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Authors: Kendra Norman-Bellamy

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BOOK: Song of Solomon
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One
Seven Years Later
 
“Have a good evening, Dr. Taylor.”
“See you on Monday, Dr. Taylor.”
“Bye, Dr. Taylor. Enjoy your weekend.”
Neil Taylor, Ph.D. stood in the entranceway that led to his office and answered the remarks with quiet waves and an occasional cordial nod of his head. As one of only a small handful of available men on staff, it wasn't uncommon for the women around him to vie for his attention; or at least, that's the way it felt. Neil wasn't complaining about it, though. In fact, though he never voiced it, he rather enjoyed the admiration. Most of the women he worked with were easy on the eyes; however, dating any one of them was totally out of the question. Business and pleasure could make for a lethal mixture, and he loved his job too much to place it in jeopardy.
Neil cherished his profession as Director of Kingdom Builders Academy, the private school that had become an essential part of Kingdom Builders Christian Center. The responsibilities of his vocation made him feel as if he were making a genuine difference in the lives of the children of his community. Under Neil's leadership, the number of students at the academy had doubled, with a current enrollment of 576 children, ranging from pre-K to fifth grade. And they were a lively bunch.
“High five, Dr. Taylor!” a group of four boys said in chorus as they raced up to the man they saw regularly throughout each school day. Running was disallowed in the halls of Kingdom Builders Academy, but it was the end of the day, and Neil was too tired not to let it slide.
Answering the call of duty, the handsome, well-dressed faculty leader lowered his moderate five foot seven stature to their levels and slapped each of their awaiting palms with his. “Down low, down low,” Neil challenged, dropping his hands so near to the floor that the giggling first and second graders had to practically kneel to reciprocate. “Have a good weekend, boys.” He rubbed their heads in signature fashion. “See you on Monday. Be good now.”
“Okay!” they vowed before dashing toward the three sets of double doors that led outside.
Neil wondered how many of the rowdy boys would keep that promise, but whether they did was out of his control. Once they left Kingdom Builders Academy, they were their parents' responsibility. But Neil couldn't help but pray for them. All of the children who spent nearly eight hours with him on a daily basis were special to him.
“Is there anything else you'd like me to do before I leave, Dr. Taylor?”
The question came from Margaret Dasher, Neil's dutiful administrative assistant ever since he took the job five years ago. Her impaired hearing, coupled with the noise of the dismissed children who crowded the halls en route to their buses or guardians' cars, made her talk louder than normal. Most days Margaret refused to wear her hearing aid, citing that it made her feel old. Neil was amused by her line of thinking. Seemed to him that she'd feel even older knowing people were practically yelling at her just to be sure she understood.
“Thank you, Ms. Dasher,” Neil said while accepting the folder that his assistant handed him, and quickly scanning the content. “I think that will be all.” Even after years of working together and bonding on a personal level, the two of them still referenced one another by their professional titles—at and away from work.
“Good,” she said, pushing her bifocals up on her nose and flashing a wide grin that displayed the good use of Kingdom Builders Academy's dental plan. Margaret ran her fingers through her short, graying hair and added, “Got anything planned for the weekend?”
The question was laced with meddlesome inquisitiveness, and Neil shook his head knowingly. “Not really. The weather is nice outside, so I plan to do a little yard work, but it should be a pretty uneventful weekend other than church on Sunday. Will you be there?”
“Of course I will.” Margaret sounded like she was offended that he would even ask. Pausing, she peered at him over the same lenses that she'd just pushed up a few moments earlier. “My niece is coming into town for the weekend. She's a nice-looking girl with a college degree . . . a teacher, no less. And she's single. Why don't you come over for dinner and a chance to meet her? I think you'll like her. What do you say?”
Neil had a healthy chuckle at his assistant's expense. Margaret was forever trying to set him up with one of her many female relatives. She seemed to have more available nieces, goddaughters, and cousins than most families, and every time one of them came through Atlanta for a visit, Margaret became an instant matchmaker. Neil had only taken her up on the offer once, and that experience had been quite enough for him.
“Why are you laughing?” she asked, easily reading his thoughts. “You're still holding that two-month-old incident against me, aren't you? Listen, I'll admit that what happened with you and my late husband's half brother's second wife's oldest daughter was disgraceful, but this is different. Lawrence was a good man—God rest his soul—but his family has always been half crazy, and I should have never even suggested that you go out with that gal.”
Margaret paused long enough to catch the breath that her long spiel had required. Then she shook her head and dove right back in. “But you don't have to worry about that with the McBride women.” She tilted her head to the side and gave her chest five quick, proud pats like the ladies in her family were Mary's sisters and Jesus' aunts. “The McBride women are law-abiding citizens. None of them would ever be caught dead with a bench warrant against them. They would never be so trifling as to get arrested at the dinner table in an upscale restaurant for cutting another girl over some man who was serving time in jail for stealing live shellfish out of the tank at Red Lobster.”
Neil could barely contain himself. It was a situation he could laugh heartily about now, but at the time of the public arrest, it was both unnerving and utterly embarrassing. Fortunately for him, none of the patrons in the restaurant on the night that his “date” had been hauled away in handcuffs were friends or colleagues of his. Had they been, he would have had to resign from the job he loved and move to another city. Maybe even another state. Maybe another country.
Wiping moisture from the corners of his eyes that resulted from his fit of laughter, Neil calmed himself. “Thanks for the invitation, Ms. Dasher, but I think I'll just spend a quiet Saturday at home, taking care of some things around the house that I've allowed to go undone.”
Margaret shrugged. “Okay. It's your life.”
One . . . two . . . three . . .
Neil counted the seconds in his mind, knowing full well that Margaret wasn't going to leave it at that. If history was any indication, he guessed that it would only be a matter of time before she said more. And he was right.
“I don't know what you're afraid of, Dr. Taylor. The Bible says he who finds a wife finds a good thing.”
“Been there, done that, and the souvenir T-shirt that I have is all the memento that I need, Ms. Dasher. I'm not afraid; I'm smart.”
“As the saying goes, marriages are made in heaven,” Margaret quickly emphasized.
“And as another saying also goes, so are thunder and lightning.”
Margaret wasn't the least bit amused or deterred by Neil's retort. “Okay, so your first marriage failed. Big deal. So did mine. But I didn't write off love or marriage because of it. As far as I'm concerned, it was his loss. Any man who is too stupid to appreciate all this deserves to be by himself. And he found out quickly the grass on the other side ain't always as green close up as it appears to be from afar. And he had the nerves to try and come back to me.” Margaret scowled, propped both hands on her full hips, and began craning her neck back and forth like a chicken on amphetamines. “Please take you back? Are you crazy, fool? Do I have ‘big dummy' written 'cross my forehead?”
Neil held his hands up in surrender and laughed as he cowered away. “Hey, hey, hey. I'm not him, okay?”
Margaret crossed her arms in front of her body, and the amplified breath she released sounded like one that was meant to calm her. Seconds later, she'd regained her composure and was back to her previous line of reasoning. “All I'm saying is that the last thing you should do is let the person who broke your heart also break your spirit. If that woman didn't have the common sense to see that you were a catch, then maybe the relationship had to be severed in order for God to send you what you deserve. If you don't at least open yourself to that possibility, then God ain't got no choice but to give what He has reserved for you to somebody else who'll accept it and appreciate it.”
If Neil lived to be a hundred, he still wouldn't understand why his personal life was so important to Margaret. “I just don't think it's God's will for everybody to marry anyway.”
“Then why does He specifically say in His Word that it's not good for a man to be alone?” Margaret contested.
“Ah . . .” Neil held up one finger for emphasis. “But let's also remember that the Apostle Paul, who was a lifelong bachelor, said in the book of First Corinthians that he wished that all men would be like he was. Now, that was a smart man. Wish I'd have taken a lesson from him early on; but better late than never, right? Besides, being without a wife made Paul free to be used by God in whatever way God chose.”
Margaret smacked her lips, and then sucked her teeth in protest. “Bologna! A man can be used by God without being single. To begin with, Paul probably wasn't the most attractive man in Corinth. The scripture don't say that, but I'll bet you anything that if cameras were around in his day and we had a bona fide picture to look at, we'd find out that the real reason Paul never married was because he looked a hot mess and just couldn't find a woman who wanted to marry his ugly self. He probably just used his servitude to God as an excuse.”
A burst of laughter released itself from Neil's belly and resonated around the workspace. Margaret was as quick witted as any woman he'd ever known. Despite her flippant remarks about one of God's greatest apostles, she was spiritually grounded too. And even at sixty, with salt-and-pepper hair and a few excess pounds that had settled quite nicely around her hips, she was an eye-catching woman. Nice legs and all. She had that kind of overall appeal that had the potential to make Neil rethink his policy not to date a woman he worked with. As quiet as it was kept, he had always had somewhat of a boyish crush on his older assistant. Neil supposed that if he were a few years older, or if she were a few years younger . . .
Margaret intruded his rambling thoughts with, “You're too good of a man to be by yourself all this long time, Dr. Taylor; especially at this stage of your life.”
“What stage of my life? You act like I'm an old man or something.” Neil turned his back to her to look at the calendar on her desk, making sure he had no pressing appointments for tomorrow.
“You'll be forty-five in just a few days.” Margaret said it as though he had no clue. “I'm not saying that forty-five is old, but it's not young either. And time doesn't wait for anybody. I remember when I turned forty-five. Seems like yesterday, but fifteen years have passed since then.” He felt her finger touch the back of his head. “You ain't no spring chicken anymore, Dr. Taylor. Look how your hair is starting to gray.”
“Premature graying is in my genes, thank you very much. And what my genes didn't jumpstart, my failed marriage did. So citing my graying temples just gives me one more reason to be by myself.”
Margaret ignored Neil's comment like she hadn't even heard it. Then again, since his back was turned and she wasn't wearing her hearing aid, there was a good chance that she hadn't. Folding her arms in front of her, she quipped, “By the time I was your age, I'd been married twice and had six children. Just 'cause you fall off a horse one time don't mean you don't try again. Long as you didn't break your back in the fall, you're still good for another ride.”
Neil swung around to face her again. “Horses? Rides? What does that have to do with anything?”
“You need to get hitched; that's what it's got to do with anything.” Margaret looked at him like he was stupid. “You need to get hitched right now, while your future wife is still willing to give you some little ones to carry on your family's name. Nowadays, there are very few women who want to be in their forties with their feet in stirrups, birthing babies.”
Neil shook his head, but he couldn't help but smile. The way Margaret carried on sometimes, one would think that she worried about him more than his mother did. Her persistence could be irritating, but to a degree, it was also endearing. It was kind of nice to have someone fuss over him the way Margaret did.
“Well, for the record, I have no plans to remarry, but
if
ever temporary insanity or Alzheimer's set in and I stupidly decide to do so, children will be optional, so there's no rush as far as I'm concerned.”
“Optional?” Margaret gasped in dramatic fashion then grimaced like saying the word left a bad aftertaste on her palate. She walked closer to Neil, again looking over her glasses at him like one of those British ladies from
Nanny 911
. Margaret looked like she was all set to send him straight to the naughty chair. “How can you work around children every day and consider having your own as optional?”
“Working around children every day is probably
why
I consider having my own as optional.” Neil coughed out a dry laugh. “And please don't give me the ‘children are a gift from God' lecture. I've heard it more times than I care to tally up. It's not that I disagree. But be that as it may, my feelings about having kids of my own remain the same. And God knows I'm glad I didn't have any the first time around. Can you imagine what type of noose would have lingered around my neck if a child were involved?” He shuddered at the thought of it.
BOOK: Song of Solomon
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