“You must be relieved. But how do you know he won't try it again? I told you I've got people who'll sniff his punk ass out and make him regret he ever heard of you.”
“I'm not worried about that.”
“Why not? You never know what could get in that crazy fuck's head a year or two from now. Why take any chances?”
Samantha smiled wryly and said, “I'm not worried, dear, because I have people too.”
Victoria leaned forward in the chair. “Ooh, good for you, Sammy. You can't be too careful, especially after the way Hezekiah fucked you over. If Sylvester ever did that to me, he'd come up dead too. For the life of me, I don't understand how you just stood by while that son of a bitch was fucking a man.”
“I didn't just
stand by,
Victoria. I couldn't. There was too much at stake. If that had come out, I would have lost everything. And you know me better than that.”
“You knew? What did you do? I hope whatever it was, you scared the shit out of him.”
“Oh, I did more than that,” Samantha said casually.
“Go on and tell me, girl. What did you do?”
“Let's just say I arranged it so he would never fuck anybody again.”
Victoria paused briefly to ponder the true meaning of Samantha's words. She took a sip of her drink, then another. “Are you saying what I think you're saying? And, believe me, I pray to God you are,” she said wickedly.
“I'm saying exactly what you think I'm saying,” Samantha said coldly.
“You didn't?”
“I did.”
“Sammy, you had him . . .”
Samantha leaned forward and whispered, “What else could I do? He was about to cost me everything. The church, the house, my reputation. He gave me no choice.”
“I'm speechless. I don't know what to say. I never knew you had it in you.”
“Never underestimate what a desperate woman will do. All those years I never cared who he fucked, until he made the mistake of telling me he was going to leave me and the church for a man. What a fool. I had to stop him, and that was the only way.”
“Fuck, yes, that was the only way. Son of a bitch. What was he thinking?”
“That's the point. He
wasn't
thinking. So, unfortunately for him, I had to do the thinking for both of us.”
“Well, for what it's worth, Sammy, I think you made the right decision. How did you do it? I might want to do the same thing to Sylvester one day.”
“Never mind that. I've already told you too much.”
“Now look at you. You're the pastor of one of the largest churches in the fucking country. This Sunday you're going to preach in your new cathedral. You're richer than the goddamn queen, and you got away with it all smelling like a rose. Goddamn, I envy you.”
“I'm not completely done yet,” Samantha said, standing and walking to the glass wall and looking out over the grounds. “I've still got two small pieces of business to take care of before it's all over.”
“Handle your business, girl,” Victoria said, raising her glass in a toast. “Handle your business.”
“You know I will, Victoria. Now, let's have lunch. I'm starving.”
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Gideon quietly peered over the redwood gate into Hattie's back garden. Hattie was bending over a row of plants that were bulging with yellow squash, okra, collard green stalks, and tomatoes. The yard was as tidy as the inside of her home. Pristine white sheets billowed on the clothesline. The grass was neatly manicured, and a six-foot pink brick wall guarded the sacred ground and its high priestess.
Gideon could faintly hear the hymn Hattie was singing as she scooped tomatoes from the vines and dropped them into a wicker basket hanging from her arm.
“There is a fountain filled with blood drawn from Emmanuel's veins; and sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains. Lose all their guilty stains, lose all their guilty stains; and sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.”
As Gideon listened, he vividly remembered his grandmother singing that very same song when he was a small boy in Texas. He could almost see her standing on the front pew of the little wood-framed church, wearing her favorite white straw hat with the bursting blue and yellow silk flowers.
“The dying thief rejoiced to see that fountain in his day; and there may I, though vile as he, wash all my sins away. Wash all my sins away, wash all my sins away; and there may I, though vile as he, wash all my sins away.”
Gideon was lost in the hypnotic spell of the hymn when he heard, “Don't just stand there, boy. Come in.”
Hattie's back was to the gate where Gideon stood. She had not looked up or turned around before she spoke, but she knew who was looking at her over the redwood gate.
Gideon was jolted back into the present by her words and called out, “I'm sorry, Mrs. Williams. I knocked on your front door, but you didn't answer, so I thought I'd check back here to see if you were home. I hope I didn't startle you.”
“Not at all. Take a lot more than you standing at my gate to startle an old lady like me. Now, come in. The gate's unlocked.”
Hattie stood and turned to Gideon as he approached. The wicker basket swinging on her arm was filled with tomatoes. Her plastic garden clogs had left footprints in the moist soil.
“Now, what brings you back here, Mr. Truman? I wasn't sure if I'd ever see you again.”
“I had a few more questions I wanted to ask you, if that's okay. It will only take a few minutes.”
Hattie was pleased to see Gideon again. She quickly noted the air of desperation in his spirit as he spoke. “That's fine. I want to help you. I told you the last time I saw you, somebody's praying for you. Your grandmother, in fact. Have you talked to her lately? She misses you something terrible.”
“I have not.”
“Call her, boy. You need her more than she needs you right now.”
“Yes, ma'am. I think you're right. I promise I will call her.”
“Now, as you can see, I got lots more tomatoes and squash to pick before it gets dark,” Hattie said, pointing to the plants at her feet. “So what can I do for you?”
Gideon was embarrassed. “I'm so sorry, Mrs. Williams. That was very inconsiderate of me. Your garden is lovely. May I help you pick vegetables while we speak? I haven't been in a garden since my grandmother's. It used to be my job to water it every day, after school.”
“She was lucky to have you. I'm on my own now that my children are grown. They like to eat the food but never lift a shovel to help back here.”
“I remember one summer my grandmother was away for three weeks. The last thing she told me was to not forget to water the garden. Without her there to remind me, I did forget, and when she came home three weeks later, every plant had died. To this day I haven't forgiven myself for that.”
“You should, 'cause she never held it against you. There's a basket over by the fence, there by the flowers. Use that one.”
Gideon navigated the rows of vegetables like a farmer in Gucci loafers. He reached around a bush with stalks of vibrant pink flowers springing from its core. “These flowers are lovely, Mrs. Williams,” he called out to her as he reached for one of the buds. “What are they called?”
“Don't touch those, boy, 'less you want to die where you're standing,” Hattie called out abruptly. “Those are foxgloves. One of the most poisonous flowers God put on this earth. Just a nip of the stem would kill you.”
“I'm sorry. Why do you have them here if they're so dangerous?”
Hattie smiled. “Never know when they might come in handy.”
Gideon's hand froze, suspended only inches away from the beautiful flowers. He looked curiously at the blossoms, then at Hattie, and took a cautious step away from the bush. Now with basket in tow he returned to the row of squash. “Shall I pick these, ma'am?” he asked, pointing down at the bushes of deep green leaves shielding yellow orbs.
“Good place to start,” she replied. “Fit as many as you can in the basket.”
“Mrs. Williams, I don't know if you remember, but the last time we spoke, you left me with a sort of warning. You told me to be careful because I was heading toward someone who was more dangerous than I could imagine.”
“I remember. Have you met that person yet?” Hattie asked as she pulled another tomato from the vine.
“I believe I have,” Gideon said cautiously.
“And who is it?” she asked as another tomato made its way into her basket.
“Pastor Samantha Cleaveland.”
“I also told you, you was about to meet someone that you've been looking for your whole life. Have you met them yet?”
Gideon's hand froze on a squash when he heard the question. “Yes, ma'am. I think I have met them,” he answered slowly.
Hattie heard the caution in his response. “I'm very glad to hear that, son. Very glad.” Hattie stood upright and walked over to Gideon, who was crouching before a plant. She placed her gentle hand on his shoulder and said, “Never be ashamed of who you love, son. Just thank God for giving you someone to love.”
Gideon looked up at Hattie. He couldn't conceal the moisture that had formed in the corners of his eyes. He simply said, “Thank you, ma'am. That means more to me than you can imagine.”
“Good,” Hattie snapped with approval and returned to the tomato plants. “So what's this about Samantha Cleaveland?”
Gideon felt somehow emboldened within the confines of the pink brick walls and in the presence of Hattie Williams. He stopped picking the vegetables and stood to his feet. “Mrs. Williams, I don't want to shock you, but . . . I believe Samantha Cleaveland killed her husband.”
Gideon paused, waiting for a reaction from the old woman, but there was none. She simply continued to pluck tomatoes gingerly from the vines.
“I also believe, or rather I know,” he stammered and cleared his throat, “that Hezekiah was involved in an affair . . . with a man . . . which is why she killed him.”
Still no reaction.
“I also believe, ma'am . . . again, that is, I know . . . that Samantha tried to kill the man Hezekiah had an affair with so that he would not go public with his story.”
Gideon was shocked, but also frightened, by the lack of response to his seemingly outlandish allegations. He waited patiently for her to lash out and demand indignantly that he leave her garden.
Instead, Hattie kept her back to him and continued to slowly fill her basket. Then, finally, he heard a mournful whisper. “I know, baby. I know.”
There was silence in the Eden-like garden. A white butterfly pirouetted around the petals of the foxgloves. The flutters of a thousand ladybug wings whispered on the back of a gentle breeze that swept through the vegetables.
“You know?” Gideon finally said, breaking the spell the silence had cast. “How do you know?”
“God tells us all things, son. Some of us just listen better than others.”
“But, Mrs. Williams, if you knew, why didn't you tell someone?”
Hattie finally stood and faced him. They now stood only yards apart across neatly hoed rows of vegetables.
“And say what, son? That I had a vision of Samantha killing her husband in my kitchen window.”
Gideon saw clearly the anguish and pain in the old woman's face as she spoke.
“I know why God put me on this earth,” Hattie continued. “Not to interfere with His work or to tell people how they should live their lives. He put me here as an intercessor. Do you know what that is?”
Before Gideon could answer, Hattie spoke again. “He put me here to pray for others when they can't pray for themselves. To put my spirit between them and the evil that threatens to destroy their souls. To intercede and plead their case before God when they don't even know they're in danger. Now, what God ultimately does is not for me to say. From the first day I met Hezekiah T. Cleaveland, I was on my knees, praying for him. I saw he was in danger, and I prayed for God to save him, but . . .”
Gideon saw the tears forming in Hattie's eyes. Her voice began to tremble as she spoke.
“I prayed that God would spare him, but he had a different plan.” Hattie wiped a tear from her cheek with the apron that was cinched around her waist. “I did my job, son. I did exactly what God put me on this earth to do. No more and no less.”
Gideon felt her pain, but he pressed on. “But you voted to make her pastor. Even though you knew what she had done?”
Hattie sat the basket of tomatoes on the ground. The weight had become too much for her to bear. She looked at the flowers and said, “I thought it was the only way for the church to survive. Hezekiah gave his life for that church, and millions of people around the world depend on it for their spiritual nourishment. She was the only person who could keep it alive.”
Again silence took control of the garden. The ladybugs rested their wings, and the butterfly settled on the petal of a flower.
“Considering all that has happened since his death, do you still feel you made the right decision?” Gideon asked delicately.
Hattie looked at the butterfly and simply said, “I don't know, baby. I just don't know anymore.”
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“Gideon, please, I'm begging you to leave her alone. She's too dangerous.”
“I can't do that, Danny. She has to be stopped. She's killed once, that we know of. She tried to kill you, and she's threatened me. I can't just walk away.”
Danny sat upright on the chaise lounge when he heard the words. The sun was just setting behind the Hollywood Hills. Danny and Gideon were sitting by the pool in Gideon's backyard. Parker purred as he lay curled in a gray ball on the tiled terrace between the two men.