Who Do I Lean On?

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Who Do I Lean On? Page 6

by Neta Jackson


  I sat, nodding my head as the director listed things the board would want to know. When she finished, I drew in a big breath and then blew it out again. “Um, write up a proposal. You’re right. Definitely right. Except . . . I don’t know how it could work! That’s why I need help, brainstorming with people who do know this kind of stuff. I mean, what if I gave Manna House two hundred thousand for a down payment? A donation, you know, earmarked for purchase of the building. Could Manna House pay the monthly mortgage?”

  Mabel just looked at me for a long moment or two, tapping the eraser end of a pencil on her desk. Then her eyebrows—those perfectly plucked arches—went up, and her dark eyes widened just a fraction. “A donation. That’s a pretty hefty donation for someone who was penniless a few weeks ago. Is that wise? Would you have anything left to live on? Besides your huge salary for part-time work here at Manna House, of course.” Her full lips parted in a teasing smile.

  “I don’t know. I mean, yeah, I’d have something left. Not a whole lot, but something.” Something like fifty grand. Which I was counting on to help meet expenses for the boys, and I’d need a hunk of it pretty soon to get a car.

  Mabel tapped the pencil eraser a few more times and then put it down. “Have you talked to your lawyer? You’re still working with Lee Boyer at Legal Aid, aren’t you?”

  I nodded. “Yes. I mean, he’s the one filing the custody petition for me. But no, I haven’t had time to really discuss this idea with him.” Not for lack of Lee’s persistence. He’d called me several times the past few weeks, but I was feeling confused about Lee Boyer. Was he my lawyer? My friend? Both? Or . . . more? I’d cancelled my last two appointments to give myself some space. “Just until I get the boys settled,” I’d told him.

  “Well, talk to your lawyer, Gabby. You need to get your own finances squared away and make some decisions about your situation. You and Philip have only been separated . . . what? Less than two months? And you just lost your mother. That’s a lot of change and a lot of stress. Might not be the best time to make a major decision like this.”

  I blinked back sudden tears. “But I really think this is God’s idea, Mabel.” My voice croaked. “Jodi Baxter thinks so too. I don’t know how it all fits together, but—”

  How could I explain what the shelter meant to me? It was here I’d met God again, discovered He’d been whispering my name and calling me to “come” all those years I’d left Him behind. But I couldn’t hear Him until I’d lost everything. Now I wanted to give something back. I didn’t want to forget what it felt like to be in Precious’s and Tanya’s shoes, with no home for my children.

  I felt Mabel’s hand on mine. “Gabby.” Her voice was gentle. “If this is God’s idea, then it’s going to happen. God’s timing is perfect. You don’t have to rush it.”

  “I know.” I fished for a tissue and blotted my eyes. Probably raccoon eyes by now.

  Mabel’s hand left mine and she sat back. “But tell you what. Talk to Boyer, get his legal advice, and maybe he can recommend a financial adviser. And write down your vision for this House of Hope idea, wild as it may sound. Plus as many facts as you can—cost of the building, purchase requirements, repairs needed, whatever you can pull together. Put it down on paper. Meanwhile, I’ll do some fact-finding on current city and federal resources for rent subsidies—something I’ve been wanting to do anyway. We’ll put it on the agenda for Saturday . . . but we can always take it off, Gabby, if you decide not to pursue it right now, or just need more time.”

  “Thanks, Mabel. I really appreciate this.”

  “And one more thing.”

  A grin tickled my mouth. With Mabel, there was always “one more thing.”

  “Pray about it. The psalmist said, ‘Unless the Lord builds the house, its builders labor in vain.’ That would definitely apply to this house. Do you have a prayer partner?”

  “Uh . . . not exactly.”

  “Find one. Estelle, Edesa, Jodi Baxter . . . someone. Pray about it together. I’ll be praying about it too.”

  “I’d like that.” I stood up to go. “Thanks again, Mabel.”

  “Oh—and one more thing.”

  Now I laughed aloud.

  “Okay, okay, never mind.” She waved me off and turned to her computer, pretending to work.

  “Mabel! What?”

  She whirled her desk chair to face me. “Your Paul seems to get along well with the kids here. The last few weeks before school starts are likely to be nuts around here, since city summer camps are over and we don’t really have any activities for the kids going on. Do you think he’d want to volunteer a few days a week? During the time you’re here? Just play with the kids, be a big brother. We could give him a volunteer T-shirt.”

  My feet wanted to dance. “Yes! I mean, I’ll have to ask him. No, better yet, you ask him. Make it official. Give me ten minutes to disappear, though. Don’t want him to think it was my idea.” I darted out the door—and two seconds later poked my head back in. “Oh, one more thing,” I snickered. “He already has a T-shirt. You gave one to both boys the first time they visited.”

  Still grinning, I slipped through the multipurpose room and down the stairs without Paul noticing me. I’d been worried about finding something for the boys to do until school started, even with my shortened hours. But look at God! He’d answered my prayer before I’d even prayed about it.

  “Yeah,” I overhead Paul telling P.J. in the backseat as we headed for Foster Avenue Beach later that afternoon. “Ms. Turner asked if I’d be a volunteer at the shelter, helping out with the little kids. She gave me another T-shirt since I’ve worn that other one a lot. I’m supposed to wear it so the kids know I’m the boss.”

  “Ha!” P.J. snorted. “Did you tell her you used the first one to clean your bicycle after you greased the wheels?”

  I stifled a laugh and stayed out of it. Younger brothers always lived in their older siblings’ shadows. But Mabel’s volunteer job offer had definitely raised Paul’s status. His big brother couldn’t tease him for “playing with the little kids” if it was a job.

  Foster Avenue Beach was within sight of Richmond Towers, but the boys had already been there a few times earlier in the summer, and this is where they’d swim when they were with their dad, so familiarity and consistency had points in their favor. I spread my beach towel so my back was to the row of luxury high-rises in the distance. P.J. and Paul were both good swimmers and the beach had several lifeguards on duty, so I let my mind and body relax, watching the boys dash for the shoreline.

  It didn’t get much better than this . . . except for the hole in my heart. But I stuffed Philip’s rejection underneath the pleasure of the moment, smothering the nagging pain with the warmth of the sun on my skin, the breeze running gentle fingers through my tangled curls, and the sheer joy of watching P.J. and Paul cavort in the water.

  And the long envelope from Putnam, Fields, and Pederson that was in the mailbox when Paul and I got home from the shelter the next day definitely buoyed my spirits. A check for two hundred thousand dollars, my share of my mother’s term life insurance policy.

  I turned right around and drove to the little branch bank near Manna House where I’d opened a new account and put it all in my checking account. For now. And then I walked a few yards to the Emerald City Coffee Shop underneath the Sheridan El Station, ordered the Kona Mocha—maxi-size—and two of their to-die-for buttery pumpkin cookies, settled back on one of their cushiony couches near the front window . . . and started to cry with sheer thankfulness.

  “Mom!” Paul accosted me just as I was heading out the door of the shelter at ten thirty on Wednesday to pick up P.J. from his third day of cross-country practice. After taking him home, I needed to go straight to Legal Aid for my eleven o’clock appointment with Lee Boyer. “Mom! Why don’t we take Sammy and Keisha swimming with us at Foster Beach this afternoon? They never get to go swimming!”

  Keisha and Sammy? No way would that be relaxing! I doubted if either of
them knew how to swim, and I’d have to keep an eagle eye on them. I opened my mouth to say no, and then hesitated. Here I was taking time off for a personal appointment from my already shortened day, and even though Mabel was generous with flexible hours for doctor’s appointments and the like, I still felt I should make up the time somehow. Taking Keisha and Sammy swimming with my boys this afternoon would certainly fall under my job description of program director for the shelter.

  “Good idea, buddy. But it has to be after my appointment at Legal Aid, and they need to ask their moms. You work it out, okay? I’ll be back to pick you up after lunch—and if they don’t have swimsuits, tell them to bring an extra pair of shorts and a T-shirt!”

  I smiled as Paul ran off in his orange-and-black T-shirt that said “Manna House Volunteer” across the front, with “I’m part of God’s miracle” in small letters beneath. The week was settling into a workable routine. P.J. seemed just as glad to chill out at the apartment after his sweaty workout with the Lane Tech cross-country team, and by two o’clock when I got off work, we were all ready to do something together. The beach. Grocery shopping. Maybe the bike trail along the lake one day—though I had to get a bicycle first. And Mr. Bentley was picking us up to go to the zoo on Thursday.

  After all the pain and uncertainty of the first part of the summer, these few weeks felt like being rocked in God’s lap. Thank You, Jesus. Thank You . . .

  I was still basking in the blessings of God when I walked into Lee Boyer’s office at eleven. “Hey, Gabby!” he said, jumping up from his desk and giving me a quick hug and big smile. A professional hug, I told myself. “Glad you didn’t cancel another appointment. I’ve got good news! We’ve got a court date to hear your petitions on”—he glanced at some papers—“September eighth. That’s three weeks from Friday. I figured you’d want time to get P.J. and Paul settled in school.” He looked up and grinned again. “I’m eager to hear how it’s going since your boys got back.”

  Lee Boyer. Dressed in his usual jeans, Birkenstock sandals, open-necked short-sleeved dress shirt, brown hair with gold flecks brushed neatly to one side, and friendly light brown eyes behind retro wire-rims. He was such a down-home guy. I’d liked him from the first time I’d made an appointment at Legal Aid, and he’d certainly gone out of his way to help me find a place to live so I could get custody of my sons. He seemed to like me too . . . which got a little confusing at times.

  Like now. I hadn’t come for a personal chat. “I . . . the boys are fine . . . but I really need some legal advice about money.”

  “Ah. The inheritance your folks left you. That’s good, that’s good, Gabby. Now that you’ve got an apartment and a nest egg in the bank, that can only strengthen our case for getting custody of the boys. Not that I have any doubt that a judge will rule in your favor.” He smiled and leaned back in his desk chair. “I suppose you want to set up some kind of trust fund for the boys?”

  I licked my lips. “Well, not exactly. I have an idea, something I want to talk to you about. The building where I live . . . it’s still for sale, right?”

  Lee peered at me over the top of his wire rims. “As far as I know. But if you’re thinking of buying property, don’t you want to look at some single family homes? Or a condo here in the city? You don’t have to jump into anything right away. The apartment you’re renting is sufficient as far as your legal case is—”

  “It’s not about my custody case.” I squirmed a bit in my chair. “It’s that building. I want to buy a six-flat. And live in the building. It’s all part of this idea . . .” Taking a deep breath, I told Lee about my idea of purchasing a building that would provide second-stage housing for some of the homeless moms at Manna House, real apartments where they could be a family with their kids, not sharing bunk rooms in an emergency shelter. “I even have a name for it. The House of Hope.” I grinned. Just saying the name triggered goose bumps up my arms.

  Lee blew out a breath. “Whew. When you get an idea, you don’t waste any time jumping out of the starting gate, do you!” He leaned forward, his eyes searching mine. “Gabby, it’s okay to take some time to get yourself squared away before jumping into such a big financial commitment.” He cocked his head. “How much are we talking about here anyway? Your inheritance, I mean.”

  “Uh, well, my share of my parents’ life insurance is two hundred thousand, plus another fifty when the sale on their house closes—and that’s after Mom’s attorney pays the inheritance taxes. My aunt is buying the house, so it’s a sure thing.”

  His eyebrows went up. “Two hundred fifty thousand? That’s it?”

  “Well, yes. Of course I wouldn’t put all of it toward the building. But that’s why I need some financial advice. How much would I need for a down payment? And what would be the best way to do something like that? I mean, should I just make a major donation to Manna House, earmarked for purchase of this building? Seems like that would save me a lot on taxes. Or should I use my money as a down payment on the building and buy it myself ? I mean, two hundred thousand would be a substantial down payment, wouldn’t it?”

  Lee threw up his hands. “Whoa, whoa, whoa. Gabby, slow down. Look, I’m not a financial adviser, but as your lawyer, I would not advise you to give away the major portion of your inheritance like that. Really, you need some sound financial advice, someone who can help you invest your money, make it work for you. That’s not a large inheritance—it’s nice, but it doesn’t put you on easy street.”

  I stared at him. Words rushed to the tip of my tongue, like foot soldiers defending my idea, but I pushed them back, afraid my voice would quiver.

  Lee’s voice softened. “Gabby, I’m not just speaking as your lawyer, but as your friend. I really care about what happens to you and your boys. And this . . . this idea just doesn’t seem wise. Noble, yes. But let’s get things settled with the custody case, follow through on your divorce, give yourself some time. And as I said before, the divorce settlement could give you a nice financial footing as well.”

  Divorce. Why did he keep bringing that up? As for time . . . “No, there’s not plenty of time,” I said, tipping my chin up. “Not if someone else buys the six-flat in the meantime. I don’t think you understand. This House of Hope is very important to me. It has to be that building. I’m already living there. It’s close to Manna House. It’s for sale. I’m going to be talking to the Manna House board on Saturday, and I wanted your advice how best to go about it. But if you’re just going to shoot it down . . .” I stood up. “Maybe I’d better go.”

  “Gabby, wait.” Lee got up and came around his desk. “Please sit.”

  I slowly sat back down as he perched on the edge of his desk.

  “Okay. I hear you. This idea is important to you. If you are determined to go ahead, then my advice is, buy the building yourself. Property is a good investment. Pay the mortgage payments with rent from the other apartments. I don’t know how that would work with subsidized housing—but the board of Manna House should be able to figure that out. I’m pretty sure there’s a Low-Income Housing Trust Fund that works with a number of landlords to provide subsidized rents.”

  I nodded. “All right. That makes sense. I don’t want to do something foolish. But . . .” How could I explain to Lee that this wasn’t just my idea, but an idea that God had dropped into my spirit?

  Lee reached out and took one of my hands in his. “There is one more thing we need to talk about. With this inheritance you’ve just received, you don’t exactly qualify for Legal Aid any more.” He grinned mischievously. “I think I can make a case for following through on the petitions we’ve already started on your custody case. But you’re going to need to hire another lawyer to handle things beyond that.”

  I stared at my hand in his, his touch sending tiny waves of heat all the way up my arm and making my heart jackhammer. “But I don’t want another lawyer. You’ve been a great help to me, Lee. I mean, you understand my situation. I don’t want to start all over again with someone else.”<
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  He smiled gently. “Well, look at it this way. If I’m not your lawyer, that doesn’t mean I can’t keep on being your friend. In fact, if we end our professional relationship, it opens the door to other possibilities . . . and I’d like that, Gabby. Very much.”

  chapter 7

  Open the door to what other possibilities?

  All the way back to the shelter, Lee’s quip replayed itself in my brain like an LED advertising billboard. A dozen reactions sprang to the tip of my tongue—Of course we can be friends . . . Don’t cut me loose now; I need you! . . . I’m still married, so back off, buddy!—but for the life of me, I couldn’t remember what I said in return. I’d stammered something, said I really had to go, could he recommend a financial adviser, told him I’d call. I think. Or had I bumbled out of there like a tongue-tied idiot?

  I wasn’t ready for that kind of friend.

  And yet . . . the memory of Lee’s touch sent heat into my cheeks again. I liked that he found me attractive at the ripe old age of thirty-nine. And I couldn’t deny I found him attractive. Even more, he made me feel safe. At ease in a way I never had been with Philip. I liked that he had stood up for me in front of Philip the day of my mom’s funeral. He seemed to like me for who I was—even though he’d met me at my messy worst. Most of all, he believed in me. Made me feel like a real person.

  But divorce Philip? I still kept thinking I was going to wake up from a bad dream. That Philip would show up, realize what he’d done, beg me to forgive him, and say he wanted us to be a family again. After all, we had two sons—growing boys who needed both their parents. Philip and I had been in love once. Surely there was a spark somewhere under all the debris from our wrecked marriage that could be fanned once more into a flame.

  And if there was, I didn’t want to do anything to snuff it out forever.

  Parking the rental, I managed to dash into Manna House while lunch was still being served, eat Estelle’s midweek offering of sloppy joes and mustard potato salad, assure Sammy’s mom and Keisha’s grandmother that the beach was safe and I’d have the kids back to the shelter by five, and herd Paul and his charges out of there by two o’clock—all without raising Estelle’s suspicions that I was feeling like a teenager who’d just been asked out on her first date. I had to totally avoid her to do that, though. Didn’t know how she did it, but Estelle seemed to read me like Gandalf the Wizard reading his crystal ball.

 

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