Missionary Daddy
food.”
    With rumbles of approval and a clatter of chairs, the teenagers rushed the pile of snacks like a swarm of hungry locusts. Potato chips and cookies flew off the table while Eric handed out sodas from an ice chest. The man understood the language of kids, whether they were American or African.
    “Thanks, Eric.”
    “Yeah, thanks, man.”
    The kids adjourned to the TV room and plopped down to eat. Sam found a diet soda and settled onto the floor beside the girl named Gina.
    “Cold?” she asked.
    Gina nodded and pulled a sweater closer to her narrow body.
    “She’s always cold,” Jeremy answered as he slid down beside his girlfriend, paper plate piled high with food. Though he was tall and lanky, the brown-haired boy showed the muscular promise of coming manhood. He plunked a cookie and napkin in front of Gina. “Eat.”
    “I had supper.”
    “You did not.” He waved the cookie under her nose. “I ate. You watched.”
    Gina turned her head away from the tempting chocolate sandwich. “My stomach’s a little off today.”
    With a shrug, Jeremy placed the cookie on her knee and concentrated on demolishing his own plateful. Gina picked off a tiny corner of the cookie, then placed the remainder on her boyfriend’s plate.
    As Sam observed the exchange, a suspicion niggled at the back of her mind. After a bit, she shrugged it off. She didn’t know these kids yet. Her concerns were likely the result of her own long struggle with food.
    She sat quietly, getting to know the group by listening to their chatter. The lively talk reminded her of the days in junior high before food had taken control of her life. Other than Eric’s odd behavior, tonight was fun and relaxing, a welcome respite from her hectic life.
    Freckle-faced Tiffany obviously had a crush on Billy, but the shaggy-haired boy was clueless. Sam hid a smile when Tiffany took Billy’s empty plate and Coke can, asking if he wanted anything else. Nikki, the Goth girl with kohl-rimmed eyes and black clothes, was the obvious leader. Young Dylan stayed on the perimeter, watchful and quiet.
    Samantha wanted so badly to talk to Eric the way she had in Africa. How was he? Why was he here in Virginia? How were the boys, Matunde and Amani? She still treasured the single photo of them. She’d even had it blown up and framed to sit on her dresser—if the suite of rooms being remodeled at Harcourt Mansion was ever finished.
    Soda can empty, she went to find a trash can.
    “In the kitchen,” Nikki called, guessing her intent.
    The Youth Center had been built during Sam’s long absence from Chestnut Grove and she was unfamiliar with the layout.
    Rounding a corner, she slammed into the back of a broad-shouldered man. Eric.
    He turned, his ready smile fading as soon as he recognized her. With a curt nod, he said, “Excuse me,” and turned away again.
    Sam caught his arm. The muscle beneath her hand tensed, rock hard.
    “Eric, wait.”
    Reluctance hanging on him like a baggy shirt, he complied.
    “Have I offended you in some way?” she asked quietly.
    “Of course not. You’ve only just arrived.”
    “Then why the cold shoulder?”
    Indecision came and went. Sam suspected he wanted to blow her off and escape. The honest man she’d met in Africa couldn’t do that. “You should have told me who you were. It was a pretty big shock to come home to.”
    “Did it matter? Would you have treated me any differently?”
    She saw the truth in his eyes. He would have. She would have been a fashion model, an object on display, instead of a person.
    “You don’t have to serve as cochair of this committee,” he said. “I can find someone else or handle the job alone.”
    The words hurt. He neither needed nor wanted her. “You’d like me to quit?”
    He hitched a shoulder. “I figure you’re too busy for something like this. How did Rachel rope you into it?”
    Sam didn’t want to tell him, but she might as well. He’d find out soon enough. “She thought my
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