Touched by Angels Page 0,98

me to marry him. I didn't want to agree, but at the time it seemed like the best thing to do. You and Dad were so pleased, and you both like Carl."

"He's been like a son to me," her father admitted sadly.

"I'm sorry, Dad," Hannah whispered. "I didn't mean to disappoint you." Before either one could say anything more, she rushed out of the apartment.

"Hannah, please, don't go," her mother shouted from the top of the stairway, but Hannah pretended not to hear. Never in all her life had she ignored her mother and father.

Hannah caught a taxi outside the deli and read the driver the Riverside Drive address Joshua had written down on the back of his business card.

"It looks like it might snow," she said, glancing toward the darkening sky. The sooner she reached Joshua, the better. She needed him now as never before. When she told him what had happened, he'd come with her and together they'd talk to her family and make everything right.

The driver mumbled something in return that she didn't understand.

Several minutes later the cabdriver pulled over to the curb and flipped off the meter. Hannah gazed out the car window at the high-rise apartment building and experienced a sense of relief. The man she loved, the man she'd defied her family to marry, lived in this building.

"Lady, are you going to stare out the window all day?"

"No, sorry." She returned her attention to her purse and pulled out her wallet. From the corner of her eye, she caught sight of a familiar figure. Looking up, she saw Joshua coming out of the building. She raised her hand and was about to call him when, suddenly, she stopped. The happy shout died in her throat.

Joshua wasn't alone.

Standing beside him was the most beautiful, elegant-looking woman Hannah had ever seen. Joshua slipped his arm around the other woman's waist, bent down, and kissed her gently on the lips.

Her heart pounding like a locomotive chugging uphill, Hannah hurled herself back against the seat, not wanting him to see her.

"Lady, are you going to pay me or not?" the cabbie asked a second time with far less patience.

"Yes, yes, of course." Hannah leaned forward just far enough to peek at Joshua. It was apparent the two were long-term acquaintances. The woman with him gazed up adoringly, as though this were the happiest day of her life.

"Please," Hannah whispered. "Take me home."

"You got the money or don't you?" the taxi driver asked.

She handed him a twenty-dollar bill for security. "Now take me back," she pleaded. She'd go home because she had nowhere else to go. With her tail between her legs, her heart heavy with pain, she'd return to her family, who would love and support her despite the fact that she'd deeply embarrassed and disappointed them.

"All right, if you want to go back, then fine, I'll take you." The driver hesitated, and Hannah met his gaze in the rearview mirror. "Is everything all right?" he asked gently.

"No," Hannah whispered.

She was too late. Joshua had found someone else.

Mike Glasser was buried two days later. Father Grady was scheduled to say the funeral mass and had spent considerable time counseling Mike's mother, Louise.

Brynn was one of the first to arrive at the church. She slipped into the pew and knelt down on the padded kneeler. Since hearing the news, she hadn't cried. It might have helped if she'd been able to release her grief, but she held on to it with both hands, clenching it to her breast, fearing what would happen if she ever let go.

Mike's death was a constant, painful reminder of how badly she'd failed him and her other students. How badly she'd failed herself.

Emilio walked into church and sat in the pew directly across from her. Yolanda and Pearl arrived together and sat in front of Brynn.

The huge church was nearly half full with a number of other students and faculty members from Manhattan High. Mike's suicide had had a powerful impact on those who'd known him.

Organ music, deep and somber, filled the church. Mike's mother and a handful of other relatives arrived. Together they walked down the center aisle. Louise Glasser's shoulders were bent under the weight of her grief. She appeared to be leaning heavily on the girl walking beside her. The two clung to each other. It didn't take Brynn long to realize the one with Mike's mother was Suzie Chang. They needed each other.

Brynn had met with them both, separately. They'd

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