He slapped the bright red folder he clenched in his right hand against his leg. He’d worn black chinos and a dress shirt—his only dress shirt—for the interview, but had had to settle for his new work boots. They’d seemed a better choice than his athletic shoes.
Although he’d used the library to apply online for a dozen other jobs, this was his first interview. He turned the doorknob and pushed the door open, not sure what to expect.
Neal’s office looked like any guy’s garage with the addition of a desk pushed back in the corner, facing the door. “Right on time,” Neal said, looking over the computer monitor in front of him. “Come in, sit down.”
He took a seat in the chair to the left of the desk, and Neal swiveled to face him head-on. Rhys placed the red folder on the desk and pushed it toward Neal. “My résumé.”
Neal handed him a paper in exchange. “Our job application. You can write ‘on résumé’ for previous employment.”
Rhys pulled a pen from his shirt pocket and went to work on the application, shutting down the urge to look up at Neal’s expression while he reviewed his résumé.
“How much of the apprenticeship had you completed when you...” Neal paused, as if searching for the right word.
“Before I was arrested,” Rhys finished for him. No sense in tiptoeing around the facts. He’d done his time for his actions. Actions he no longer justified with needing to make back payments on their mortgage and taxes to avoid his family ending up homeless. He knew now that he’d broken God’s commandment, and had asked for and received forgiveness. “I had about three and a half years of the apprenticeship done. I’ve reapplied to pick up the Associate of Applied Science degree in general technology I was pursuing online as part of the apprenticeship.”
“Good.”
Rhys finished the application and looked up.
“I can contact your references for more information?” Neal asked, tapping the letter from the electrician who’d supervised Rhys’s work in Albany.
“About my work, yes.” The electrician had assured Rhys he’d have no problem discussing with potential employers the progress he’d made in the apprenticeship program.
“And Connor Donnelly? You participated in his ministry at Dannemora?”
“I—”
“Wait, you don’t have to answer. I shouldn’t have asked.”
“No, I put it in the references. I have no problem talking about it.” If Neal was going to hold his faith against him in any way, he wasn’t a person Rhys wanted to work for, despite how badly he needed work. “I’m indebted to Pastor Connor for leading me to Christ and for helping Gwen, my wife, relocate here so I could see her and the boys more.” Rhys leaned forward. “And Owen and Dylan are registered for The Kids Place summer and after-school child-care program at Connor’s church when CPS gives the go-ahead for them to live with me.”
Neal raised his hand in a sign of surrender and Rhys’s heart dropped. Him and his big mouth. Gwen had always said he didn’t talk much, but when he had something to say, he had no filter.
“Hey, I know where you’re coming from. I was a single father for nineteen years.”
Rhys leaned back.
“My oldest daughter, Autumn, was born when I was seventeen, and she was practically my whole life until she graduated high school. She and Pastor Connor were classmates. Autumn’s a midwife at the birthing center in Ticonderoga. I raised her myself. Granted, I had help from my mom and dad, but she was my responsibility.”
“So you understand.” Rhys accepted the kinship Neal offered. That’s what he planned to do: make Owen and Dylan the center of his life. He couldn’t imagine marrying again, as Neal had, or having more kids. He owed his boys too much to have anything left over for anyone else.
“But you’re probably more interested in knowing about the job than my kids,” Neal said.
Rhys kept a rein on his excitement as Neal outlined the responsibilities of the position, but almost lost it when he heard the generous starting salary.
“Any questions?” Neal asked when he’d finished.
Rhys hesitated. “Health insurance?” He didn’t care so much for himself, but he needed it for the boys. It would be another positive he could report to CPS.
“Good insurance. Better than most small employers can offer. It’s through GreenSpaces’ multi-company plan. And we have a retirement savings plan, too.”
He tried to look appreciative. For now, all he wanted was to be able to make a secure home for his family.
“Anything else?” Neal asked.
“Not that I can think of.”
“All right, then.” Neal rose.
Rhys followed suit. “Thank you for the opportunity to interview.”
“I’ll give you a call within the next couple of days. If your references check out, you have the job.” Neal smiled. “Anyone else in the area with your training and experience already works for me.”
“I look forward to hearing from you.” Rhys walked out of the office at a controlled pace, rather than bounding to the door in leaps of joy, as he wanted to. He couldn’t imagine either his former supervisor or Pastor Connor telling Neal anything derogatory about him. He whistled his way to his truck, which started with the first turn of the key. Nothing could dampen his spirits.
His cell phone vibrated in his pocket and Rhys pulled it out and saw the CPS number.
Well, almost nothing.
* * *
“Is that him?” Owen asked Renee for the third time in the past five minutes.
She went to the front window, pushed back the curtain and spotted Rhys’s truck slowing to turn into the Hills’ driveway. She brushed her moist palms against the skirt of her black-and-white crinkle-cotton summer dress.
“Yes, your dad is pulling in the driveway.”
Owen reached the door at the same time Rhys knocked.
“You’re supposed to ask before you open the door, Owen,” Dylan said. “Mrs. Hill said so. It could be a stranger.”
“It’s Dad. Ms. Delacroix said so.” Owen looked over his shoulder at Renee.
“Go ahead.”
Owen swung the door open. “You’re here.”
A broad smile spread across Rhys’s face, softening the angular, almost harsh edges of his features.
“Of course I’m here. I told you at church this morning I would be.”
“I know, but I’m just so glad.”
“Me, too.” Rhys moved his gaze from Owen to Dylan, who stood next to Renee but edged closer. Rhys’s smile faltered a bit. “Hi, Dylan.”
“Hi, Daddy,” Dylan said before turning his face into the side of her leg.
“Ms. Delacroix.”
“Hi. The boys have been checking every few minutes to see if you were here yet.” She was only slightly exaggerating. Owen had been checking enough for both of them.
“Yeah, we have a bunch of stuff to show you,” Owen said.
“And I want to see it all. Give me a minute with Ms. Delacroix and to check in with the Hills.” He glanced around the living room as if he’d just noticed they weren’t there.
“Boys,” she said. “Why don’t you go into the kitchen and get those cookies you made for your dad, and the milk and paper cups?”
Owen looked from her to his father. “So you can tell Dad about the Hills?”
Something flickered in his father’s eyes. If it was anyone else, she would call it fear, but she couldn’t imagine him being afraid of anything or anyone.
“Can I carry the milk?” Dylan asked into her skirt.
She said yes and Dylan loosened his clutch. The boys ran off into the next room.
“I didn’t expect to see you here,” Rhys said. “I mean, the other day when you called, you said dinner at the Hills with the boys.” He straighte
ned, looming over her. “Where are the Hills?”
“It’s nothing bad.”
He knitted his eyebrows.
Great. Now she had him on edge. Not what she wanted. Her job should have been simple enough—be there in the background with him and the boys until Jack got back.
“On their way home from church, Suzi got a call from her grandmother’s neighbor in Saranac Lake. Her grandmother took a fall this morning. She’s all right. Nothing broken, but she’s shaken up. Suzi drove up there and is staying with her for the afternoon.”
“And Jack?”
“He got a towing call about an hour ago. He should be back any time now.”
Rhys scrutinized her. “So you had to come and cover for them.”
“I volunteered.” Her internship wasn’t just a job. She cared about the children. The people she worked with did, too. “The Hills didn’t want to cancel and disappoint you and the boys.”
“Ms. Delacroix, look at how strong I am.” Dylan entered the room, lifting the gallon jug of milk for her to see and filling the silence that had stretched between her and his father.
She felt the pain that flickered across the man’s face at his younger son turning to her, not him, for approval.
Owen followed with a plate of four cookies and cups. “Dylan, put the milk on the table before you drop it.” He placed the cookies on the coffee table next to the jug. “Ms. Delacroix said we could only have one each so we don’t spoil our appetite for dinner. We’re having lasagna with meatballs.”
“We certainly wouldn’t want to spoil our appetites for that,” Rhys said.
“I told Mrs. Hill that it’s your favorite,” Owen said.
“Me, too,” Dylan said, grabbing his cookie and jumping up on the couch.
Rhys gave the boys a thumbs-up, sat on the couch next to, but not touching, his youngest son and poured him a cup of milk.
It was good to see Dylan interacting with his father. Maybe she’d imagined Rhys’s resentment earlier. It might have been nerves. As stoic as he seemed, Rhys Maddox was human.
“Come on, Ms. Delacroix,” Owen said, sidling up next to his father to make room for her on the couch. “There’s space for you, too.”
“In a minute. I need to check the lasagna.” And give your father a moment with you. “I’d better stir the sauce and meatballs, too. I told Mr. Hill I wouldn’t let it burn.”
“We wouldn’t want burned sauce, would we, guys?” Rhys asked.
“No!” the boys shouted.
From the stove, she could see directly across the kitchen and dining room to where they were in the living room. “I’ll be right back.”
Rhys nodded in her direction as he listened to Owen give a play-by-play of baking the cookies with Mrs. Hill.
In the kitchen, Renee lifted the lid of the saucepan and breathed in the spicy tomato smell. After giving the sauce a stir, she looked over her shoulder into the living room. Owen was still talking. She opened the oven and checked the lasagna. Silence from the other room made her spin around, heart pounding. The oven door snapped shut. They were still there. Relief flooded her. Of course they were. Rhys Maddox wouldn’t do anything stupid to jeopardize his regaining custody.
“Everything looks good,” she said as she reentered the living room. “The timer’s set for the lasagna. Mr. Hill should be back by the time it’s done.”
“Eat your cookie, Ms. Delacroix,” Owen said. “We want to show Dad our room and stuff.”
“Yeah,” Dylan said. “Mrs. Hill said you’d stay right with us.”
His father stiffened against the back of the couch.
“I can wait on the cookie. I know you’re anxious to show your dad your things.”
Owen leaped off the couch and grabbed his father’s hand, pulling him toward the stairway. “Our room is upstairs.”
“Wait for your brother,” Rhys said.
Dylan slid off the couch. “I’ll show you, Ms. Delacroix.” He slipped his hand in hers.
Rhys’s shoulders slumped for a moment. Straightening, he said, “Lead the way Owen.”
Upstairs in the boys’ room, Renee relaxed as they caught their father up on what they were doing in their lives. Their exuberant—and their father’s more restrained—joy flowed over her, drawing her in.
“And this is my shirt drawer,” Owen said once he ran out of other things to show his father.
The sound of the stove timer startled Renee away from the adoring grin on Rhys’s face that had captivated her. He was a different person around Owen and Dylan.
“Hello? Where is everyone?” came a voice from below before she could excuse herself to check the pasta.
“That’s Mr. Hill. I’ll tell him you’re here, Dad.” Owen raced down the stairs with Dylan shadowing him.
Their father stopped halfway down. “Before we have dinner, I have a question.”
“Certainly, Mr. Maddox.” She reassumed her professional demeanor that she’d let slip watching him and the boys.
“If we’re going to be doing this visitation stuff...” He waved down the stairs. “Can you call me Rhys?”
“I can.” Despite her best effort, she’d already started thinking of him as Rhys. “And please call me Renee, except in front of the boys.” Not that she expected to have much contact with him and his sons once she started her new job a week from Monday.
“Gotcha,” he said with the same smile that had softened her when he’d used it with his sons upstairs. The smile that cracked his armor and showed the dichotomy of Rhys Maddox—both the off-putting, cold, aloof male and the adoring father who tugged at her heartstrings.
Her departure from CPS couldn’t come too soon.
Chapter Three
Rhys put his washed lunch dishes in the drainer and wiped the table down for the second time today. After three days of rain and being trapped inside—except for a couple times when the clouds had broken and he’d casually driven by the Hills’ in hopes of catching a glimpse of Owen and Dylan—he had to get out.
He tossed the dishcloth into the sink. No, it hadn’t been casual, but more stalker-like. He’d better be careful or he could mess things up. It didn’t help that it had been almost a week and he hadn’t heard from Neal Hazard about the job, nor had he heard from any of the places he’d applied to online.
The only bright spot had been his conversation with Pastor Connor. He had given him more details about the Building Bridges program and said that Owen and Dylan were two of the children the local school district had recommended for The Kids Place program. Connor had also asked Rhys if he’d be interested in volunteering at the group’s weekly meetings and events. Several of the other children recommended had no male role models in their families. Flattered that Pastor Connor would think him role model material, Rhys said he’d consider it and let Connor know before the meeting of volunteers and staff next week at the Christian Action Coalition office. While he wasn’t sold that it was entirely his thing, it would give him more time with his sons.
Rhys changed into a pair of shorts and grabbed the towel from the bathroom. When he’d rented the house, Ted Hazard had said to feel free to use the family beach next to the Sonrise summer camp on Paradox Lake. It was early Thursday afternoon and most people would be working. He’d probably have the place to himself. A half hour of hard swimming might lift the weight of his situation off him for a while.
When Rhys walked onto the beach, he saw he wasn’t alone. Renee sat on a blanket towel-drying her hair next to a woman he didn’t recognize. Just the reminder he was trying to escape. He hadn’t heard from her or anyone else at CPS about another visit all week. He started to turn back. The jog from the house had worn off some adrenaline. Then he changed his mind. He couldn’t be a hermit, not if he wanted to make any kind of life for him and his sons. Rhys strode towa
rd the women. Better to be on the offensive than the defensive.
“Hey,” he called with what he hoped was a friendly wave. He couldn’t tell from the look on Renee’s face when she turned around. It bordered somewhere between surprise and alarm.
“Hi, Rhys.” She composed herself and dropped the towel onto the blanket.
He spread his own towel a short distance away. “Ted Hazard said I had beach privileges as part of the rental.” Rhys regretted his words as soon as they were out. He should have said “Nice day” or “How’s the water?” He didn’t have to justify his every action to her or anyone else.
“Hello,” the other woman said. “Since Renee has seemed to have lost her manners, I’m her sister Claire.”
“I was getting to introductions,” Renee said. “Claire, this is Rhys Maddox.” She hesitated, glancing out at the lake. “D—” The rest of her introduction was drowned out by the shout of a little boy about Dylan’s age racing toward them. Renee’s nephew? Rhys’s lunch churned in his stomach when he saw Dylan right behind the boy.
“Aunt Claire, I left my goggles in your car,” the boy said.
“Daddy, what are you doing here?” Dylan asked.
Not the most welcoming greeting, but Rhys would take it. “I was going to swim. I didn’t know you were here, either.”
“You can swim with us,” Dylan said.
“I’d like to.” He looked at Renee for confirmation.
She frowned.
It had seemed like a reasonable request to him.
“I thought you didn’t have a father,” the other boy said.
“That was last year.”
Dylan’s words sliced through him. His son had been telling his friends he didn’t have a father?
“I told you I did now. Daddy, this is my friend Robbie. He’s not the one who said you’re a bad guy.”
“Hi.” That’s a real confidence booster.
Robbie was dancing back and forth on his toes in the sand. “Can we get the goggles now? I want to show Dylan the cool rocks on the bottom of the lake.”
Reuniting His Family Page 3