Heaven Forbid
Heaven Forbid
Also by Lutishia Lovely
Sex in the Sanctuary
Love Like Hallelujah
A Preacher’s Passion
Heaven Right Here
Reverend Feelgood
Heaven Forbid
LUTISHIA LOVELY
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
For my mother, Flora Louise,
whose common sense, “mother wit” wisdom,
and ongoing support is the wind beneath my wings…
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
It’s hard to believe that I’ve reached book number six in this series. Wow! There’s no doubt that without the love, support, and encouragement of so many people, this would not have been possible. I don’t have enough time or space to thank everybody whose name deserves to be listed, so along with the “A” Team (including Selena and Natasha), let me just send a HUGE blanket thank-you to my family and friends, my Facebook family (for supporting me as I launched the TishTVNetwork, available on youtube.com, and for participating in the “Talk About It Tuesdays” discussions that transform the storylines from the Hallelujah Love Series to real-life issues), and all of the other Internet sites, such as Twitter, MySpace, and BlogTalkRadio, that help us authors promote our work. And what would these thank-yous be without a book club roll call? Here’s my standing “o” to just a few of these fabulous organizations who support this series: Reading Is What We Do, F.A.M.E. Book Circle, Women of Faith Turning Pages, W.E.B.B. Book Club, Black Women Who Read, Urban Divas Book Club, Urban Fire Books, Da Story Book Club, Women Enlightened by Books, S.I.S.T.E.R.S. Book Club, Urban Soul, Urban Street Lit Book Readerz…I love you. It’s that simple. Six books into this series, here’s another reason why I’m thankful. I am seeing huge increases in the crossover success that I always envisioned for this work—that it not only be read by people who are religious and/or go to church, but by everyone who likes a good story filled with drama, humor, excitement, edutainment, and inspiration. As the number of fans for this series grows, you give me strength to do the same—to grow, evolve, stretch myself, push the limits, speak the truth, and be the voice of love on this planet. And speaking of love…Spirit…you are my boo…
Contents
1. If God Can’t Fix It…
2. Looks Can Be Deceiving
3. Preach, Preacher
4. In the Biblical Sense
5. A Stranger’s Confession
6. A Secret Place
7. God’s Princess
8. His Baby’s Mama
9. Just the Two of Us
10. A Different Kind of Meal
11. Lightning Done Struck
12. Still My Princess
13. Written All Over His Face
14. Most Precious Love
15. Every Now and Then
16. A Strong Deliverer
17. Some Explaining to Do
18. Just Dropped By
19. God Don’t Like Ugly
20. Get Me Some Peace
21. What’s Going On?
22. When I Would Do Good
23. Will You Pray?
24. Here Comes Trouble
25. Healthy Appetites
26. The Devil Is a Lie
27. Sordid Revelations
28. A Funky Valentine
29. Who I Am?
30. Somebody Else
31. A Special Someone
32. Just Live Your Life
33. We Need to Pray
34. His Eye Is on the Sparrow
35. It’s Her Fault
36. Sleep Don’t Come Easy
37. Boyfriend and Best Friend
38. What’s Up?
39. We Need to Talk
40. Love You Good
41. Back to Normal
42. Bedroom Business
43. Unknown Caller
44. Back to Texas
45. Try Jesus
46. The Best Defense
47. Committed
48. Let the Past Stay in the Past
49. Don’t Let Me Down
50. I’ll Pray
51. Don’t Fall for the Okey-Doke
52. Count the Cost
53. Come Monday
54. Can We All Get Along
55. My Boo
56. Almost as Beautiful
57. Raw and Nasty
58. And Then It Happened
59. A Heartfelt Request
60. Something Else
61. A Testament
62. Not a Game
63. Stay Faithful
64. I Am Not the One
65. That’s What’s Up
66. Time Will Reveal
A Reading Group Guide
Discussion Questions
1
If God Can’t Fix It…
Anyone watching the two men conversing quietly in the corner booth of the dimly lit restaurant would have thought their discussion serious. They would have been right. The seasoned seventy-something, gray-haired minister, looking important and dignified in his black, double-breasted suit, listened intently as the younger man, displaying a rugged handsomeness in his navy blue, tailored Kenneth Cole design, used his manicured fingers to underscore a point.
“Number one,” Stan Lee said, his finger in midair, “all sexual misconduct is sin, whether or not your members want to hear it. Before you came and laid down the law, the Gospel Truth congregation was way out of hand, from the pulpit to the vestibule. You know I’m right about it. Number two, it takes a tight rein to straighten out this kind of mess. And number three, Reverend Doctor O, I think you are the only preacher alive who can hold the rein tight enough to pull this backslidden church back in line with the Word.” Secretly, Stan wished the doctor could put somebody else in line—his wife. But that was another story.
Obadiah, officially known as the Reverend Doctor Pastor Bishop Overseer Mister Stanley Obadiah Meshach Brook, Jr., and affectionately called “Reverend Doctor O,” nodded in understanding. He liked this young man’s fervor when it came to strong morals, and he couldn’t help but agree with him. Doctor Stanley Morris Lee, the forty-eight-year-old pastor of Los Angeles’s Logos Word Church, was a prolific preacher in his own right. Obadiah affectionately called Stan his namesake, even though he’d gone by his second name, Obadiah, since childhood. He respected the Logos Word ministry and viewed Stan as a spiritual son.
Obadiah knew that Stan spoke truth: Gospel Truth Church was in a gospel mess following the nationally televised scandal of its former pastor, Nate Thicke, and it took a preacher well worth his salt to pick up the shattered pulpit pieces. Something of this magnitude was the only thing that could have pulled him out of retirement, though truth be told, he’d missed the pulpit and was glad to be back.
Obadiah ran a hand over his weary eyes as he remembered the fiasco. How one of Nate Thicke’s many women had managed to secretly videotape them during a sexual tryst, and how a portion of said tape was spliced into a holiday cruise promotion that was then shown during a national church convention. For about five seconds, Nate’s glistening, bare backside had been seen by many of the twenty thousand attendees before a quick-thinking technical director stopped the tape. It didn’t matter; the damage had been done. Nate was forced to resign, and his mother, Nettie Thicke Johnson, had immediately placed a call to her good friend Maxine, Obadiah’s wife. Nettie, like Stanley, had been convinced that someone of Obadiah’s stature, experience, and wisdom was the only one who could lead the congregation back down the straight and narrow. Goodness knew that during Nate Thicke’s pastoral reign, the members—and the minister—had gone buck wild.
Obadiah cleared his throat and leaned toward Stanley, his powerful orator’s voice near a whisper. “I know in my heart that ever
y rule I’ve put in place and every change I’ve implemented at that there church is absolutely necessary. Narrow is the road that leads to salvation,” Obadiah continued, his voice rising slightly as he quoted scripture. He looked around the sparsely populated dining room, took in the rich chestnut walls accented with deep red–covered chairs and tablecloths and sipped his coffee. “But as right as I am, the church is failing. The Sunday offering is shrinking faster than a jackrabbit’s peter. And I’m losing the regular parishioners, especially the young folk. That’s why I brought you here, to lead a revival and staunch the flow of fleeing fornicators. If they end up over at that funeral home Jenkins is masquerading as a house of God, Thomas will turn over in his grave.”
Stanley’s chuckle was low and deep. “Aw, c’mon now, Reverend Doctor O. Why are you so hard on Reverend Jenkins? He’s doing the best he can. Besides, he’s older than you are, and most of his members have probably been with him the entire forty years he’s pastored that church.”
Obadiah let out an uncharacteristic snort but otherwise remained silent. He didn’t care to share the beef he had with Reginald Jenkins, a beef that went back those forty years of which Stanley spoke, a situation where Reginald took something that at the time Obadiah thought belonged to him.
“Young women don’t listen to old men like me,” Obadiah said after a pause. “Especially since I’m telling them to close their legs and take the ‘for sale’ and ‘for rent’ signs off their hot-to-trots and whatnot. This medicine will go down better coming from a young, handsome man such as yourself.” He looked over at Stanley, took in the sleek bald head, the smooth, honey-brown face, the square-jawed strength settled under dark brown eyes, and nodded his approval. “Yes, they’ll listen to you.”
Both men paused while the waiter came and took away their dinner dishes. They declined dessert but said yes to more coffee.
Stanley looked down at the outline Obadiah had brought him: a recap of the rules outlined in the newly developed Gospel Truth Member Manual. Among the dozens of the now forbidden activities for church members was wearing makeup or outlandish jewelry; getting tattoos; watching television (except for a list of family programs sanctioned by the committee); and touching, besides handshakes, any member of the opposite sex who was not their spouse.
“I’m going to come with the unadulterated word of God,” Stanley said. He leaned back casually in his seat while his countenance remained serious. “I’m not going to leave them with any questions in their mind. When I get done this week, they’ll understand that being saved and sanctified means no fornication, no adultery, no pornography, and definitely no masturbation.” His lips curled into a snarl as he all but spat out the last word, several unfortunate memories rising up unbidden in his mind. “If these women and men want to call themselves children of God, then they’ve got to live holy!”
The wives of Stanley Morris Lee and Stanley Obadiah Meshach Brook were visiting in the Brook home and having their own conversation on sexual matters…from quite a different point of view.
“He hates it!” Passion said passionately. “How can a grown man with three kids and oversized, working plumbing, if you know what I mean, abhor the natural act of sex so much? I just don’t get it, Mama Max.” Passion had been sitting on the plush, cream-colored chenille sofa, but now she paced back and forth across the carpet in Maxine Brook’s living room.
“Humph, that would be a blessing for some women. There’s plenty more that could go wrong in a marriage, child.” Mama Max tamped down the thought that had been nagging her since moving to Texas, about what could go wrong, and refocused her attention on Passion. “Now lookie here, is the man hitting you, abusing you?”
Passion stopped in her tracks. “No. Whatever would make you ask that question?”
“Because I want to know, that’s why.”
The truth was, she and Stan had begun to argue more, and once, just once, he had advanced toward her as if to strike. But he hadn’t. “No, Mama Max. Stan isn’t abusive.”
“Is he a responsible man, keeping food on the table and money in the bank?”
“Yes, ma’am, but—”
“But nothing. Is he a good father to his children?”
“The ministry keeps him busy, but, yes, when he’s around them, he’s a good dad.”
“Then count your blessings and get you a good book to read at night. Drink some of that camouflage tea so you can sleep easy.”
Passion didn’t try to hide her smile. “You mean chamomile, Mama Max?”
“Yeah, that too. Drink it and cool your frisky behind down!”
Passion returned to the sofa and sat close to Mama Max. “Mama, I’m only thirty-four years old. I want to share physical intimacy with my husband, not continue with this forced celibacy that Stanley has mandated. I was celibate for five years before I got married. I don’t intend to be horny and wanting with two hundred pounds of prime beef lying next to me! I’m sorry to be so blatant, Mama Max, but I haven’t been able to talk about this with anyone.”
“No apology needed, Passion. You can speak your mind in my house. Now, I can tell you’re frustrated, and I wish there was something I could say to make you feel better. I haven’t felt the flame of desire for nigh unto twenty years, and was never too crazy about the act of procreation when Reverend and I were busy creating King, Queen, Daniel, and Esther. Maybe I should have been. But as a wife, you do have certain rights. Have you tried talking to Stan about it?”
“Until I’m blue in the face,” Passion said, standing to pace again. “But he won’t even have the discussion anymore—says that as a first lady, I shouldn’t have such animalistic desires.
“It’s not like Stan can’t perform. Our sex life was fairly good right after we got married. Nothing too risqué, you understand, and only once, maybe twice a week. But we did it.”
“And then what happened?”
Passion hesitated. She respected Mama Max and her counsel, but could she share everything with her? Like what she’d discovered in Stan’s luggage after he’d returned from a minister’s conference three months ago? And how, upon further investigation, she’d found similar items hidden in a rarely used gym bag on a top shelf in their garage? And how any doubt as to the use of these items was cleared up when Passion came home one day, early and unexpected, and was shocked senseless by what she saw? Passion decided she wasn’t ready to tell anybody what she’d learned about Stanley Morris Lee…. She was barely able to admit this truth to herself.
“Passion, baby…you all right? I asked you a question, about what happened to change how you and your husband…know each other.”
Passion shared what she could. “Stan has been traveling a lot, so I didn’t really notice it at first. When I finally asked him about it, he made excuses. Then, about three months ago, he started spouting Bible verses and using Scripture and religion as the foundation for denying me what is rightfully mine. He hasn’t touched me since and has made me feel guilty for wanting something perfectly normal!
“Things can’t go on this way,” Passion said, almost to herself, as she looked out Mama Max’s large picture window and beheld a beautiful, Texas fall afternoon. But the burst of color from the autumn purple ash tree in the Brooks’ front yard, the profusion of purple, red, yellow, and orange, was lost on Passion. Her eyes weren’t looking at the scenery out front, but rather at a scene from her past, the pictures she’d taken with her cell phone camera that had changed so many lives. She felt a strange camaraderie with Stan’s ex-wife, Carla Lee, now Carla Chapman, along with the guilt that never totally went away, guilt from what she felt was her part in Stan and Carla’s divorce.
“Passion, you need to take this burden to the Lord and leave it there,” Mama Max said into a room that had suddenly become overwhelmingly quiet. “God can fix whatever is broken.”
When Passion turned to face Mama Max, there were tears in her eyes. “I sure hope so, Mama,” she said in a whisper. “Because if God can’t fix it, a divorce court can
.”
Shortly after divulging her dilemma to Mama Max, Passion asked to be driven to the guest pastor condo. Her marital admissions had made her tired, and she wanted to spend some quiet time alone with her thoughts before Stan arrived. Once inside the comfortably decorated abode, Passion undressed quickly and took a shower. She had no reason to believe that tonight would be any different from all the others, but she wanted to be clean…just in case.
As Passion walked into the closet to don a nightgown, Stan’s unlocked luggage caught her eye. Without pausing to think, she stepped over to it and lifted the lid. Inside, everything was compartmentalized and organized, much like Stan’s life. His underwear, including briefs, were neatly folded, his socks paired and lined against the side. Not wanting Stan to know that she’d snooped in his belongings, Passion gingerly lifted the undershirts, T-shirts, and casual polos. She ran a hand inside the zippered compartment and came up against belts, handkerchiefs, and ties. She was just about to pull out her hand when her fingers felt something else.
Passion closed her eyes and took a breath. She slowly pulled out what her hands clutched. Swallowing, she opened her eyes and sighed. The pink silky fabric was trimmed in frilly black lace. Passion didn’t have to hold them up to know, but she did anyway. It was just as she’d expected. The panties were extra large…just Stan’s size.
2
Looks Can Be Deceiving
Stan eased up the privacy partition in the limo that had picked him up. The meeting he’d just had with Obadiah was at once invigorating and exhaustive. He loved spending time with this elder in the faith, loved sharing the Word with and learning from someone of Doctor Obadiah Brook’s caliber. Often, Stan didn’t feel on the same page with men his age, like KCCC’s pastor, Derrick Montgomery, or Mount Zion’s King Brook. True, they all preached from the same Bible and basically shared the same religious tenets, but whenever the talk turned personal, especially regarding the opposite sex, Stan shut down. How could these two virile men, who made love to their wives on the regular, understand what he was going through?