Moments later, Passion listened to the soft, even sound of her husband’s snoring, interspersed with the sound of the ocean. The crashing waves beat a sensual, rhythmic melody against the shore, one that was soon mirrored by Passion’s fingers in her cat. She ground herself against her fingers, trying to find the release Stanley had left wanting.
Finally, she gave up the attempt, and sought comfort by cuddling spoon-style against Stanley’s strong, broad back.
“I love you,” she whispered, with a kiss to his neck. “This will get better, I’m sure of it.” But I might have to explore some alternate ways to climax until you lose your inhibitions. Maybe I’ll get a vibrator. This would have been a guilty thought when she was single, but being married, it now felt okay. After all, the marriage bed was undefiled. That’s it! That’s what I’ll do—get a big rubber penis to help me release, while I stay faithful to my husband. Passion smiled at her ingenious solution, even as she snuggled closer to Stanley. I’ll just think of it as my special friend.
She giggled aloud at her last thought before falling asleep. Maybe I’ll name it “Denzel.”
A READING GROUP GUIDE
A PREACHER’S PASSION
LUTISHIA LOVELY
ABOUT THIS GUIDE
The following questions are intended to enhance your group’s reading of this book.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Passion wanted to be married before having sex again and was celibate for five years. Is this too long to “wait on God” for one’s mate? Why or why not?
While Passion and Lavon abstained from intercourse, they “fooled around.” When practicing celibacy, what, if any, intimacies are allowed? Cuddling? French-kissing? Heavy petting? Mutual masturbation? Oral?
Carla considers masturbation a “lesser sin” to adultery. Is masturbation a sin?
Carla and Lavon were obviously attracted to each other from the moment they met. What actions could either have taken to prevent the adultery that occurred?
What role, if any, did Carla’s husband, Stanley, play in her affair with Lavon?
Did Stacy know Darius was gay? If so, how/why did she continue to see him? If not, how/why did she ignore the signs?
Darius was forced into fatherhood and agreed to take care of the child. Was this the extent of his responsibility? Should he have chosen Stacy over Bo?
Both Robin and Stacy take extreme measures to try and get their man. What is the craziest thing you’ve ever done, or witnessed someone else do, to try and get or keep a man?
Vivian’s intuition pointed to something happening between Kelvin and Princess. Should she have acted on this hunch and, if so, how?
Kelvin’s mother, Janée, chose not to tell Princess’s mother, Tai, about Princess’s abortion. Was this the right thing to do?
Tai had a feeling Lavon was the man Carla was seeing. Lavon was a member of her church. Should she have talked to his pastor, her husband, about it? Should King have intervened?
By the time word got out, Lavon and Carla had ended their affair. Was Stanley justified in his actions? Should he have divorced her?
How do you feel about how Pastor Montgomery handled Darius’s dilemma? What about his views on homosexuality?
Passion felt guilty about Robin’s death. Could she have stopped her destructive behavior?
Considering her part in his and Carla’s divorce, should Passion have dated and ultimately married Stanley Lee?
Oh—my—goodness!
Did a “what goes around comes around” just go down???
And speaking of comings and goings…
What’s up with Cy and Hope Taylor, her cousin Frieda, Stacy and Darius…Darius and Bo?
They’re all back, as are Millicent, Carla, Lavon, the Brooks, and Montgomerys, in…
Heaven Right Here
Enjoy the following excerpt!
1
Babies Are Blessings
Stacy Gray, Hope Taylor, and Frieda Moore sat enjoying the warm breeze coming off the Pacific Ocean. Eighteen-month-old Darius Crenshaw Jr. sat cooing and clapping in his high chair, obviously enjoying the warm November weather as well. It was the first time in months the ladies had hung out together, and for all three the good food and great conversation was just what the doctor ordered.
“I don’t care about what she did, I love Conversations with Carla. That sistah keeps it real!” Frieda jabbed a fry in the air for emphasis.
“I like her too,” Hope said. “I’m just saying it’s amazing how someone who fell so low could rise again so quickly.”
“I’m with Frieda,” Stacy added, taking a napkin and wiping mashed potato from her son’s face. “She did wrong and she was punished—lost her husband, her ministry, dignity, respect. No one on the outside looking in will ever truly know how much her present success cost her.”
No one knew, but many speculated on the price Minister Carla Lee had paid for the very public scandal she endured a year and a half ago. A personal affair with a church associate had become very public via LA Gospel, a Los Angeles–based magazine targeting the Black church community. Her husband had promptly divorced her and married the woman who revealed Carla’s secret, Passion Perkins, now Passion Lee. Carla’s base of Christian women supporters, which once numbered in the hundreds of thousands, dropped to four figures, and several Christian bookstores pulled her DVDs. But now, less than six months after her television show debuted, Carla was attracting a following that promised to eclipse that of her former popularity, one that included women of every race, religion, and socioeconomic status. Her Dr. Phil–style directness, Oprah-like warmth, combined with religious sensibilities and southern charm, had sent her ratings, and those of the MLM Network, sky high.
“Did you see the girl on there the other day?” Frieda asked. “The sixteen-year-old who already had two kids? I wasn’t expecting Carla to get with girlfriend like she did but telling that little sistah to put a closed sign on the punanny was real talk!”
“She said that?” Hope exclaimed.
“Pu-nan-ny, on national TV. That’s why women love her.”
“What did the girl do?”
“Started crying, and then promised Carla she’d put her stuff on lock.”
“What I liked,” Stacy interjected, “is that Carla agreed to be her personal mentor, that she cared enough to get involved with her guest like that.”
Stacy and Frieda kept talking, but Hope didn’t hear. She tried to not let the talk of babies affect her, but it did. She and Cy had been trying for almost two years to get pregnant. She’d gone to several doctors and got mixed diagnosis: one said she was fine, another that her uterus was tilted, and a third, something about low-producing ovaries. Her first lady, Vivian Montgomery, had told her she just needed to relax and stop trying to get pregnant. But Hope wasn’t getting any younger, and she and Cy wanted at least two children, if not more.
“I know one thing,” Stacy was saying when Hope finally began to listen again. “If Darius thinks he’s going to force me to have my son stay in that den of sin he and Bo call home, he better think again.”
“But he the daddy, girl,” Frieda reasoned. “Let that boy get to know his father and his uncle,” she said with a wink, referring to Darius’s lover, Bo Jenkins.
“You can’t keep the boy away from his father,” Hope agreed. “A child needs both parents.”
“Yeah, well his father should have thought about that before he chose Bo over me.”
Time had not dimmed Stacy’s resentment of the way Darius chose to end his bigamous ways: remain married to his male lover and have his and Stacy’s marriage annulled. It hadn’t helped matters that his subsequent coming out didn’t receive the backlash she hoped it would. Granted, it generated all types of controversy in religious circles and he wasn’t getting as many requests to play in churches, but his concerts were selling out and his attempt to cross over into R & B was proving successful.
“Having a child is a blessing, Stacy,” Hope said softly. “Don�
��t miss out on the joy of it by holding on to anger. I’d do anything to have a baby right now….”
Just then they were interrupted by a well-dressed man who stopped at their table. “Stacy Gray?” he asked.
“I’m Stacy,” she replied.
“This is for you.” He handed her a large envelope. “You’ve been served,” he said brusquely, and quickly walked away.
“What the…” Stacy didn’t even finish the sentence, but put down her drink and tore open the envelope. Her eyes scanned the papers quickly. “Oh my God, I don’t believe this. I don’t believe the man had this kind of nerve. He’s out his mutha—”
“Calm down, Stacy,” Hope interrupted, putting her hand on a woman who was about to go postal. “What is it?”
“It’s Darius, acting like the asshole he is,” Stacy responded, her eyes welling with tears. “That fool is taking me to court. He’s suing me for full custody of my child!”
Don’t miss Lutishia Lovely’s
Sex in the Sanctuary
and
Love Like Hallelujah
Available now wherever books are sold!
From Sex in the Sanctuary
Mr. Snakeskin Boots
It squeezed her booty without apology. But that was only part of the beauty of a St. John suit. The other was its flawless design—its intricate stitching—its wrinkle-free fabric. The way it hugged every inch of her curved, firm body. She was a perfect St. John size six. Thirty-eight years and two children, still a perfect St. John size six and she was proud of it.
Vivian Elise Stanford Montgomery stepped back and briefly inspected her image in the mirror. She moved to the dresser and, pushing aside the two-carat-diamond studs, decided on the round ruby dangles with matching choker. The black onyx jewel setting provided a fitting backdrop to the precious stones and complemented the black piping around the jacket as if they had been designed specifically for the occasion.
The ruby and the black and the herringbone all worked to complement Vivian’s unblemished, coffee-colored complexion. Well, coffee with a wee bit of cream. She’d been pretty her whole life, although she didn’t always think so. It took Sistah Lillie and Brothah Benson’s son Titus to convince her she was really pretty, worth a Snickers candy bar and the faux-pearl ring he got out of his Cracker Jack box, but that’s another story. To this day she still wasn’t sure whether Titus really thought she was pretty or if he just wanted her to play hide-and-go-get-it behind Brother Armstrong’s toolshed, but again, that’s another story. She could remember being in the Sunbeams and having the mothers of the church comment, “Ooh, ain’t she a pretty little Black thang?”
Her shoulder-length black hair framed her face softly in a trendy flip style, a style that accented the Asian slant of her wide, brown eyes. Sitting at the vanity, she finished her makeup, adding just a hint of blush and a subtle layer of ruby red lipstick to her full, well-defined lips.
Vivian opened the set of double doors to her dressing room and grabbed a snazzy pair of Manolo Blahnik pumps, black with a patch of ruby and black herringbone fabric encased between the leather toe and heel. She slid into them effortlessly while eyeing the matching bag on the lower shelf. She glanced briefly at her watch, and amidst the dazzle of diamonds that caught the light from every direction was the message that she’d better hurry.
Crossing to the dresser, Vivian splashed on a generous amount of Spikenard, a present from her best friend Tai’s most recent visit to the Holy Land. With one last glance in the full-length mirror, rather a stop-pivot-turn, stop-head-back-pivot-turn again, Vivian exited the spacious master bedroom and entered the hallway.
“Derrick! Elisia! Let’s go!” She never stopped walking as she knocked on each child’s door and headed for the stairway. She knew that Anastacia, the housekeeper and children’s nanny, would have them dressed and ready to go. “We’re down here, Mama!” yelled Elisia, all satin and lace. Derrick was sitting on the settee in the foyer, already looking like a deacon at the ripe old age of seven. Why did he insist on dressing like that? Because it made him look like his father, that was why, and his father was his hero.
His father, Dr. Derrick Anthony Montgomery, was many people’s hero. Senior pastor of Los Angeles’s latest soul-saving sensation, Kingdom Citizens’ Christian Center, he was a preacher’s son, preacher’s preacher, scholar, teacher, much-sought-after conference speaker, and one of the finest brothers this side of glory. Vivian smiled as this last thought popped into her head. But how could she help it as she looked at her husband’s spitting image, albeit thirty years younger, in front of her?
You know how people say when you meet your husband you’ll know? Well, Vivian had that very experience when she laid eyes on D-2’s daddy fifteen years ago. Lord! Where had the time gone? And why did the moment seem like yesterday?
It was back in her home state of Kansas at the Kewana Valley District’s annual Baptist Convention. Vivian hadn’t wanted to go. The only reason she, a twenty-one-year-old communications graduate on her way to becoming the first Black Barbara Walters, had agreed to revisit her old religious stomping grounds was because her best friend’s husband was being installed as the new and youngest assistant moderator of the district, and her friend thought Vivian’s attending would add a bit of “celebrity” to the affair.
Her best friend was Twyla “Tai” Nicole Brook. Vivian and Tai (so named because her goddaughter and namesake couldn’t say Twyla; it always came out “tie-la,” so they eventually settled on Aunt Tai, and the name stuck) had been friends since the ninth grade. That’s when Vivian’s father, Victor L. Stanford, had made a sizeable contribution to Kewana Valley District’s Higher Learning Scholarship Fund, and in doing so had become even more important than his propensity for eloquent speech and impenetrable loyalty already afforded him. Her father had been invited to join the district’s board, and shortly thereafter invited to a board meeting, family included, in the Florida Keys. Vivian dreaded the trip because she thought she’d have to endure a week of “old fogies” and was delighted when she met fourteen-year-old, auburn-haired, freckle-faced Twyla in the lobby of the posh Hilton Keys Hotel. They had run off to their rooms, donned modest two-piece swimsuits, headed to the beach, and shared lifetime secrets, dreams, and aspirations that only thirteen- and fourteen-year-old girls could share. They were fast friends from that very day, and even a hundred-mile distance—for that was how far they lived from each other at the time—could not separate them. They wrote each other every week and talked on the phone almost every day from the ninth grade through Vivian’s first couple of years of college.
Just before her senior year in high school, Tai informed Vivian that she was getting married. Vivian was not surprised. Tai’s singular goal after graduating was to become a wife and mother, and she had talked nonstop about King Wesley Brook from the moment she met him. She surmised after their first kiss that he would be her husband, and after their first unofficial date a short time later, a surreptitious meeting in the church parking lot during a midnight revival, said he would be the father of her children. She was right on both counts and became Mrs. King Wesley Brook shortly after her nineteenth birthday and six months before their first child, Michael Wesley Brook, was introduced to the world.
Tai had asked Vivian to deliver a motivational speech at the Saturday Night Youth Extravaganza. Vivian went to the Friday night services to gauge the type of crowd attending the meeting. She wasn’t sure whether to be more spiritual, religious, or political. It was a fine line during this time, the ’80s, and with her ever-increasing personal relationship with God and widening social and political views as a news correspondent, she was always walking that line.
She tried to sneak in after the devotional (which she found boring) and before the offering (where she wanted to be sure and give back to God). She excuse me’d down to the center of the pew three rows from the back and had just opened her program when the lady to the left tapped her and nodded toward an usher who was motioning for her to
follow him. She looked around and saw Tai’s widened eyes, which said “come on, girl,” so she dutifully excuse me’d back down the row, avoiding a few angry eyes but not missing the “umph” s and “tsk” s of a few sisters before bowing her head and following Mr. Black-Suit-White-Shirt-Pinstriped-Tie down to the second row.
She barely had a chance to squeeze Tai’s arm, giving her a little pinch, when she saw him. He came in with the pastors and others designated to participate in the evening’s program. She was staring without knowing it and, even after she knew it, couldn’t stop. She checked him out from the top of his s-curled, collar-length hair to the soles of his buffed and polished snakeskin boots. Snakeskin boots! Who was this brother?
“Who’s Mr. Snakeskin Boots?” she hissed at Tai. Tai just smiled and rolled her eyes while rocking to the choir’s fiery rendition of “Jesus Is a Rock.” Vivian tried to regain her composure, but snakeskin boots had cooked her collards. He was wearing a dark navy, double-breasted suit that emphasized his broad shoulders which narrowed down—can we say “vee”—into a highly huggable waist and then fanned out, oh-so-slightly, to reveal a perfectly shaped, hard butt…Jesus! What was she thinking? And in the middle of church service, no less. Right in between “rock in a weary land” and “shelter in the time of storm.” Pull yourself together, girl!
She tried to divert her eyes as he sat down and even joined Tai in a rock, clap, rock, clap as the choir bumped it up an octave. She threw in an “amen,” raised her arms, and closed her eyes, trying to capture the image of Jesus as a rock. But all she could see was curly hair and snakeskin boots, and it was making her hot! She opened her eyes just in time to see Snakeskin staring at her intently. She closed her eyes again and tried to start singing, but since she didn’t know the words, it just looked as if she were singing in tongues, and they didn’t play that at the Baptist Convention in 1985! When she stole another peek Snakeskin was smiling broadly, as if he knew she’d been thinking of him.
A Preacher’s Passion Page 29