A knock on my office door was followed immediately by a glowing brown face, brilliant blue headband, and bouncy hair twists. “Are you alone, mi amiga?” Without waiting for an answer, Edesa Baxter called over her shoulder in a stage whisper, “Coast is clear. Hurry!”
The next moment, Josh Baxter hustled into my office, carrying a large bakery sheet cake, followed by Edesa with Gracie on her hip. They shut the door behind them and stood there like the Three Bears, caught sneaking into Goldilocks’s house instead.
“Can we hide this cake in here, Gabby? Josh, set it on top of the file cabinet, out of her way.”
“Um . . . sure. What’s going on?”
“Da-Da!” Gracie squealed, spying Dandy, who’d gotten up to sniff at our visitors.
“How d’ya like that?” Josh made a face as he carefully set the cake on top of the file cabinet. “She says ‘Da-Da’ and means ‘doggy.’”
I had to smile. The young Baxter family made such an odd, cute trio. The ten-month-old’s creamy tan skin and loose, black curls made her look as if she could be their natural child—white daddy, black mommy—instead of a Latina child in the process of being adopted. “Are you going to tell me what all this hush-hush business is about?”
Edesa leaned forward, keeping her voice low. “Sí! Sí! It is Estelle’s birthday today! But this is just the backup cake. Señor Harry is bringing—”
Oh no! Estelle’s birthday! I slapped my forehead. “Drat! I forgot! I even mentioned it to Mr. Bentley last week, and then . . .” I shook my head. “With all that’s happened this week, it totally slipped my mind. I don’t have a card or a gift or—”
Edesa put a finger on my lips. “Hush, mi amiga. It’s all right. Estelle thinks we’ve all forgotten. Which is good, since . . . why are you poking me, Josh?”
“Don’t give it away, Edesa, my sweet. It’s supposed to be a surprise, remember?”
“Sounds like a regular party.” Had to admit my nose felt a little out of joint. Seems like somebody should have at least told the person in charge of shelter activities what was going on. But Edesa and Josh didn’t seem to notice my little snit.
“Sí!” She giggled. “Estelle might guess that we’ll celebrate her birthday Sunday night at Yada Yada, but she won’t suspect anything today. Oh!” Edesa looked at her watch. “I’ve got to run. I’m teaching Bible study in ten minutes. Pray for me!” She handed the baby to her husband, blew them both a kiss, and disappeared out my door.
Yada Yada Sunday night. That was the prayer group Edesa and Estelle and Josh’s mother, Jodi, were part of. Knowing each other so well, they celebrated birthdays . . .
I shook off my melancholy, aware that Josh and Gracie were still standing in my two-bit office. “Say, Josh, as long as you’re here, I wanted to ask you about that sports clinic idea you once mentioned.”
“Sure, Mrs. Fairbanks—I mean, Gabby—I’d be glad to talk about that. But . . .” The young man shifted the baby in his arms and cleared his throat. “Maybe it’s none of my business, but Edesa said that you . . . uh, that your husband—”
“Josh. It’s all right. Sit down.” I indicated the metal folding chair leaning against the wall. As he flipped it open with his free hand, I went on. “If you mean, did my husband kick me out of our penthouse? Yes. That and he took the kids back to Virginia without my knowledge or permission. So . . .” I shrugged. “I’m staying here at Manna House for the time being. My mother too.” For some reason, it was easier to be matter-of-fact with this young man than it was with Edesa or Estelle or Mabel. I even allowed a sardonic half smile. “Every staff person ought to be a resident of the shelter for a while. Gives one a whole new perspective.”
Josh shook his head. “I’m so sorry, Gabby. I thought . . . well, guess I’d hoped Edesa and I could get to know you two better, you know, as an older couple who’ve been married a few years.”
Now I did have to blink back a few tears. I nodded. “Yeah, I know. That’s how it should be. But . . .” I bit my lip and glanced at my watch. Ten forty. Still three hours to go before I could meet with the lawyer. Philip and I were on a road I hoped Josh and Edesa never had to travel.
I’d intended to duck into Edesa’s Bible study, but Josh and I ended up tossing around different ideas to meet the needs of kids who ended up at the shelter, while Gracie grabbed things off my desk. Now that his classes at UIC were over, he said, he’d have more time on the weekends. “Weekdays, though, I’ll be working full-time for Peter Douglass till school starts again. He has his own business—Software Symphony. Edesa and I really need a bigger apartment, but that takes moola.”
Huh. Takes moola to get one, period.
Currently, there weren’t that many moms with kids at the shelter, but Josh talked about taking them to ball games this summer, finding a park where the preteens could shoot hoops and get some pointers, maybe starting a weekend league in this neighborhood for other kids. “My dad coaches some summer leagues. Maybe he could help us get started. We need a van, though. Can’t keep borrowing the one from the church.”
“Yeah, well, I just added a fifteen-passenger van to my program budget. We’ll see if the board has a collective heart attack . . . Oh my. Is that the bell for lunch already?” Well, at least the rest of the morning had gone fairly quickly. Only two more hours . . .
Estelle had outdone herself on the lunch menu. A chicken pasta salad with walnuts and grapes and hot garlic bread. Maybe she was celebrating her own birthday by giving everybody a treat. She was certainly dressed brightly today—a long, blue tunic with silver filigree around neck and sleeves, worn over wide-legged pants, though the big white apron and food-worker’s hairnet didn’t do anything for the outfit. But nobody said anything about “birthday,” so I kept mum, even when I went back for seconds.
While I was waiting my turn at the counter, I heard the doorbell ringing on the main floor . . . and then twice more, as if no one was around to answer. Darting up the stairs and through the multipurpose room, I reached the front door and pulled it open. My friend from Richmond Towers and a young boy stood on the steps.
“Mr. Bentley! Mm. Don’t tell me. You’re here because—”
“Uh, you said this was Estelle’s birthday, didn’t you?”
I sighed. “Yeah, I did. But with everything that’s happened this week, guess who forgot? Come on in.” I held the door for them as they stepped inside, noticing the big, square box the youngster was carrying. “Who’s your young helper here?”
Mr. Bentley grinned. “That’s right, you two haven’t met. This is my grandson, DeShawn. He’s living with me now. DeShawn, this is Mrs. Fairbanks. She’s, uh, from Richmond Towers, where I work. Here, let me take that.” He took the cake so his grandson could shake hands.
The boy grinned at me. He looked about nine years old, recent haircut, caramel-colored skin, a tad lighter than Mr. B, firm handshake. “I didn’t know you had a grandson.” I felt like kicking myself. Why hadn’t I ever asked Mr. Bentley if he had family? The boy was a little younger than Paul. If he’d just come to live with his grandfather, something must’ve happened to his mom and dad . . . like my boys, living with their grandparents now. But Mr. Bentley seemed tickled as all get-out. “I—I’m happy for you.”
“You doin’ okay? Your boys . . . ?”
“They’re okay. Just trying to get them back is all.” I managed a smile. “Look, you two can go on down. They’ve already started eating.”
“Uh, is there a way I can sneak this in without Estelle seeing? We’d like it to be a surprise.”
I peeked through the clear top of the cake box. Another cake—this one fat and round. “Wow. I guess we’re gonna pig out on cake today. Here, let me carry it. She won’t even notice what I’m carryin’ when she sees you.” I winked at Mr. B.
Sure enough, Estelle was so flustered to see Mr. Bentley, she didn’t even notice me taking the cake box to the other end of the room. She filled two more plates of food and even sat down with her guests at one of the tables, seemingly delighted at the news that the boy had come to live with his grandfather. “Stu told me!” she exclaimed.
Stu? That’s what she called her housemate, whose real name was Lily or Leslie Stuart or something like that. How did her housemate know Mr. Bentley? Now I was starting to feel left out. Everybody and their cousin seemed to know about Mr. Bentley’s grandson except me. Wasn’t he my friend first?
My disgruntled thoughts were interrupted by Mr. Bentley tapping a spoon on his glass for attention and announcing that this was a special day for a special lady—Estelle Williams’s birthday. She tried to make him sit down, but everybody began singing “Happy Birthday” in two or three different keys while Mr. B brought the new cake and set it in front of Estelle.
Yells of “Make a wish!” . . . “Ohh, now, that’s purty” . . . and “Cut it, Estelle! Don’t wait all day!” greeted the end of the song. Mr. Bentley handed a kitchen knife to the “birthday girl” and sat down again.
“Oh, now. This cake is just too pretty to cut,” Estelle protested sweetly, quickly taking off her apron and hairnet when Josh waved a camera.
“Cut it!” everyone yelled. I grinned. The residents were really enjoying this.
Estelle slid the knife through the frosting, thick with decorative pink and yellow sugar roses. Then she stopped, a puzzled frown pinching her forehead. She tried again in a different place. The knife only went one inch deep. “What?” she mumbled.
Behind Estelle, Edesa and Josh had hands over their mouths, trying to keep from laughing aloud. What in the world?
Estelle caught them. “Uh-huh. I get it now. ” Turning back to the cake, she lifted the knife over her head in both hands and plunged it into the middle of the cake. This time the knife went in, though it took an extra push on Estelle’s part. Then she lifted the knife and the whole cake came with it.
The entire dining room was gasping with laughter. “What is it?” . . . “What? No cake?”
Estelle lowered the cake to the table, the knife still plunged into its heart, then took a big swipe of the frosting with her finger until she reached the “cake.” “Uh-huh. Just what I thought. Foam cushions.” I’d never seen Mr. Bentley laugh so hard.
“Ah, he gotcha good!” Lucy yelled.
Estelle wagged her head. “Harry Bentley! I oughta throw this whole frosted pillow in your face, but I’m too . . . I’m too—” And forgetting decorum, she picked up the bogus cake and dumped it right on his bald head.
Mr. Bentley’s grandson was hopping up and down, pointing at his grandpa.
With perfect timing, Josh and Edesa brought out the real sheet cake from my office, giving Mr. B a chance to wipe frosting off his face and talk Estelle into letting him give her a birthday hug. I wanted to squeeze in my own hug and wish Estelle a happy birthday, but I glanced at the clock above the kitchen counter. Ten after one. My appointment at Legal Aid was at two! I needed to get out of there.
The prank Estelle’s friends had played on her—“It was all Mr. Bentley’s idea,” Josh had said—left me feeling strangely hopeful. Estelle had once been a resident at Manna House—though I still didn’t know why—but now look at her. Laughter. Jokes. New friends. Even a new beau . . .
“Mrs. Fairbanks?”
I looked up from the magazine I’d been flipping through in the waiting area of the Legal Aid clinic to see a man standing in the doorway, looking at me expectantly. Wait a minute. I’d been expecting some freckle-faced, idealistic law student in his twenties. Or maybe a fatherly type, retired, rich, doing pro bono work on the side. But this man was late thirties, probably five-eleven, wire-rim specs, brown hair with blond flecks brushed neatly to one side, nice tan, open-necked shirt tucked into a pair of jeans. Could’ve been Bill Gates for all I knew. Sure of himself. Decidedly casual.
And boots. I smiled, feeling a surge of familiarity. Maybe it was my North Dakota blood, but Lee Boyer—if this was indeed Lee Boyer—could’ve walked right off a cattle ranch into my father’s carpet store.
I followed the man back to a small cubicle office and sat in the chair facing the cluttered desk while he shut the door. On closer look, those flecks in his hair were more silver than gold. Okay, maybe forty-something.
“What can I do for you, Mrs. Fairbanks?”
My mouth went dry. For some reason I felt embarrassed to tell my sob story to this man, who looked like someone I might’ve gone to school with back at the University of ND. But that’s why I was here. To his credit, the lawyer took copious notes. He asked a few more questions about my mother. Did I have power of attorney for her? If not, was she rational enough to sign over power of attorney?
I felt frustrated by the direction of his questions. “Mr. Boyer, it’s my kids—”
“I understand, Mrs. Fairbanks. But the fact that you currently have responsibility for your mother, who seems to be suffering from some kind of dementia, definitely strengthens your case.” He handed me a set of power of attorney forms to fill out. “Talk to your sisters and your mother and get these filled out, all right? It’s important. Now . . .” He leaned back thoughtfully, making a tent with his fingers. “Let’s start at the beginning. Your husband is in violation of both Family Law and the Landlord-Tenant Law by changing the locks of your apartment without a court order. It doesn’t matter if your name is not on the lease. Your husband can’t evict you without proper legal procedures, and you can get a court order to return to the apartment.”
“A court order? How long would that take? He’s given notice that he’s breaking the lease and plans to move out by the end of the month. That’s next week!”
“Hm. That’s tight. We could try to hurry that along, but maybe the main question is, are you prepared to take over the lease if your husband bails?”
Take over the lease? I shook my head slowly. “No way could I afford the penthouse at Richmond Towers on my own. Even if I could, I don’t want it. Not now. Please. Just get my kids back. That’s all I care about.”
He jotted another note. “All right. We’ll come back to this later. Now, the kids . . . P. J. and Paul, you said. If there is no order giving your husband custody—”
“Absolutely not!”
“—and if he has hidden your children in another state, you can call the police on the in-laws for kidnapping—based on the grounds that he can move with them, but he cannot move the kids alone and leave them in the care and custody of another, without your consent or a valid court order.”
“But I already called the police.” I’d left that part out, hoping to get a different answer from the lawyer—or that the lawyer would call the police when he heard my story. But now I rehashed what happened when I’d called 9-1-1.
The lawyer pulled a law manual from a stack on his desk and flipped through it. A minute passed, then two. Then he nodded. “Well, that’s right. Since the kids aren’t being hidden, and you’re able to talk with them by phone, there would be no charge for kidnapping.” Lee Boyer leaned forward, hazel eyes behind the wire rims sympathetic. “But no judge is going to take kindly to what your husband has done, Mrs. Fairbanks. At this point, our options are to file an unlawful eviction case and a custody case, and we can merge these into one. And divorce. You definitely have grounds to file for divorce.”
Divorce? “Uh, wait a minute. Can’t I get my kids back without a divorce?”
“Of course. But you should know your rights, Mrs. Fairbanks. Your husband has left you virtually penniless. If you successfully file for divorce, you are entitled to half of your husband’s estate.”
My eyes widened. “Did you say . . . half of what my husband is worth?” I almost laughed aloud. Oh, wouldn’t that news spin Philip’s clock!
Lee Boyer nodded. “And you have a strong case, though you should do what you can to make it even stronger. Prove you can support your children. Get a higher-paying job if necessary. For goodness’ sake, get out of the shelter and find an apartment with adequate room for two young teens! I have to warn you, Mrs. Fairbanks. We are Legal Aid. We do what we can. But someone like your husband, with a high-powered job and the money to retain an expensive lawyer, can keep throwing legal hurdles in the way to make life difficult.”
His eyes were kind. “Just so you know . . . this might take awhile.”