetop, the front and inside of the microwave, and the handles and doors of the refrigerator. Next I decided the floor needed a good mopping. Only when every surface sparkled did I stop my frenetic cleaning.

I glanced at the clock on the stove. It wasn't yet nine o'clock, much earlier than my usual bedtime. But I was exhausted. All I wanted was to get into bed and sleep.

And never wake up
.

“Are you finished?” Brad asked from the kitchen entrance.

I turned to face him, stiff and cold. “Yes. I'm done.”

“Can we talk now?”

“I'm tired. We'll talk tomorrow.”

“That's what you said last night. You can't give me the silent treatment forever. We need to clear the air.”

I sighed. “I don't know what you want me to say.”

“It isn't about what I
want
you to say. It's about what you're thinking, what you're feeling. It's about what you
need
to say to me.”

I didn't want to admit those feelings to myself, let alone to him. I didn't want to give voice to my doubts and suspicions, to my disappointments and fears. To say them aloud would make giants out of them, and I was clearly no David with enough faith to slay Goliath.

“Talk to me,Kat. Don't shut me out. We've never kept secrets.”

My eyes widened. “‘Never kept secrets'?”My voice grew strident. “What do you call kissing Nicole and not telling me?”

“She kissed me.”

“That's putting a fine point on it.”

“I'm sorry. I thought when she quit that the problem was solved.”

“Looks like you thought wrong.” I swept past him, wanting to get as far away from him as I could.
Don't follow me. Please
don't follow.

I got my wish. He didn't come into the bedroom then. Neither did he come an hour later or an hour after that or an hour after that. I know because I was awake, checking the clock every few minutes, until sleep finally claimed me somewhere around two in the morning.

When I awakened, the pink fingers of dawn were poking through the blinds and stretching across the ceiling. I rolled my head on the pillow to look the other way. Brad's side of the mattress was untouched. He'd never come to bed.

My gut knotted, and I began to weep. Silent tears at first, followed soon enough by sobs that wracked my body. I pulled Brad's pillow over my face, trying to muffle the sound of my heartache. Instead, when I breathed in, I filled my nostrils with my husband's familiar scent, and the pain escalated.

I loved Brad, but could I forgive him if he'd broken his marriage vows? Could I believe his professions of innocence? How would I ever know what was the truth and what was a lie?

So many questions.

So few answers.

Twelve

I WAS STILL IN MY BATHROBE WHEN
HAYLEY
CAME BY THE
house, a little after eight o'clock that same morning.

“Is Dad here?” she asked as she followed me toward the kitchen.

“No.”

“Did he go to the office?”

“Yes.” I supposed it was true. He hadn't been there when I got out of bed,my crying jag spent. For all I knew he'd spent the night at the office.

“Have you had breakfast?”

“I'm not hungry.”

“You should eat anyway. Isn't that what you tell me?”

I released a humorless laugh. “Probably.”

“I'll scramble a couple of eggs. You go shower and get dressed. Then you and I are going out.”

I'd sunk to an all-time low. I couldn't remember a time since the age of twelve or thirteen when anyone had to tell me to fix my appearance. I was the one who was put together in any circumstance. I was the one who took care of others, the one they looked to for advice, the one who maintained control even in chaotic situations. Now look at me.

BOOK: The Perfect Life
7.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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