
Capturing the Minister's Heart
Author
KD Fleming
Reads
18.3K
Chapters
11
Chapter 1
Abby Blackmon shot Pastor Jeremy Walker the evil eye as she snatched the finance committeeâs proposal off the protective glass covering of his desk. She stuffed it into her briefcase. His office usually evoked a sense of comfort. The cherry-stained furnishings complemented the lush gold textured carpet, creating a sense of timeless assurance. Hopefulness.
But today, Jeremyâs unexplained recalcitrance filled her with an irritation no peaceful ambiance could quell. She regarded the thicker theological tomes lining his bookshelves with an eye toward their physical, rather than spiritual, effectiveness. As in, the best one to use to knock some sense into his stubborn head.
âWe need to get the community behind this project if weâre going to raise the money to build the recreation center. The indoor center you want built. Remember? The outreach ministry for disadvantaged kids? A place their parents could send them during the hot, humid summer and know they were safe. Ring any bells for you?â
He opened his mouth as if to answer her. But nothing came out. He wouldnât even meet her gaze. Instead, he angled his leather chair to her left and looked out the window. A serious air befitting the responsibilities of his calling cloaked him like a heavy trench coat. He was tall, athletic, with an expressive face anchored by a strong jaw, best captured in profile. His sandy-brown hair always looked as if heâd just run his hands through it, which he did now instead of explaining himself. He swiveled his chair and faced her. His eyes, usually more gold than green, and glinting with humor to balance the mien of seriousness, were a flat shade of brown. Their somberness didnât offer her any hope of changing his mind.
Still, she tried. âJeremy, giving interviews and wooing the media is how my fatherâs campaign manager raises the most funds for his re-election. They share their vision with the people who have a vested interest in reaching the same goal, and then they gain their support.â
His mouth opened. âIââ He fell silent again.
âYou have to give me a better reason for rejecting a proposal the finance committee spent weeks working on. âNo interviewsâ isnât good enough, and you know it.â
Their glares waged a silent war. Despite her determination, she blinked first. That loosened his rigid posture and he leaned back in his chair, his jaw clamped shut.
âFine,â she said. âYou can explain yourself to the committee at the end of the month. But know thisâIâve dealt with difficult people before. And despite them, the project was finished on time.â
The normally agreeableâuntil todayâminister repositioned his rimless glasses. Probably so his view would be focused when he looked down his nose at her. At Grace Community Church, his word was final in the hierarchy of decision making. Never mind that he was being nonsensical with his âno cameras and no interviewsâ edict. She glanced at her watch. Great. Katherine was probably already at the restaurant, wondering where she was.
Abby stood, straightening a crease in her pencil skirt, stalling until she had her temper under control. âMy parents asked me to invite you to dinner at their house this Saturday. Daddyâs due back in Washington next week.â
Her gaze sought his when he didnât respond. âI wonât be there, if thatâs the reason for your hesitation.â
Jeremy ran a hand through his hair again and let out a soul-deep sigh. âPlease, tell your parents Iâm happy to have dinner with them.â He watched her for a moment before clearing his throat. âI know you and the committee worked hard on this proposal, but I wonât change my mind about the interviews. I am sorry, Abby. Youâll have to find another way.â
She nodded. âIâll let them know to expect you.â At the door, she placed her hand on the knob before glancing back at him. âAnd I donât believe you are. Sorry, that is.â She walked out, leaving the door gaping open like the invisible chasm separating them.
Disappointment dogged her on the drive to the restaurant. Sheâd stopped by Jeremyâs office with the idea of giving him a brief rundown of the proposal, then leaving it with him for further review. He would, of course, love it, then call her later in the week about scheduling the interviews. So much for great ideas or thinking they were on the same page about anything.
A few minutes later, Abby slid into the booth across from her friend Katherine Harper. She snapped her linen napkin open with a loud pop, wincing when Katherine glanced up from her menu. âSorry.â
Del Sol boasted cozy privacy, where the booths scattered around the expansive room invited long and lingering conversations. They were using an extended lunch hour to put the final touches on the plans for Katherineâs upcoming wedding, in which Abby was her maid of honor and Jeremy was officiating. That one thought reignited her anger.
As soon as the waiter had taken their orders, Katherine leaned forward. âWhatâs wrong?â
Abbyâs gaze flew to hers. âNothing.â
Katherine reached over and rescued the saucer of butter pats from the salad fork Abby was wielding like a pitchfork. Each golden decorative floral design had been transformed into a thin, round blob riddled with enough holes that it could pass for Swiss cheese.
âWhatâs the matter?â Katherine used her patient, logical voice on her.
Oh, how Abby hated the sound of obvious reason. Katherine wouldnât talk about anything else, even her perfect wedding to Mr. Dreamy, if she didnât pour all this vexation out and let Katherine try to fix it. Which she couldnât. No one could but the stubborn minister whose jaw had turned to granite right after the word no had passed his lips.
âFine.â Once she began tattling on Jeremy, the words wouldnât stop. Then, finally she said, âHe refused to participate in any interviews involving cameras. No television, no newspaper reports.â
âOur Jeremy?â
âHe might be yours. But he is definitely not mine. Not after this morning.â She snagged a piece of bread before Katherine could move that out of reach, too.
âThat is so odd.â Katherine scrunched her brow and took a sip from her water glass. âHe has always been a clown. But now that you mention it, I donât think Iâve ever seen him pose for a picture. In fact, he finds an excuse to leave the room just before we take group photos with the church outreach volunteers.â
âYou should have seen him. He acted so angry with me. It was as if Iâd asked him to keep the car running while I robbed the bank instead of being interviewed for a local news feature.â Abby sank farther into her seat. âI donât know where Iâm supposed to go from here. That was the plan.â
Katherine slid the butter dish toward her. An act of pity Abby wouldnât acknowledge.
âAnd the way he looked down his nose at me. Oh, I wanted to just shake him until he saw how ridiculous he was being.â The fresh-baked bread on her plate hadnât fared any better than the pats of butter. âYou donât think itâs a phobia, do you?â
âMore like camera shyness. I mean, he has no trouble with public speaking. I donât see where having his picture in the paper would be nearly as scary as standing in front of five hundred church members each Sunday and reminding them that God sees everything they do or say.â
Abby leaned forward. âI checked Google on my phone before I came inside. But all I found were articles relating to archaic religious or spiritual superstitions.â
âWhat? How can a minister have a spiritual issue with a camera?â
She laughed, and some of her frustration faded. âThe person believes that when the camera captures their image, itâs also capturing their soul.â
They both leaned back as the waiter placed their salads in front of them.
After saying grace, Katherine stabbed a forkful of grilled chicken and greens. âMy voteâs still on camera-shyness.â
âAre you using me to practice up on how to inject political jargon into conversations like any good politicianâs wife-to-be?â
Katherine stuck her tongue out at her, and the topic of conversation switched from Jeremy to all things wedding. Abby noted the appointment time in her planner for their final dress fittings. Nick was picking up the invitations as soon as the printer said they were done.
âOh, we need a sample of the fabric from your dresses to give to the florist so he can match it to the ribbons in the bouquets. Please donât let me forget that when weâre there.â
Abby glanced up, her pen poised over the planner page, and smiled. âLook at you. Ready to write an article for a bridal magazine on the importance of matching colors.â
âPfft. That isnât what Iâm doing and you know it. If you and Gina donât go with me, the florist will have talked me into having you both walk down the aisle carrying a crystal vase full of roses that resemble a rainbow.â
The sad thing was it was the truth. Kat had confessed to her that Nick had promised this florist exclusive rights to their wedding in exchange for coordinating the floral part of his wooing campaign to win her heart.
Thoughts of how happy the two of them were going to be soon had Abby cramming Jeremy and his prickliness into the âto be dealt with laterâ part of her brain. She immersed herself in helping her best friend plan the wedding of her dreams to her Prince Charming.
After theyâd gone through both their lists, coordinating times and things still needing attention, the waiter cleared their dishes from the table. Katherine insisted on picking up the check in thanks for Abby helping keep her on target. Abby hugged her goodbye in the parking lot before heading to her office.
Once there, she pulled the wrinkled pages of her plan to make Jeremyâs dream come true from her briefcase and threw them in the trash. All sheâd lost with her impromptu meeting this morning was an easy way to raise money for the rec centerâand any hope she had that Jeremy saw her as something more than a member of the finance committee and the church he pastored. It was better she knew his position on both, now, before she invested any more effort into a doomed venture.
She had always admired him and the heavy burden he carried in his heart, not just for his congregation, but all of Pemberly, Georgia. With the numerous programs they had worked on together, sheâd thought she knew him. But the man whoâd shot down her ideas before she could get out of the starting gate today wasnât her Jeremy, willing to do whatever it took to meet the needs of his people. This morningâs Jeremy had been a cold and distant stranger.
Her Jeremyâoh, goodness, she had not just thought of him that way. They were friends. They respected each otherâs views. And, yes, she had hoped that sometime in the near future their relationship would grow into something deeper. At least she had until todayâs face-off.
Oh, she was pathetic. What kind of person had warm, fuzzy flutters in her heart when she thought about her pastor? She was sick. Sick, sick, sick. God, help me. Youâre the only one who can.
To distract her from her crazy thoughts and find a way around Jeremyâs edicts, she scrolled through her contacts list, on the hunt for someone to help raise the money to begin construction. Because, no matter how many ideas Jeremy rejected, she was the head of the finance committee tasked with gaining the necessary funding to see this project completed. She always achieved her goals. And she would this time, tooâwith or without Pastor Jeremy Walkerâs nod of approval and help.
Halfway down the screen she spotted Wendy Albrightâs name. Oh, yes. Wednesday Wendy hosted midweek features involving the community for Channel Six News. Perfect. Abbyâs father hadnât recommended she attend the University of Georgia just because it was his alma mater. Sheâd met and forged friendships with people who were now influential members of society throughout the state and the country. Including Wendy.
Ten minutes later, she was explaining her âneedâ to her fellow sorority Faithful Sister.
âAbby, darlinâ, if we Faithfuls canât help each other out, what is this world coming to?â
She smiled. Wendy was just as Southern as ever. Some things never changed. âExactly. Iâm trying to raise money for a church-based recreation center that would also benefit the community. Do you know of any eager philanthropists willing to have their name on a bronze plaque over the top of the double doors when we dedicate the building to the city of Pemberly?â
âWhatâs your angle in wanting it built?â
Abby sat up straight. âThe community needs this for the teens. The church has an outdoor court for basketball, but with all the rain and heat during summer, itâs hard to get the kids out of the AC long enough to make a difference in their lives.â
âHmm. Basketball, you said? I know a former Hawks player with a soft heart for community projects that benefit kids. Heâs only been out of the game a few years, so his name would still be a big draw. Give me your number, and Iâll ask him to call you. You arenât married, are you?â
âWhat? Why does that matter?â
âHeâs a bit of a ladyâs man, but heâs harmless. If I donât use Mrs. anywhere in your name, heâll call you back faster. Iâve interviewed him a few times. Heâs really a nice guy. But he likes the time spent with the people asking him for a donation to include something besides bringing his checkbook and them offering him a pen. Be charming and talk about more than the project when you take him out to dinner.â
Abby laughed and gave Wendy her contact information. âI think I remember how to play the Southern belle. Give him my number with the promise of a great dinner and a concert thrown in for good measure if he calls me back this week.â
âWill do. But seriously, Abby Blackmon, attorney-at-law and daughter of a senator, really doesnât have anyone special?â
The image of solemn hazel eyes and tousled hair flashed in her mind, and she forced the words past the squeezing pressure around her heart. âNo, thereâs no one special for me.â
âThatâs just wrong.â Then, after an abbreviated silence, âI hate to run, but Iâm due on set for a sound check in five. Call me after construction begins. Iâll see what kind of feature coverage I can arrange for your pet project and the basketball star. Who knows, maybe youâll get more than a rec center out of the introduction.â
âI really appreciate your help, but a sponsor for the rec center is all Iâm after right now.â After hanging up, she twisted her chair around until she could see the fountain in the middle of the park across the street. She let out a relieved sigh and smiled with satisfaction. If things worked out, she might have found the perfect âfaceâ to promote the rec center project and an interesting dinner companion. Not that she was looking.
* * *
Late Friday afternoon, Jeremy came into the fellowship hall to help set up for the weekly meal for the homeless. Heâd switched schedules with three different members of the congregation during the rest of the week to avoid running into Abby. No one was willing to trade their Friday night out for kitchen duty, though. There was no escaping her or their shift on dish washing detail after the meal.
The kitchen in the fellowship hall was roomy. But the sinks were side by side. Earlier, while sheâd worked the serving line, Abby had said âthank youâ with a sweet smile and warmth in her silver-blue eyes each time heâd brought her a refill for the mashed potatoes or green beans. She hadnât shown a single sign of irritation over his harsh rejection of her plans. But now all the food was gone, and so was the buffer the other volunteers provided. It was just the two of them and a pile of dirty dishes.
No one liked kitchen cleanup. Except Abby. She viewed the task as part of the job instead of torture. She had a soft spot for the less fortunate in their town. She delighted in meeting and making welcome any newcomers to the dinner crowd. The regulars looked for her and her warm smile as they made their way down the serving line, and she never disappointed. The care and attention she showed each person drew their spine a little straighter and raised their opinion of the meal from charity to dinner with a friend.
Jeremy didnât know if he was in that category any longer. She had been furious when sheâd left his office Monday. And they hadnât seen or spoken to each other since. Both situations were his fault. That truth wouldnât make the next hour any less uncomfortable.
He ran the hot water, creating high peaks of frothy suds before dumping all the silverware into the left sink. Abby had yet to speak to him on a personal level. No asking how his week had been or commenting on the size of tonightâs crowd. If he wanted to dispel the silence hovering between them, heâd have to start the conversation. He grabbed a moment and really looked at her, taking in her golden, sun-kissed complexion, heart-shaped face made more beautiful by the glint of mischief in her expressive eyes and those full lips. Her physical beauty was only a reflection of her spiritual loveliness.
He swallowed hard. âI think there were more newcomers tonight than weâve had in a while.â
She was humming one of the choir standards as she wiped the stainless counter where the serving pans had rested earlier. She paused at his words, glancing in his direction. âThere were thirteen new faces.â
Okay, he deserved to have to work at making their exchange into an actual conversation. âAbby, Iâm sorry I upset you at the meeting. Itâs justââ
She waved him off. âDonât worry about it. I canât say I understand your reasons for not doing all you can to reach the youth in our city. But thatâs for you to deal with. Iâve found an even better way to raise the money. And the church should qualify for a loan for the amount necessary to finish construction if we use the property as collateral.â
What? They were talking about a huge amount of money. âIt only took you four days to come up with a better way to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars?â
âUh-huh. Can you pass me that towel so I can dry these spoons?â
He handed her the towel but held on when she pulled. âWhat have you done? I know my refusal upset you. But Iâm not doing any interviews. Not even for you.â
The gentle squeeze she gave his shoulder was the equivalent of a pat on the head for a dog that had mastered the trick of rolling over on command. He gritted his teeth. âHow are you raising the money, Abby?â
âWhy all this sudden interest in my methods? You were quick to let me know the easiest avenue to achieving this goal was off-limits. So I did as you asked and took you out of the equation.â
âI donât want to fight with you about this.â
âWeâre not fighting. I was just letting you know I took your advice and found another way to move ahead.â She turned away and started humming again.
He stared at the back of her head, the tether of their friendship loosening in the silence. He sighed. He deserved her dismissal. But he didnât have to like it. Rules that had held him captive for more than a decade prevented him from doing what she needed on a project he knew in his heart was what God wanted for their city. He should be glad she was able to work around the obstacles heâd thrown in her way.
She didnât act vindictive or even satisfied, as if she was getting back at him for shutting down her original plan. She lookedâhappy, without him in the picture. He steeled himself against reacting to the sharp jolt that lanced through him at her assurance that everything was progressing just fine without him.
They had always gotten along, making a great team when addressing the financial needs of the church. Abby was creative and expansive when it came to problem-solving or fund-raising. But he couldnât allow his face to appear in any form of media, no matter how logical and well thought out her proposal had been. And he couldnât explain why. It was against the Witness Security Programâs and Marshal Dekkerâs rules.
âAre you going to make me wait until the next finance committee meeting?â
She spread the drying towel she had been using across the handle of the oven, then reached for a new one before facing him. âI spoke to a college friend who put me in touch with Shaun Fowler. Heâs big into community projects for kids. Especially anything to do with basketball. Anyway, I met him for dinner last night, and we talkedââ
âWait right there.â He threw his scouring pad into the sink, sending a plume of suds high into the air. âShaun Fowler, the former Atlanta Hawks player? You went out with him?â
He should have interpreted the lift of her perfectly shaped eyebrow and the firm set of her full lips as a warning. Even without her arms folded tightly in front of her. It didnât matter. His vision was passing through a haze of green. He stepped closer until there was less than an armâs length between them. âFund-raising should not include your having to schmooze people into donating for a cause. Especially playboy pro athletes.â
She looked up at him, the top of her head almost level with his chin and her back ramrod straight. âSchmooze a playboy? I had dinner with a handsome man who happens to like giving money to worthy causes. Since I chair the committee tasked with raising the funds to build the recreation center youââ she poked him in the chest with a fingernail as sharp as her words ââasked us to take on, I am doing my job. And I wonât apologize for having a pleasant evening in the company of a man who doesnât have any odd hang-ups.â
She stalked away to fill the slotted drawer with the dried silverware. Jeremyâs chest was heaving like a stovepipe. He wanted nothing more than to make her face him and explain exactly how pleasant her evening had been. But he had no right. No claim. Dekker and the rules made sure of that. Never mind how angry heâd made her at their meeting. But the minute he severed the link holding Abby anywhere near him, some former NBA superstar was there, ready to offer her everything he never could because that hadnât been Godâs plan for his life.
And that hurt.
The realization tore a jagged path from his heart to his soul. He would never be completely separated from her because of their shared friendships with Katherine Harper and Nick Delaney. Suddenly the aridness of a WITSEC relocation spot in Tempe sounded appealing.
God knew what was best for him and for Abby. He had just never let himself consider the possibility that what was best for them wouldnât involve the same path. But maybe it didnât. Lord, Iâm sorry for my selfishness. Please, forgive me and help me to mend this rift Iâve created between Abby and me. Sheâs my friend, and if Your will doesnât allow for more than that, help me to accept it and cherish the relationship You have blessed us with as friends.
He swallowed hard. âIâm sorry. I shouldnât have acted that way.â
She paused with a long-tined fork in her hand. âNo, you shouldnât have. What I do is my business. Iâm respecting your edict that I keep the media away from you, but I need a face to associate with this project for people to identify with it. Shaun brings notoriety and good press, not to mention over half the money we need. Heâs funded similar projects like this all over the country. And heâs a nice man. He and I have to work together on promoting the center, so it makes it easier for me that heâs so likable.â
Abbyâs gaze shifted before meeting his. âHe wants to stop by and watch you work with the teens one Tuesday evening.â
Over his dead body. The guy was not only luring Abby away from him with his charitable works and likability, now the man wanted to get in the middle of the ministry that let him use the skills he had been forced to keep hidden from the world. Great. The guy would probably challenge him to a game of one-on-one in front of the teens. He clenched his fists at his sides. If he got smeared, what credibility would his teaching have in the future?
âSince when did one dinner garner such attention from a former NBA All-Star? Are you sure Shaun Fowler isnât just looking to add a senatorâs daughter to his collection of adoring female fans?â
His barb brought Abby front and center. She was in his face with her cheeks flushed, strands of honey-gold hair escaping its clip, ready to give him the set down of his life. And sheâd never looked more beautiful.
âGet. Over. Yourself. You canât have it both ways. Whatever your fear is that keeps you from doing whatâs needed to get this center built is your problem. I found a way to move forward despite you. And since your favorite sport is basketball, I went with that theme. And who better to promote our cause than a former NBA player who favors charities that sponsor projects like this? Heâll help me draw in the sponsorship we need to make your dream happen.â
He stepped away from her and leaned against the sink. âIâm sorry.â
She shook her head and rolled her eyes. How many times had he said those words to her this week, knowing he couldnât change anything even if he wanted to?
âThere are things I wish I knew how to explain, but I donât. Canât. And I know my attitude resembles sour grapes.â The rules might keep him from talking about witness protection, but nothing prevented him from letting her see the path heâd planned for himself before Dekkerâs late-night visit took all of that away.
He drew a deep breath and bared as much of his soul as he could, with no motive other than hoping sheâd understand his mixed feelings a little better. âWhen I was in high school, all I dreamed about was playing for Kentucky and winning a national championship. I was going to be a first-round draft pick in the NBA.â He resisted the resentment trying to climb inside him again at the thought of all he had lost. Heâd surrendered that battle to God before attending seminary and won. So why the resentful rumblings now?
Abbyâs gaze was warm and encouraging.
âBut that wasnât what God wanted me to do. And Iâm fine with that now. I like being a minister. I think I make a difference in peopleâs lives, helping open their hearts and minds to what God really wants for them.â
âYou do.â Her words a breathy assurance, while her gaze strayed from his. âGod used you to open my eyes to how much more I should be doing to help others. Iâll always be grateful to you for that.â
His breath seized in his chest. Was there an underlying meaning in her words? Was she telling him he was just her minister? What about their friendship? He had no choice but to trust God here. He was so far out in a sea of emotion he couldnât see land.
âYou have a very giving heart. I think God was already at work within you before our paths crossed. Basketball is how I get the older boysâ attention. They think they know everything, and the only way to break through that âking of the worldâ mind-set is to outdo them at something. With basketball, when I win, they can always say itâs because Iâve been playing longer or something like that, but it still earns me a little of their respect. And that allows me to plant a seed. God waters it and lets it work deeper into their souls through lifeâs twists and turns, until one day, it finds root and they stand tall, grounded in Him.â
* * *
Abby stared at Jeremy, listening to the words tumbling from his mouth. He was always so earnest, so passionate in his sermons. There was no doubt about his belief in what he was saying. But just now, with his breath coming in uneven measures, he had opened up and shared a piece of his heart with her that she believed few people had ever seen. The honesty made her want to take him in her arms and tell him how good and honorable he was.
But the type of relationship they had didnât give her the freedom to express that level of admiration. And it might never. Oh, theyâd still attend many of the same public functions. They might even go to some of them together if they were low-key enough. Her parents would always invite him to lunch with them on the Sundays they were in town. But she and Jeremy had never been close enough to trade secrets that involved their hearts. Now she wasnât sure they ever could.
They were casual friends. Somehow, he always made her laugh. But theyâd never talked about their dreams or a future, whether separate or together. She already missed the friend who couldnât be more.
She offered her hand. âTruce?â
He reached out. But instead of a handshake, he wove his fingers through hers and kissed her knuckles before letting go. âTruce.â
Her heart jumped. Frustrating and confusing man!
She went home more flustered than sheâd been before the evening started. He kept her off kilter. Probably not on purpose, but that didnât matter. His actions contradicted themselves. One minute he talked to her as if she was the ideal womanâhis Eve. The next, he was cranky and suspicious, acting as if heâd caught her two-timing him. Sheâd never even one-timed him.
She shook off her conflicting thoughts. Thereâd be time to worry later about the jiggly feeling stirred by the thought of Jeremy jealous over her. Convinced she could find the solution on her own, she struggled with her uncertainty for another hour before giving in and doing what she should have done before any of this happened.
She prayed.
She prayed while she showered. While starting a second load of laundry as the towels dried in the dryer. Even while she painted her toenails Romantic Red. Then she curled up with a cup of tea and poured her heart out to the only one who knew the cause of the hurt and confusion welling up inside her. Who could offer her a solution. Who could bring her peace. Perfect peace. She went to bed after surrendering her plans to God. And she slept. Because the Lord carried her burdens for her through the night as He promised He always would.












































