Topaz Heat (Christian Romance) (The Jewel Series) (13 page)

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Authors: Hallee Bridgeman

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BOOK: Topaz Heat (Christian Romance) (The Jewel Series)
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CHAPTER 8

INSTEAD
of asking Sarah where she had parked her car, Derrick just took her to his. He set her down next to the car to unlock and open the door, and then gently helped her inside. It seemed like it took an eternity to get around the front hood and then to his door, to unlock it, and slide into the seat next to her. Sarah just leaned against the car door as huge tears slid down her face. He wanted to do something to help her, but he didn't know how or what. So he drove, through the light traffic downtown, darting cars and pushing limits on yellow lights, until they left the city behind them.

In minutes, he turned into Tony’s neighborhood. As he drove up the winding driveway and cleared the last of the trees, the sight of the downstairs lights spilling out through the windows filled him with a sense of relief. He felt nearly happy when he pulled in behind Maxine’s car parked in front of the door.

Sarah hadn’t spoken throughout the entire drive. He guessed she knew their destination without having to ask. He parked behind Maxine’s car and quickly hopped out and moved to Sarah’s door. She kind of poured herself out of the seat, very wobbly as she gained her footing. “Let’s go inside, Sweetheart,” Derrick said.

“Don’t call me, ‘Sweetheart,’” she reflexively insisted.

Derrick couldn’t help but grin at the rebuff, glad to hear her words spoken without any kind of slur. He didn’t know what happened to her, but she exhibited signs of shock and he wondered if he should have taken her from the hospital at all.

She wrapped her arms around her middle, as if warding off a deep cold. As the lightning flashed around them and the wind whipped her hair free of the confines of her hairpins, Derrick thought she looked very lost, and very scared. He put a hand on her elbow to help her up the wide steps to the big double front doors.

An eternity passed from the time he rang the door bell to the moment Maxine opened the door. She had a coat in her hand and Barry followed behind her. Her smile grew wider when she saw them, until she looked directly at Sarah.

“What happened?” she asked, a half second before she turned her head and called for Robin.

Sarah stepped into the house and fell against Maxine, whose arms automatically came around her. As the first sob escaped, Robin and Tony entered the foyer and ran toward them. Derrick watched helplessly, relieved that the family all came together, as Sarah sobbed out, “I remember.”

 

A
shudder coursed through Sarah’s body, starting somewhere in her stomach and moving in a widening radius outward, until even her toes clenched against it. She sat curled up in a leather chair, Robin on the couch next to her, leaning forward with her hand on the arm of the chair, and Maxine sitting on the end of the table in front of her, her hands rubbing warmth into Sarah’s legs.

“What happened?” Robin asked.

“We were in the elevator.” Her breath hitched.

Maxine paused then asked, “You and Derrick?”

Sarah nodded. “He’d come to check on me, because you two were worried about me. We were fighting about something when the power went out.” She waved a hand in the air. “I guess the storm.” Her hand fell limply to her side. She felt disconnected from the material world. Another shudder made her jaw clench.

Derrick spoke from somewhere in the room. “The elevator jerked to a stop and the lights went out. I don’t know how long they were out. It couldn’t have been more than a few seconds but it felt like longer.”

Sarah rubbed her eyes. “As soon as the lights went out, it was like I was transported back in time.” She looked at her sisters. Her vision blurred as her eyes filled with fresh tears. “I remember we were in a closet. We were hiding. And he … he …” With both hands, she slapped her palms over her mouth. Both of her sisters moved toward her at once, sitting on the arms of her chair and wrapping their arms around her, around each other.

Robin spoke. “Shh. Shush, now. It’s okay, now.” Her voice soothed, as it had twenty years ago.

Sarah’s stomach hurt as more and more memories assailed her, flooding her mind and her senses until she could almost smell the burn of the cheap drugs, feel the harsh hands that slapped at her, and hear the terrible sound of her mother’s voice. “How have you lived? How have you functioned with this in your heads?”

Maxine leaned back and lifted Sarah’s face, wiping the tears off her cheeks. “Well, Robin worked. And I shopped. And we did those things mindlessly and soullessly until we found God.”

Tony appeared at Robin’s side, a glass of water in his hand. Robin took it from him and held it up to Sarah. “Drink.”

Despite the fact that the last thing she wanted was a sip of water, the cool liquid felt wonderful in her parched mouth and soothingly slid down her aching throat. She accepted the glass from her sister and took another sip, then handed it back as fresh tears welled up in her eyes and tumbled down her cheeks. She ripped the glasses off her face and handed them to Maxine.

“I remember that night. Hiding. And gunshots.” She put the heels of her hands to her eyes and pushed. “Up until now, my earliest memory was waking up in my parents’ house. I couldn’t see anything because I didn’t have my glasses. I realized, even at nine, that for the first time in my life I was really safe.”

Her stomach clenched painfully when she realized that her sisters had never really told her a lot. “But you two –”

Robin shushed her again, using a soothing voice. “We weren’t little. I was fifteen, Maxine twelve. There was little hope for adoption. We were put into series of foster homes.”

Maxine continued. “It was bad at one of them. The man –” She pressed her lips together, obviously struggling to speak.

Robin interrupted her. “There is evil in this world. The man there was attacking Maxi and I stabbed him in the back with a kitchen knife. He wasn’t badly hurt but within a few days, Maxi ended up in another foster home and I landed in a girls’ home.”

“When she turned 18, she was released. Hank gave her a job at the restaurant and he helped her get custody of me.”

“And a year later, we started appealing for you, but your parents had already adopted you.”

Sarah nodded. “I didn’t know about you, but I dreamed about you. When I saw you the morning of my fifteenth birthday, I recognized you from my dreams.”

Maxine’s eyes shifted to a distant and very private memory and she confirmed, “God speaks to us in dreams.”

Robin pursed her lips and swallowed hard, but her expression was more angry than sad. “Your mom was just protecting you,” she finally said, as if telling herself.

Knowing now, knowing the bond that held the three of them together, remembering the love she had for her sisters that surpassed anything she could have imagined, her heart gave a painful, tight beat. “It wasn’t fair,” she whispered. “Maybe if we had been together, I could have coped with all of it instead of just forgetting.”

“Hey,” Maxine said, gripping her hand. “Take it as a gift. Take it as a gift from God. You were able to live a normal life, all things considered. You found a family, with uncles and aunts and cousins. You had parents who tucked you in at night and read you bedtime stories. You went to church and had Christ in your life early when you were still young. God gave you that for a reason – either for them or for you, we can’t know. But Robin and I don’t begrudge any of that for you.”

“You were probably the only person in the world praying for us,” Robin said. “And look at us now. We are together, a family.” She held her hand out, and Tony stepped forward to take it. Derrick stood next to him, and Barry put his hand on Maxine’s shoulder. “We beat the system, and the odds, and God made us into a family. Our children will never have to worry about any of the things that we faced as children, as long as there is breath in our bodies.”

Sarah leaned down until her head rested in Robin’s lap. Her sister ran her fingers through her hair.

Tony spoke above her. “We should pray.”

Barry affirmed, “Good idea.”

Derrick cleared his throat. “I’ll do it.” Sarah felt her neck muscles automatically tense up, but she closed her eyes and did not object. In a circle, they held hands, closed their eyes, and bowed their heads in prayer.

“Father God,” Derrick began, “I’m not sure what to say. There is so much pain in new memories, and it’s on top of fresh grieving. I’m afraid that it’s a little overwhelming right now. I would like to start off by thanking You for placing me in the elevator tonight when the power went out. Thank you for letting me be with Sarah when she experienced the return of her past.”

His voice, once grating to her very nerves, now soothed her, caressed her, until she felt the fist that clinched her heart loose its grip, until she felt a sense of calm slowly overtake her. Her sister’s hands felt warm against her cool skin.

“Mighty God, you are a healing God. Your word tells us that You can do all things and we have faith that it is so. We know that if it is Your will, You can erase the scars of the past and heal the pain of past wrongs as if they never even happened. God, we have faith that it is so. We petition You to touch Sarah, tonight. Even now, God, we pray that You hold her up in the very palm of Your mighty hand and comfort her through the Holy Spirit.”

As he prayed for healing and forgiveness, Sarah just relaxed and felt his voice flow over her body. Her heart felt lighter and she knew that they were in the very presence of the Holy Spirit.

“God, we pray for all those who persecuted us in our past. We pray that we can be living witnesses to them of Your glory and Your promise. We pray that we can testify to the truth of Your word and Your enduring love. Father, let Sarah feel that love tonight and let that love fill her to overflowing. Let her see Your love shining in her sisters and her brothers in law. You know how long I have loved Sarah, Lord, and just how much.” As Derrick suddenly quit speaking, Sarah’s breath caught and she sat up quickly, turning to look at him. Without her glasses on, she couldn’t see a lot of detail on his face, but she could see that he stood frozen.

She watched him take a step back. “I’m sorry,” Derrick said. “I …” His face looked into the eyes opening around him and he proclaimed. “Amen. Amen.” Then he rushed from the room. Tony followed him at a more sedate pace. Sarah heard their deep, masculine voices, but could not make out what they said. She felt a burning flush cover her face and reached forward to retrieve the glasses Maxine had set on the table next to her hip.

“Well,” Robin said, standing and rubbing her hands on the sides of her thighs.

She didn’t say anything else, and Sarah felt her face burn hotter when Maxine smiled and said, “Well, indeed.”

The older sisters said nothing else, as if sharing a long kept secret or a private joke. Sarah put her hands against her cheeks which felt hot and damp with tears. “Goodness.”

Tony came back into the room and cleared his throat. “Derrick had to go.”

Barry’s bark of laughter made Sarah flinch. “I bet,” he said. He immediately sobered up and looked at Sarah, “Sorry.”

“No problem,” she whispered as she stood, shakily, to her feet. Maxine stood with her, reaching an arm out to steady her. “Can you drive me home?”

“Stay here, tonight,” Robin said.

“I don’t want to.” She had discovered that Maxine and Barry had dropped the kids off with Robin so that they could go to New York for Maxine’s show. “I don’t think I can face the kids in the morning.”

“This house is big enough that you wouldn’t have to,” Tony observed dryly, by way of teasing Robin.

Sarah gave a curt shake of her head. “I need to go home.”

“We can drive you home,” Barry said.

“I left my purse in my locker at work,” Sarah said.

“We’ll go there first.”

She hugged Robin then Tony. “I love you,” she said to them.

Robin stepped forward and hugged her again. “I love you. Call me if you need me.”

Sarah knew Robin meant it. Robin had taken care of Sarah from birth. When she was six-years-old, Robin was the one to wake up in the middle of the night to feed the infant Sarah. She was her mother more than the woman who died at the hands of a drug dealer, or the woman who fostered Sarah for the last nine years of her childhood. “I will.”

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