theyâd make the necessary adjustments. A child was welcome into their lives at any time. Love guaranteed.
F or the life of her, Monica hadnât been able to forget the private investigator. Heaven knew sheâd tried. He was little better than an alcoholic, drinking beer in the middle of the day. Not only that, heâd been arrogant, rude, and curt with her. Heâd treated her as if she were a senseless child when sheâd tried to help him.
Monica didnât understand what it was about this one man that intrigued her so. Sheâd gone to bed that night and dreamed of him. Sheâd woken breathless, her heart pounding double time. A woman had no control over her dreams, Monica assured herself. If she had, Monica certainly wouldnât have allowed that . . . man to touch her. The very idea was appalling. No, Monica corrected, closing her eyes and shaking her head, that wasnât the truth. It was the problem. She had thought about him touching her, kissing her. Her untamed imagination had taken over and sheâd allowed it to happen in her dreams.
âThere you are,â her father said, strolling into the living room. âIâve been looking for you.â He settled down in the leather chair by the fireplace and reached for the evening paper. âIâm afraid Iâm going to need you tomorrow afternoon.â
âFor what?â He seemed to forget she had a job and even if she did work as the church secretary it was a demanding position. Her father would cover for her if necessary, but she would rather he asked first instead of volunteering her services, which was something he often did.
âMrs. Ferdnand just phoned and she canât be a bell ringer for the shift she signed up to take last Sunday.â
âBut, Dad.â Standing on a cold street corner and collecting charitable donations was the last way Monica wished to spend an afternoon. An hour never lasted so long and by the end of her shift sheâd be frozen solid.
âI wouldnât ask if it wasnât necessary.â
âI know.â It was useless to argue with him. The man had the patience of Job and an answer for every argument.
âItâs downtown so youâll be sure to get plenty of traffic,â her father added, reaching for the sports section of the newspaper and folding it open.
âGreat.â She stabbed the needle into the fabric and set aside her needlepoint. After working on this Ten Commandment project for weeks she was only on the fourth commandment, which meant she hadnât a prayer of finishing before Christmas. She studied the tiny stitches. Ironically the one she was currently stitching stated Honor Thy Father and Thy Mother. God must have worked it out that way, sealing any argument she might have given.
âAre you all right?â her father asked her unexpectedly, momentarily setting the paper aside.
âIâm fine,â she said, then amended, âa little tired perhaps.â
âI thought as much. You donât seem to be yourself lately.â
âOh?â
âI know this thing with Patrick hurt you and . . .â
âPatrick is a friend, Dad. He was never anything more. I donât know why you insist upon dragging his name into every conversation.â It was a white lie to suggest she hadnât cared about Patrick, but sometimes she found those necessary, although she was never comfortable stretching the truth.
âI noticed Michael talking to you the other day. Heâs a very nice young man.â He eyed her speculatively as if waiting for her to comment.
âVery nice,â she agreed. But Michael didnât stir her blood, he didnât make her heart throb and the thought of him kissing her produced not so must as a whit of excitement.
Her father was right, there was definitely something wrong with her.
The following afternoon, Monica was dressed in her dark blue suit, standing on the corner of