Debbie Macomber

Angels at Christmas: Those Christmas Angels / Where Angels Go


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want to be judgmental, but the woman Mercy considered the answer to Anne’s prayer was being less than cooperative.

      “What do you mean?” Mercy asked. “I thought the accident was a brilliant idea! It got Roy and Julie together, didn’t it?”

      “All they did was snipe at each other.” Goodness wasn’t disparaging her friend’s effort, but it simply hadn’t worked.

      “I think I was more optimistic than I should’ve been,” Mercy said when Shirley came and sat next to her.

      “I thought everything went very well.” Shirley seemed undeterred by Julie’s lack of cooperation—or Roy’s. She continued to stare at her portrait with an appreciative eye.

      “How can you say that?” Goodness cried. In her opinion, Julie wasn’t the only one who needed instruction in romance. It was evident that Shirley had difficulty recognizing what worked and what didn’t. That staged accident certainly hadn’t.

      Shirley sighed. “I had real hope when Roy took her to his own physician.”

      “But then he dumped her there.”

      Mercy nodded vigorously. “The least he could’ve done was wait long enough to make sure she wasn’t injured.”

      “He did pay for her taxi ride home,” Shirley said. “They were getting along so well, too.”

      Goodness gaped at her friend and wondered if Shirley had lost all touch with reality. “They did nothing but argue!” She’d witnessed courtroom battles with less antagonism. Roy Fletcher and Julie Wilcoff were completely unsuited as a couple, but no one wanted to listen to her. As far as she could see, the two of them didn’t even like each other.

      Goodness might never have been in love—romance was for earthly beings—but she had an instinct for matchmaking, if she did say so herself. She’d successfully guided men and women toward each other a time or two, but none of that seemed to matter.

      “Yes, they were arguing, but I was well aware even if you weren’t that they like each other,” Mercy insisted.

      “I don’t think so.” Goodness hated to discourage her friends, but she didn’t see it. The spark just wasn’t there. She suspected Julie had become so discouraged about her prospects of finding a husband that she’d lost the ability to attract one. Goodness had wanted to shake the young woman for joking about her weight. A lady never discussed such things! Julie should know better. And Roy—he was one of the walking wounded. He didn’t seem capable of feeling anything, except bitterness and cynicism.

      “What are you suggesting?” Mercy asked.

      Goodness knew it was one thing to criticize and another to offer an alternative. But she figured they’d better face up to the truth sooner rather than later. “We should give it up and search elsewhere.”

      Mercy folded her wings tightly, a sure sign she wasn’t pleased.

      “We did our part. Now it’s up to the two of them. Agreed?” Goodness gave her friends a stern look.

      “Just who do you think would interest Roy?” Shirley asked.

      “Just who?” Mercy parroted.

      They had Goodness there. “I don’t know—yet,” she said. “But we’ve done our part. Agreed?” she said again.

      The other two nodded with unmistakable reluctance.

      “Now I say we leave them alone, and if it’s meant to be, it’ll happen without any help from the three of us.”

      Mercy seemed about to argue, but then she sighed loudly. “Oh, all right, but I still have a strong feeling that Julie’s the answer to Anne’s prayer.”

      “Anne,” Shirley whispered. As if she’d suddenly remembered something, the former Guardian Angel announced,

      “I’ll be right back.”

      Goodness was having none of this. “Where are you going?”

      Shirley glanced over her shoulder. “I’ll only be a minute.”

      Goodness exchanged a look with Mercy and both of them followed Shirley. The other Ambassador didn’t go far. She crept into Anne’s bedroom and saw that the older woman was in bed, eyes closed.

      “Is she asleep?” Mercy asked, floating above the bed.

      “Not quite,” Shirley answered with confidence.

      Goodness peered closer, but couldn’t tell. After working two consecutive nights on the portrait of Shirley, Anne must be exhausted.

      “She’s meeting her son later this morning,” Mercy said.

      “She won’t sleep long.”

      Goodness checked the clock radio. “The alarm is set.”

      “She thinks she only needs an hour or two.”

      “The poor thing,” Shirley said. To Goodness’s surprise, she moved to stand over the older woman. Gently pressing her hand to Anne’s forehead, Shirley leaned forward to whisper, “You did a beautiful job.” Then she lifted her hand and eased away.

      “Look,” Mercy said, pointing at Anne.

      The softest of smiles touched the woman’s lips, almost as if she’d heard Shirley speak.

      “Roy?”

      Roy glanced up at George Williams, his high-priced corporate attorney. “I’m sorry, did I miss something?” Judging by the pained expression on the other man’s face, apparently he had. Williams had been discussing the profit-and-loss statement for Griffin Plastics, a company Roy was interested in purchasing. He’d half heard Williams drone on about “synergies”—which, as far as he could determine, just meant that Griffin would be able to make the cases for his security software. Sighing, he directed his attention to the papers on his desk. “Let me look these over and get back to you this afternoon.”

      The attorney frowned, gathered his files together and stuffed them in his briefcase.

      “Before you leave I have a question,” Roy said.

      “About the Griffin figures?”

      “No.” Roy reached for a pen and made a few scribbles on a clean sheet of paper while he collected his thoughts. “Late last week, I had a minor … altercation with a bicycle rider.”

      “Altercation?” George Williams repeated.

      “She fell—” he chose the word carefully “—off her ten-speed and hit a tree.”

      The attorney’s eyes widened and he pulled a blank pad of paper toward him.

      “She was unhurt,” Roy rushed to add. “As an innocent bystander, I immediately phoned the paramedics and notified the police.”

      “So, you’re telling me that you were in no way responsible for her … fall?”

      “That’s correct.”

      “In other words, you happened along shortly after the accident, and out of consideration for this biker you stopped your vehicle and saw to her welfare?”

      The attorney was describing a rather different scene than the one that had actually occurred, but Roy let him. “Yes,” he said slowly, thoughtfully.

      “Your concern is?” Williams asked.

      “The woman claims I caused her accident.” Just thinking about it irritated Roy. Although there was no evidence to validate her accusation, Julie Wilcoff had insisted he’d run into the rear of her bike. But he hadn’t even seen her until the last second and had instantly slammed on his brakes. In mentally reviewing the incident, Roy had decided that the sound of his car behind her must have startled Julie; she’d lost focus and hit something in the road, which was the reason she’d catapulted off the bicycle and into the tree.