Samaria Jacobs is a deceitful, yet captivating diva who will do anything to win the heart of her married lover. Will she get her man or destroy herself and everyone else in the process? Samaria has her sights set on Gregory Preston. A successful surgeon, he has just the bankroll she needs to keep her in the lifestyle that her credit card debt has helped her grow accustomed to. He's married, but Samaria would never let a little thing like that get in her way.
Samaria joins New Mercies Christian Church to get close to Gregory's wife. If she gets to know Angelina Preston, she can become like her in more than just looks, and really work her way into Greg's heart.
Angelina's life is filled with a successful career and busy ministry work, but something's just not right with her marriage. Late nights, early meetings, lipstick- and perfume-stained shirts have her suspicious that Greg is doing a little more operating than she'd like. But does she have the strength to confront the only man she's ever loved and risk losing him to the other woman?
Just when Samaria thinks she's got it all figured out, she finds herself drawn to Angelina's kindness. Will she be able to carry out her plan after she finds herself yearning for the one thing she's never had. . .the friendship of a woman?
Release date:
January 1, 2012
Publisher:
Urban Books
Print pages:
384
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I stepped into the classroom marked “Women’ s Bible Study” with a mission in mind that had nothing to do with Jesus. I was going to get to know more about my man’ s wife and use what I learned to steal her husband. This place they called holy ground was about to become a battleground. The plan was Operation Steal Greg.
“Is this classroom C?” I made sure to add just the right mix of airhead and sweet church girl to my voice. The door was clearly marked, but I had to say something because I was late, and all the real church sisters were already seated and staring.
A plump chick in her late thirties jumped to her feet like someone yelled happy birthday and she was popping out of a cake. “Yes, sister, come in. Have a seat.” She swayed an open palm in the direction of the chair she’d vacated.
I smiled tight, then took two steps to the left and away from the over eager beaver. “Thanks.” I crinkled my nose and pointed. “I’ll take something over there.”
Big girl looked disappointed, but my choice of seating was strategic, so I wasn’t giving in to sad puppy eyes. I flicked a lock of my hair over my shoulder and did a visual sweep of the occupants. Thirty or so women were dispersed throughout the room in small groups that reminded me of cliques in the high school cafeteria. I could tell they were the kind that chewed you up and spit you out like the mystery meat that followed Tuesday’ s spaghetti.
Since they were staring, I put a little extra motion into my well practiced jig. Sixty eyeballs followed the rhythmic gliding of my hips as I made my way to what I thought would be the perfect seat to make observations; the vacant back row. I rested my Dolce Gabana handbag on an empty seat, picked up the Bible that lay in wait for me, and as a final gesture for the royal nosies, wiggled down into the chair and crossed one leg over the other.
Try that, I thought, noticing more than half the occupants in the room were overweight and hard pressed to cross any extremity over the other.
I turned my attention to the woman behind the podium who I figured must be the Bible Study teacher, if that’s what you called the presenter at a thing like this. The only study groups I’d attended were for school. Church wasn’t my thing. I had never quite figured out the purpose for it all, and as far as I could see, most of the hypocritical, nasty, backbiting Christians I worked with hadn’ t either. Nah, I’d taken a pass on the church thing—until now.
“Hello.” The teacher met my gaze. “I’m Sister Green. Welcome to women’s Bible Study. ”Then, with an uncomfortable cough, she dropped her eyes to the book she was holding.
So much for introductions.
“Let’s go to the sixteenth verse, and if you would, Sister Hawkins, read down to verse twenty-one for us, ”Sister Green continued.
A wiry woman not too far from me stood to her feet and began reading, “So I say, live by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the sinful nature. For the sinful ...”
I tuned her out, after all, that wasn’t the reason I was here. I craned my neck left, and then right, looking for the person I’d come to see, but she wasn’t here. I’d only seen Greg’ s wife once, from a distance, when I’d lurked outside a charity event he’d slipped and told me they were attending.
Angelina Preston had long hair that fell in an angled bob down her back. No one’s do fit the bill from where I sat, and because I was in the back, I couldn’t see any of their faces. I hoped I hadn’ t wasted an evening coming to this gathering of stuck up, sanctimonious, women for nothing. I snapped the Bible closed I’d open across my knee and began tapping my heel impatiently. Just when I was about to call it a wrap, the door opened.
Angelina Preston swept into the room looking like an African American corporate Barbie doll in a chocolate St. John suit, Jimmy Choo slingbacks, and matching handbag. I let my mental calculator go to work. The woman was wearing close to a thousand dollars worth of gear, and that didn’t include the rocks in her ears or the one that for sure was weighing down her left hand.
I squirmed in my seat. I wanted to curse, but remembered I was in a church, so I bit my tongue. Talk about a bad sister. I uncrossed my legs and watched Angelina glide across the short space and slide effortlessly into a seat. Her featherweight hair billowed like smoke behind her. She turned to the women on her left and right, offered them a few words and a quick smile through perfect teeth, and looked to Sister Green.
“Sister Preston, we’re glad you’re here. I’ll turn the lesson over to you. ”Sister Green moved away from the podium like someone had told her there was a bomb underneath it. From the awkward way she had been conducting herself before Angelina showed up, I could tell she wasn’t one for public speaking. Her role as teacher really had me wondering about the church thing already.
Angelina stood and peeled off her jacket as she made her way to the front of the room. “Good evening, ladies.”
Her voice matched her corporate persona. It had that Demi Moore husky quality that was great for business, but also sexy to a lot of men in the bedroom. “Hmmm, something else to hate about her, ”I murmured under my breath.
“Thank you for excusing my tardiness. It couldn’t be helped. As most of you know, I’m on the board for the Department of Youth and Family Services, and thanks to the media, you’re probably also aware that we had a child death last night that necessitated an emergency board meeting.”
“How is the family, Sister Preston?” one of the women asked. A solemn pallor had fallen over the room. I vaguely remembered hearing something about a four-year-old foster child dying from an unexplained fall. I shuddered at the thought.
“The family is outraged, understandably, but I’m not really able to discuss the case.”
The women seemed to understand that. I had no idea Angelina was affiliated with child welfare. What thankless work for someone who—well—didn’t have to work at all.
“We can pray for the family after the meeting.” She closed the subject neatly. “Let’s pick up where we left off last week.”
“Sister Preston.” Big Girl stood and careened her neck in my direction. “We have a guest.”
Darn, I didn’t need anyone pointing me out. I was trying to be incognegro, but it was not to be so. Angelina wasn’t going to be rude and ignore a sista like her predecessor had.
She tilted her head ever so slightly, and her mouth eased into a smile that was full of sincerity. “I apologize for not noticing. I’m Angelina Preston, the women’s adult education coordinator for Greater Christian Life. Welcome. Please tell us your name and anything else you’d like to share with the group.”
I wasn’t sure how introductions were handled in church. I stood to my feet and stated the lie I’d prepared for this moment. I hesitated for a second, wondering if I were supposed to call myself sister, but then I realized Angelina hadn’ t put sister in front of her name, so I nixed it.
“Good evening, ladies. My name is Rae Burns. I’ve been coming to the church for a few weeks now. I live in Roswell. I’m single, and I work as a healthcare consultant.” I plopped down in my seat, shocked that perspiration had dotted my top lip and pleased that I hadn’t messed up and said my real name.
That coming to the church a few weeks part was not true either. Except to attend a wedding or funeral, tonight was the first time I’d stepped foot in this church or any church. I was thinking with nearly two thousand members that no one would know this was my first visit. I was obviously wrong. A few of them looked between each other, comparing mental notes, shaking their heads that they had not seen me at their service. I ignored them. I only cared what one woman thought, and that was the one who was looking directly at me.
“We’re glad to have you with us, Rae.” Angelina’s delivery was warm and sincere. “We hope that this evening is the first of many journeys into the Bible with us. ”After an appropriate pause for welcomes and nods from other women in the room, Angelina resumed her discussion of the lesson.
I resumed my studies also. From her appearance to her public speaking skills, the way she threw her hair over her shoulder and the classy way she held her swan-like neck, every word, every movement, everything about her was polished. Her persona seemed to be perfected to convey one resounding message. I am the hotness with a capital H. Don’t mess with me.
It was starting to get on my nerves because I was going to mess with her, and I hated the fact that I was starting to feel intimidated. I mean as far as looks, she was predictably what I expected. A doctor’s wife—classy. A handsome doctor’s wife—beautiful. I did notice one thing that I wouldn’t have guessed, not based on Greg’ s old southern money, Louisiana upbringing. Angelina wasn’t from the south. This surprised me because the southern gentlemen usually married the belles who understood them, but northern she was.
I had studied a lot of accents. She spoke that clipped English that well-to-do black folks from up north chirped in their superior, northernly way. My guess was this diva was from Jersey or Connecticut. Greg and I had never talked about it. With the exception of the few times he let me know Wednesday evenings were a good night for us to be together, because his wife taught Bible Study, he never mentioned her. The only reason I knew where to come tonight was because he’d been talking on the phone to her, and I overheard him sarcastically say something about her undying allegiance to Greater Christian. I had heard that name, Greater Christian, before, on radio advertisements. One trip to Google had me in the complete know.
I covertly tried to learn more about Mrs. Preston from Greg. A girl likes to know a little about her competition, but he was unwilling to share. That was a big why for me. Why no complaints like most married men? The complaints were what usually soothed their dogged guilt. His lack of flack about the Mrs. made me wonder how Greg soothed his. Surely he had some. I knew he wasn’t absolving it in church because he laughed when he told me he hadn’t been to church in years. “That’s my wife’s bag.” His tone was full of venom. The good doctor and Jesus had fallen out over something, so I felt sure I wouldn’ t be running into him here.
Angelina Preston was attractive, well bred, and my guess would be educated, but obviously, as my mama always told me, all that glittered wasn’t gold. Her husband was in my bed.
I let out a long sigh. I was no fool. I understood how the cheating husband thing worked. Most men didn’t leave their wives because they actually loved them or something like that. Chicks on the side, I had learned early on, fell into one or two categories. The first was what I called “something different.” This would be a woman that was completely different from the wife; usually a real freaky-deak who probably traveled with handcuffs and a portable pole. She was willing to do the things wifey had never done or didn’ t respect the Negro enough to do anymore. But she was a distraction, a way to make the man feel better about his boring home life.
The second category, and the one I preferred to be, was the new model. That was simply a younger version of the current wife. From my experience, more often than not, the younger version was more common, at least amongst the upper middle class men I spent my time with. Their wives didn’t stroke them in the right places anymore. First and foremost, the ego and then ... well, let’s say most of the married men I’d dated didn’ t think they were getting enough sex. I liked being the new model. It held more promise. After all, who was going to actually leave their wife for a freak? You couldn’t take a freak to a business dinner or a charity affair, but you could take the new model anywhere and everywhere, and that’s what I had in mind. My future.
I squinted for a better view. Now that Angelina was really close up I could see the similarity; same complexion, bone structure, height—heck, did we get our hair wrapped at the same salon? I thought, patting my shoulder length tresses. Add ten years and fifteen pounds and I was already Mrs. Gregory Preston. I clucked my teeth. I didn’t like what I saw. The woman was darn near perfect, which meant this might be more difficult than I’d originally thought. But I was up to the challenge. Nothing in life that was worth having came easy, and getting my claws into a successful surgeon like Dr. Gregory Preston would be worth whatever I had to go through, including this boring study lesson. Besides, starting over with another man was out of the question. I needed big money soon, or I was going to lose everything I had.
“You know the church used to be a place you could go to get away from the world. ”Carol Wright fingered the strand of pearls that hung around her neck. The sour expression on her face made Angelina think the crème puffs she’d eaten were bad.
Angelina followed Carol’s eyes to find her staring at the young woman who had introduced herself as Rae Burns earlier. She could see what Carol found so distasteful. The dress was way too tight and much too short for anything other than a cathouse or a nightclub. Her makeup was so heavy Angelina thought if she stuck a finger in her cheek it would leave a hole. And those breasts, bad implants that stuck out from the woman’s small frame like full water balloons at a carnival shooting gallery. Still, that was no reason to stare at her like she was from Mars.
“I don’t think getting away from the world was ever the intent. ”Angelina pulled her eyes from Rae who had moved from the refreshment table that was set up at the back of the Bible Study classroom. Most of the women were avoiding her. The women at Greater Christian Life always shunned outsiders. Angelina knew that needed to change. She’d talked to them many times about welcoming others into the fold, but everyone at this church was so cliquish. That was one of the reasons the Bible Study wouldn’t grow beyond its current attendance. People flocked to the services on Sundays to hear pastor’s messages, but that was the extent of it. Once they attended a Bible Study or other ministry meeting and met with the cold reception, they didn’ t come back. She was trying to change that. At least, in her class.
“I don’t mean people shouldn’t be saved. I mean they need to assimilate. When in Rome, do as the Romans,” Carol continued. “She can’t do anything about those ridiculous boobs, but she can dress more appropriately.”
Angelina pursed her lips. “Don’t do that.”
Carol gave her a look that said, what? Then she pushed her shoulders back. “I can’t help it. When you buy them they’re no longer breasts.”
“Oh, and I suppose when you paid for your weave it was no longer hair?”
“Ha-ha.” Carol took a finger and swept back a stray strand that hadn’t moved with the rest of it. “Since you’re in a funny mood, the joke can be on you. She can be your mentee.”
Angelina’s shoulders dropped. She didn’ t have time for another project. She was busy at work and now this child death situation.
“I know it’s my turn,” Carol said, “but I don’t have the patience for all the ghetto fabulous drama.” Angelina eyed Carol suspiciously. “Besides this Mentor-a-Sister thing was your idea, so you can take the lead on that messy job.”
Angelina looked at Rae again. Carol was right. Mentor-a-Sister was one of many ideas that she’d had for the women’s group. The older women were supposed to teach the younger women. That was the scriptural reference for the project’s purpose. Others with similar purposes always ended due to lack of participation. Deep down inside Angelina knew why. The women of Greater Christian Life were a bunch of snobs. Doctorsand lawyers wives who lacked the patience for anyone who wasn’ t just like them. But she was determined that they were not going to sit around and do nothing to help other people. That’s what the church was for. She would resign her membership before she continued to worship in a house that wasn’ t relevant.
She let her eyes slide in Rae’s direction and wondered what had attracted her to Greater Christian in the first place. Angelina didn’t see a wedding band or an engagement ring. Then she remembered Rae said she was single. They didn’t often have young, single women. Not for more than one or two sessions anyway, and they’d never have any if they couldn’ t manage to keep one.
“You’re right. I’ll lead by example,” Angelina said with enthusiasm she wasn’t sure she felt. “You’ll see in no time, she’ll be all that God wants her to be.”
“You don’t have to shoot for God. If you can get her out of those tight clothes, I’ll give you twenty bucks.” Carol walked away and joined a small group of women across the room.
Angelina rolled her eyes. Somebody needed to mentor Carol. She put the cup she’d been holding to her mouth and drained it. She was tired and hungry. It had been an awful day, beginning with a call at five in the morning that one of their foster children had fallen from the landing of a staircase and broken her neck. The child was only four, and no matter how many times the social workers and supervisors tried to explain it, she couldn’t understand why they’d placed the child and her three-year-old sister in that home in the first place. There were too many accidents in the foster parentshistory.
Angelina had been on the board for four years, rising from the ranks of caseworker to supervisor to county director. Greg had pinned her inability to conceive children on the stress and aggravation from her work. Her friends agreed with solemn statements like, “That could be it, girl,” and “Maybe you should quit and see what happens. ”So she did, but not working at all was out of the question. She started Something Extra, a non-profit that raised funds to help foster children with the extras in life that foster care subsidy monies didn’t always stretch far enough to cover. That included money for Christmas presents, back–to–school clothing and supplies, cheerleading and football team fees, graduation dues, vacations; even vehicles and college scholarships when she could finagle them. She and her volunteers were busy all day every day, setting up fundraising events and begging for money to pay for them.
Angelina felt she had a special kinship with foster kids. Even though she’d grown up with her mother, she did understand the idea of not having parents. Her father had left right before her seventh birthday, and her mother worked two jobs. She was alone a lot.. . .
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