What's Done In the Dark Read online




  RESHONDA TATE BILLINGSLEY

  Her bestselling novels of family and faith have been hailed as:

  “Emotionally charged . . . not easily forgotten.”

  —Romantic Times

  “Steamy, sassy, sexy.”

  —Ebony

  “Compelling, heartfelt.”

  —Booklist

  “Full of palpable joy, grief, and soulful characters.”

  —The Jacksonville Free Press

  “Poignant and captivating, humorous and heart-wrenching.”

  —The Mississippi Link

  DON’T MISS THESE WONDERFUL NOVELS:

  The Secret She Kept

  “Entertaining and riveting. . . . A heartfelt and realistic look at the damaging effects of mental illness on those who suffer from it and the ones who bear the burden along with them. . . . Jaw-dropping, a drama-filled story. . . . Definitely a must-read.”

  —AAM Book Club

  Say Amen , Again

  Winner of the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work

  “Heartfelt. . . . A fast-paced story filled with vivid characters.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  Everybody Say Amen

  A USA Today Top Ten Summer Sizzler!

  “A fun, redemptive book, packed with colorful characters, drama, and scandal.”

  —RT Book Reviews

  A BET ORIGINAL MOVIE!

  Let the Church Say Amen

  #1 Essence magazine bestseller One of Library Journal’s Best Christian Books

  “Billingsley infuses her text with just the right dose of humor to balance the novel’s serious events.”

  —Library Journal (starred review)

  “Amen to Let the Church Say Amen. . . . [A] well-written novel.”

  —Indianapolis Recorder

  “Her community of very human saints will win readers over with their humor and verve.”

  —Booklist

  A Good Man Is Hard to Find

  “Billingsley’s engaging voice will keep readers turning the pages and savoring each scandalous revelation.”

  —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

  Holy Rollers

  “Sensational. . . . [Billingsley] makes you fall in love with these characters.”

  —RT Book Reviews

  The Devil Is a Lie

  “An entertaining dramedy.”

  —Ebony

  “A romantic page-turner dipped in heavenly goodness.”

  —Romantic Times (4 1/2 stars)

  “Fast moving and hilarious.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  Can I Get a Witness?

  A USA Today 2007 Summer Sizzler

  “An emotional ride.”

  —Ebony

  “Billingsley serves up a humdinger of a plot.”

  —Essence

  The Pastor’s Wife

  “Billingsley has done it again. . . . A true page turner.”

  —Urban Reviews

  I Know I’ve Been Changed

  #1 Dallas Morning News bestseller

  “Grabs you from the first page and never lets go. . . . Bravo!”

  —Victoria Christopher Murray

  “An excellent novel with a moral lesson to boot.”

  —Zane, New York Times bestselling author

  Thank you for downloading this Gallery Books eBook.

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  1

  Felise

  “ANY MAN THAT CAN RESIST this must not be a man!” I giggled as I wiggled my toned behind in the full-length mirror in my bedroom. I made sure my snow white lace thong was situated just right, then brushed down the candy-apple-red negligee. I’d never in my life spent two hundred dollars on lingerie, but I wanted tonight to be special. I needed tonight to be special.

  My commitment to Shaun T’s Rockin’ Body workout DVD had paid off. Everything was tight in all the right places, and my body looked like it belonged to someone who was twenty-five—not the thirty-five-year-old mother that I am.

  I fluffed my curls and gave one last smile to my reflection. Today was my fifteenth anniversary, and I was determined that a sex life that died fourteen years ago would be resurrected tonight.

  I had taken all of my sister, Fran’s advice. Even though she was single, she never had a shortage of men. She swore it was her ability to give good loving that kept her Rolodex on fire.

  I pressed play on my iPod to start setting the mood with all of our favorite songs. I dimmed the lights as the sounds of Luther filled the room. I had left a trail of rose petals—from the garage, through the kitchen, up the stairs, into our bedroom, then finally all over the bed. I wanted Greg to experience the alluring ambience the moment he walked through the door.

  I checked, then triple-checked that everything—the wine, the rose petals, the scented sheets—was just right. But my smile faded when I noticed the time. It was eight thirty. Two hours past the time my husband had said that he’d be home. I immediately felt myself getting frustrated. I had moved heaven and earth to get someone to cover my shift at the hospital so I’d be home in time. I had hoped my husband could do the same.

  I took a deep breath. I was not going to stress about tonight. Greg was a borderline obsessive-compulsive workaholic who was dedicated to his job as a successful investment banker. For our anniversary, though, I hoped he would try his best to relax and just enjoy himself. And tonight I was going to help him make that happen. He would relax, and we would rekindle the spark that had long ago been extinguished.

  I threw on my silk robe and busied myself with my iPhone messages until I finally heard the door chime, signaling Greg was home. I glanced at the digital clock on the nightstand: 8:52.

  Okay, Greg was late but not that late, I told myself. We could still salvage this night. I removed my robe and eased into a sexy position on the bed. I plastered on a seductive smile and waited for the door to open.

  A few minutes later, I glanced over at the clock again.

  9:06.

  “Okay, what is taking him so long to get upstairs?” I mumbled.

  When the clock hit 9:18, I had had enough. I got up, grabbed my robe, and made my way downstairs. That had to have been Greg coming in because our daughter, Liz, was spending the night with a friend.

  I peeked out the small bay window near the staircase. Greg’s car was parked in the driveway, so he was home. What in the world was he doing? Surely he had seen the trail of rose petals.

  I had just reached the middle of the stairs when I heard the vacuum cleaner. Not understanding, I descended a few more steps. Then my mouth fell open when I saw my husband vigorously vacuuming up the rose petals I had so meticulously laid out.

  “What are you doing?” I screamed over the vacuum.

  He glanced up. “Hey, babe, getting all this stuff up off the floor. Liz must’ve made a mess or something.”

  I stared at my husband in disbelief. “Are you serious?”

  He didn’t reply as he took the hose off the vacuum and began sucking up the petals off the stairs.

  “Liz didn’t do that! I did!” I yelled over the vacuum.

  He didn’t stop cleaning. “You did this? What did you spill?”

  I picked up a few petals at my feet, then threw them at him. Of course, they didn’t do anything but flutter back to the ground. “I didn’t spill anything. I laid them out! It was a trail of rose petals.”

  He looked at me like that was the dumbest thing I�
�d ever done.

  “Well, you know I like to come home to a clean house.” He finally cut the vacuum off and started picking up the rose petals the machine hadn’t nabbed. “Why do you have all of this stuff laid out like this anyway?”

  Only then did he glance up at me and notice the negligee. “What are you wearing?”

  I wanted to cry. I knew we hadn’t been intimate in a long time, but this was ridiculous. “What does it look like I’m wearing, Greg?”

  “Oooh,” he said, as realization set in. “I’ve just been preoccupied.” He took a step toward me. “I’m sorry, you know things have been crazy at work.” He stopped talking to manically pick up some rose petals that he missed. “I’m sorry, you know clutter bugs me. But I appreciate the effort.” He leaned in to kiss me.

  I pushed him away, though not hard enough to send him down the stairs. “Are you serious?”

  “No, it just caught me by surprise. Usually, you have on a head scarf and some sweats when I get in.” I was the one surprised when he added, “What’s the occasion anyway?”

  I stood waiting for him to break out into laughter. Tell me I was being punk’d, anything. Finally I said, “Today, Greg. Fifteen years.”

  The truth finally dawned on him. “Oh, my God, babe. Our anniversary. I am so, so sorry. You know I’ve been swamped at work, and I just completely lost track of what day it was.”

  I shook my head in disbelief. The tears I had been holding back made their escape. I had no words as I spun around and marched back to our bedroom.

  “Come on, don’t be mad,” he said, following me.

  I don’t know why I was even shocked. I decided to turn around and give him a piece of my mind. But before I could speak, I noticed him picking up rose petals in the hallway.

  “Ughhh!” I screamed, slamming the bedroom door.

  I wanted to leave. I didn’t even feel like taking the negligee off. I just wanted to get away from this suffocating house and away from my inconsiderate and unaffectionate husband.

  Our once-a-week sexual escapades had dwindled to twice a month, then to once every other month. It was unreal. I used to think he was seeing someone else. After all, he’d cheated on me shortly after we got married. We’d gone to counseling and, I thought, moved past it. But the past three years especially had been brutal. I felt completely neglected. I’d even hired a private investigator to have him followed. But three thousand dollars later, all I discovered was what I already knew: my husband was simply a severe workaholic.

  But tonight was the last straw.

  I snatched a maxi dress off the hanger in my walk-in closet, then slipped it over my head. I then snatched a change of clothes and stuffed them in my gym bag. I couldn’t stand to be in the same house with him another minute.

  I marched back downstairs. I found my husband actually taking out the garbage. “You can clean up the rose petals in the bedroom now,” I said, whisking past him.

  “Babe, come on, don’t be mad at me. I was just taking the garbage out while I gave you a minute to cool down.”

  “Well, I’m cool. Cold as ice.”

  “Where are you going?”

  I ignored him as he followed me out in the garage.

  “Felise! I said I’m sorry.”

  I continued to ignore him as I got in the car and backed out. I didn’t know where I was going, but at the moment, any place that was far away from Gregory Mavins was exactly where I wanted to be.

  2

  Paula

  I CAN’T BELIEVE I PRAYED for this.

  I mean, growing up, all I thought about was becoming a mother. I wanted to be a wife and have a house full of wonderful kids.

  That was my dream. This was my nightmare.

  “Stevie, if you don’t get your butt down off of that sofa!” I screamed at my oldest son. “And now, look, the twins are up there, too. You know they’re going to do whatever you do.” I swatted at my ten-year-old and turned my attention back to the phone. I’d picked it up when it rang, but I hadn’t even had a chance to speak when I noticed my kids acting plumb fools. Again.

  “Hello?” I said, exasperated.

  “Just one time, I’m going to call your house and have a civil conversation without you going off on your kids.”

  I tried to smile at the sound of my best friend’s voice. But I wasn’t in a smiling mood. These kids had worked my last nerve. Again.

  Don’t get me wrong, I love my kids. I really do. But my oldest, Tahiry, was fourteen and in that stage where I couldn’t stand her. Then my ten-year-old son was ADD, ADHD, or one of those other acronyms to describe a child who couldn’t keep his butt still. And then, just when I thought I was done having kids, I got a double surprise three years ago. Marcus and Mason. You know that 99.9 percent effective rate for birth control? My twins are that 0.01 percent because I took my pills faithfully. So imagine my surprise when my doctor informed me that my ulcer was actually babies (with an s).

  So, with three rambunctious boys and a teen who was feeling herself, I wouldn’t be experiencing any peaceful moments in my house any time soon.

  “Stevie, watch your brothers. I’m going out here to have a smoke.”

  “You know cigarettes kill people,” Tahiry said, not looking up from her spot on the recliner where she’d been texting God knows who for the past two hours.

  “So does having kids,” I mumbled.

  Stevie stopped jumping long enough to say, “For real, Ma. They told us at school that cigarettes turn your lungs black and you get all crippled and stuff and can’t breathe. I can’t be having a jacked-up-looking mom, coughing and stuff.”

  “She’s not going to be jacked up,” Tahiry said. “She’s gonna be dead.”

  “You’re gonna die, Mommy?” Marcus asked in horror.

  “Of course not, son.”

  “If she doesn’t stop smoking, she will.” Tahiry shrugged nonchalantly. Did I mention I couldn’t stand my daughter?

  “My dad quit smoking and got run over by a Mack truck,” I said, grabbing my pack of Virginia Slims and making my way out onto our back deck.

  “Why are you telling your kids that?” Felise said on the phone. “You know your dad died in a regular car accident.”

  I plopped down on a patio chair. “Regardless, he’d stopped smoking and he died anyway.”

  I didn’t start smoking until I had kids. I knew it was a nasty habit, and my husband, Steven, hated it. But I needed something to take the edge off, and since I wasn’t much of a drinker, I medicate with cigarettes.

  “What’s up? What are you doing?” Felise said. “I was hoping I could come scoop you up and we could go have a drink or something.” She sounded distressed, but as much as I would’ve loved to have spent the evening catching up with her over drinks, that was no longer my reality.

  “Girl, please. Steven is gone. As usual. So I’m stuck at home with the kids. Their behinds need to be in the bed, but I just don’t have the strength to fight with them. I hate summers.” I lit my cigarette and took a long inhale. The smoke immediately began relaxing my nerves.

  “Isn’t your mom there?”

  I blew out a puff of smoke. “Yeah, but she’s about to go play bingo. Besides, I wouldn’t be good company. I’m in a foul mood.”

  “Which is exactly why you need to get out. I’m in a foul mood, too, and I need to vent.”

  “About what?” I didn’t give her time to answer before adding, “Why are you going to have a drink anyway? Isn’t today your anniversary?”

  “That’s what I need to talk about.”

  Suddenly, the patio door opened, and Tahiry stepped out. “Mom, you might want to get in here. The boys are having a water gun fight in your living room.”

  “Are you freakin’ kidding me?” I screamed. “Felise, I’m sorry, you’ll have to tell me what’s going on later. I have yet another catastrophe to go deal with. Call you later.”

  I hung up the phone. I couldn’t even hold a freakin’ conversation with my best friend. Th
at’s how messed up my life was.

  I took a quick last puff of my cigarette, tossed it down, and hurried back inside. I immediately told myself to follow my therapist’s advice and use my “calm” voice.

  “Stevie, Marcus, and Mason,” I began, “please don’t jump on the sofa and shoot water guns in my house.” They looked at me for barely a moment, and then Mason sprayed Marcus as they took off running.

  See? I don’t know what kind of school my therapist went to or what kind of kids she was used to dealing with, but that calm mess didn’t work on my kids. I wanted to whip their behinds—like my mom used to do me—but Steven didn’t believe in spankings. To me, that was part of the reason our kids were out of control.

  “If y’all don’t stop it right now!” I screamed. That got the reaction I had been looking for, and everyone came to a halt. “Go to bed! Don’t play with any toys, just put on your pajamas and get in the bed!”

  They sulked as they walked off. Tahiry, who was still texting away on her phone, didn’t bother looking up as she said, “You should have stopped having kids at me.”

  I wanted to tell her I should’ve never started with her. But since that’s not something I’d ever verbalize to my children, I kept quiet.

  Things had so not turned out like I planned. By college I’d shed those domestic dreams of childhood. I was going to be a big-time actress. I’d even dropped out of Howard University my junior year to pursue my dream. But after a couple of commercials, that dream had died really quick, and before I knew it, I was working in retail. I still got bit parts here and there, but nothing to consider a real acting career. Then, Felise, who had been my best friend since ninth grade, had introduced me to Steven when he’d moved to DC to go to Georgetown Law. Before I knew it, we were in deep. Tahiry was conceived two months after we started dating. Steven did the honorable thing and married me, and the course of my life was rewritten.

  While I wouldn’t say Steven had pressured me into marriage, it’s not something I just had to do. But heaven forbid the esteemed son of Texas judge Walter Wright have a child out of wedlock. Not to mention the pressure from my family. Everyone made me feel so guilty that I felt that I had no choice but to get married. And although I’d learned to love my life, I now felt trapped. And resentful. On top of that, Steven worked so much. He was one of the most sought-after criminal defense attorneys in Texas. I was a stay-at-home mom, and I didn’t want to be. My passion was the theater. Just last month I’d been offered a role in a local stage play by an old director I used to work with. But they were planning to go on tour, and I couldn’t very well abandon my kids and go traipsing around the country with some play.