already dressed, he noted. In nice clothes.
âItâs Sunday.â The pronouncement came from Emily.
She said that like it was supposed to mean something. And Clay had the distinct impression that it did not include sleeping in.
âI know.â He hoped she wasnât heading in the direction he suspected.
âArenât we going to church?â
His hope dissolved. âMaybe we could skip this week.â
Tears pooled in Emilyâs eyes. âMommy told us once that if she ever went away to be with God, we could talk to her in church on Sunday.â
Clay was sunk. He could hold his own with hard-as-nails, give-no-quarter types. But these two little kids, who together couldnât weigh much more than sixty pounds, melted his heart. Meaning his Sundays were about to undergo a radical change.
Forty-five minutes later, as he approached the white church with the tall steeple that he passed on the way to work everyday, he hoped the lot would be empty. That way, he could rationalize that heâd tried to take the kids to church.
But no, it was full. And he could hear the muffled sound of organ music. According to the sign in front, the service had begun ten minutes ago.
He was stuck.
Accepting his fate, he helped the children out of the truck, took their hands and headed toward a church for the second time in less than a week. Although he tried to unobtrusively slip into a row near the back, Josh foiled his plan by tripping over the edge of the pew and sprawling in the aisle. Clay was sure every head in the place swiveled their direction as he swooped to pick up the little boy.
After climbing over three sets of feet and squeezing in between a woman with two teenagers and an older couple, all Clay wanted to do was slink out of the church and never come near the place again.
The kids, however, were oblivious to his embarrassment. Emilyâs hands lay folded in her lap, and Josh was jiggling his feet, which stuck straight out over the end of the pew. Noting thatone of the youngsterâs shoes was untied, Clay leaned forward to remedy the situationâand discovered another problem he couldnât fix. Joshâs socks didnât match.
Risking a peek at the older woman beside him, he saw her inspecting Joshâs feet. A flush crawled up his neck. The fact that it had never occurred to him to check the kidsâ clothes was yet more evidence of how ill-equipped he was for this job.
The woman lifted her head, and Clay braced for disapproval. Instead he saw understanding and compassion in her eyes.
âKids are a handful, arenât they?â The whispered comment was accompanied by a smile. âI had four. And I had that same problem on a few occasions.â She inclined her head toward Joshâs feet.
Relief coursed through him. The woman wasnât judging him. She wasnât trying to make him feel inadequate. She was being kind. He hadnât expected that.
âIâm pretty new at this. I have a lot to learn.â
âDonât we all,â she commiserated with a quiet chuckle before turning her attention back to the sanctuary, where the minister was moving toward the pulpit.
Clayâs tension eased. Most of the Christians he recalled from his childhood had been quick to criticize and censure. But this woman hadnât done that. Nor had the members of Anneâs congregation. It was a new view of Christianity for Clay.
This minister was also worth listening to. Mid-forties, with flecks of silver in his light brown hair and subtle character lines in his face, he spoke in a down-to-earth style, and his words had practical implications. Though Clay hadnât picked up a Bible in decades, the passage the pastor referenced near the end of his sermon was vaguely familiar. But heâd never looked at it in quite the way that the minister presented it.
âIâm sure most of you know the story about the fig tree that didnât bear