Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Author’s Note
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
Epilogue
Thank you
You Can Help!
God Can Help!
Free Book Offer
Her Hometown Heart
Andrea Boeshaar
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
Her Hometown Heart
COPYRIGHT 1999, 2014, 2018 by Andrea Boeshaar
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Pelican Ventures, LLC except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
eBook editions are licensed for your personal enjoyment only. eBooks may not be re-sold, copied or given to other people. If you would like to share an eBook edition, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with.
Contact Information: [email protected]
Scripture taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Prism is a division of Pelican Ventures, LLC
www.pelicanbookgroup.com PO Box 1738 *Aztec, NM * 87410
The Triangle Prism logo is a trademark of Pelican Ventures, LLC
Publishing History
Barbour Publishing, 1999, 2014
Prism Edition, 2018
Electronic Edition ISBN 978-1-5223-9803-5
Published in the United States of America
Dedication
In memory of my grandmother, Alma “Amie” Anderson Johnson who taught reading and art in the Tigerton School District and who always encouraged me to write.
With Special Thanks…
To Gloria, Sally, and DiAnn who encouraged me greatly when I first wrote this story many years ago.
And to Susan at PGB who gave me the editorial nudges I desperately needed as I revised & rewrote.
Also to the citizens of Tigerton and the Town of Morris—I hope you will suspend your disbelief
as you embark on Tom & Amie’s adventure.
While many of the businesses mentioned in my book
are gone now or never existed, but are pure fabrication,
and while the gas station on the cover looks nothing like the dilapidated structures on Hwy 45 & County J
that were once Cousin Huuva’s thriving filling station,
I hope you will imagine as I did, and fall in love with this story.
Author’s Note
Dear Reader:
Her Hometown Heart was first published in 1999 as The Haven of Rest (Heartsong Presents). It was reprinted in 2004 in the Wisconsin collection (Barbour Publishing). But thanks to Pelican Book Group and its Prism imprint, I was able to revise and update this story for readers’ enjoyment. It’s also now available in ebook format, which it never was before.
Her Hometown Heart is a special story for me, and not only because I hold fond memories of time spent as a child in Tigerton, Wisconsin, but because I wrote from out of the depths of my heart. I loved my grandparents, Amie & Reuben Johnson, whom I called “Nana” and “Duppa” so much. I’d like to think they’re proud of me and tickled that I wrote a story set in Tigerton and the Town of Morris.
My prayer is that Her Hometown Heart, though a light romance on many levels, will touch every person’s heart that has known the pain and sorrow of a blemished past. There is hope and healing in the arms of Jesus Christ.
Come share the adventure!
Andrea Boeshaar
www.andreaboeshaar.com
1
Amie Potter fidgeted with her favorite silver bracelet. Uncle Hal had given it to her years ago. She shifted in the floral-upholstered, wingback armchair. Across her parents’ living room, Uncle Hal’s attorney Jim Henderson leafed through the documents on his lap.
Uncle Hal must have mentioned her in his will. Why else would she be sitting here along with the rest of her family?
Amie eyed the attorney. The poor man had to be roasting inside that dark suit on this warm summer day, although when Dad asked, Mr. Henderson refused to remove his jacket.
He glanced her way and Amie gave him a polite smile. Mr. Henderson had been a family friend for as long as she remembered. She’d only visited his impressive Wausau, Wisconsin office once and recalled hiding beneath his wide, stately desk while Dad conducted his business.
“I, Halvor Holm, being of sound mind and spirit…”
Amie forced herself to pay attention, although Mr. Henderson made for a distracting sight with his bushy white hair and hawk-like features. He’d always reminded Amie of the second President of the United States, John Adams, with a bit of Albert Einstein mixed in. As a little girl, she had felt thoroughly intimidated around him, assuming he was a stern and intolerant man. But in all of her twenty-six years, she’d come to learn that Jim Henderson and his wife, Helen, were caring people and good friends. Even now Mr. Henderson’s compassion lined his forehead as he read Uncle Hal’s will.
Crossing her leg, Amie smiled to herself. Mr. Henderson probably, and correctly, guessed that traveling to Chicago on a Sunday afternoon and meeting here in Mom and Dad’s home was the only way he’d get the busy Potter family together for this somber event. Not all of them had schedules permitting the six-hour drive north to Wausau during the week—and Amie with the tightest timetable of everyone. Her position as a creative consultant for the Chicago firm of Maxwell Brothers’ Marketing and Development Company, gave her little to no flexibility.
But, for some reason, Mr. Henderson stressed the importance of her attendance at the disclosing of Uncle Hal’s last will and testament.
“To my sister, Lillian,” Mr. Henderson read, “and to her husband John, I leave ten thousand dollars.”
Amie sucked in a breath.
“Mercy!” Mom’s eyebrows shot up and she placed her well-manicured fingers over her heart. “Wherever did Hal get that kind of money?”
Mr. Henderson smiled patiently. “Investments. Hal liked to dabble in the stock market and it proved quite profitable for him.”
“Well, knock me over with a feather.” Mom pressed her hands against her heart. “And to think he’s lived like a pauper all these years.”
“Don’t feel sorry for Hal. He was very happy.” Mr. Henderson wore a hint of a smile just before his gaze returned to the will. “To Dottie I leave my grandmother’s jewelry.”
Amie heard her twenty-three-year-old sister gasp with pleasure. When they were girls, Mom had told them that Hal inherited their grandmother’s jewels while Mom acquired Grandma Holm's rings, brooches, earrings, bracelets and necklaces. Grandma had wanted to be fair to both her children. Most likely Dottie inherited priceless pieces now.
“To Stephen, my favorite nephew—” Mr. Henderson paused to chuckle since everyone knew the youngest Potter was Hal’s only nephew. “I leave my car.” Mr. Henderson rattled off the make, model and vehicle identification number.
“Awesome!” A happy smile snaked across Stephen’s face before he jerked his head, sending s
trands of his golden-blond hair, the same color as Amie’s, out of his eyes. Stephen had been pleading with their father for “wheels” to drive to Northwestern University next month when the fall semester started and he’d begin his freshman year. Now he had them.
“To Amie,” Mr. Henderson stated, causing her stomach to flip in a peculiar way, “I leave my gas station and entire property in Tigerton, Wisconsin.”
Amie’s heart dropped like a brick. The room fell silent and all eyes turned on her. Dottie wore an expression of pity. Stephen’s brow furrowed with confusion. Her parents’ countenances barely masked their horror.
Amie chewed her lower lip. She couldn’t describe how she felt. Disappointed? Hurt? Both? Maybe Uncle Hal hadn’t been as fond of her as she’d thought.
Except Amie had been sure that her uncle favored her above her brother and sister. He remembered her birthdays, when he tended to forget Dottie’s and Stephen’s. At Christmastime, all three received gifts from Uncle Hal, although Amie’s were always the biggest and the best. It used to be a point of contention among the two other Potter children, much to Amie’s delight. And every year around Easter, she would get a card from Uncle Hal wishing her a happy “spiritual birthday” because it was her uncle who’d helped her understand the concept of eternal salvation through Jesus Christ when she was twelve years old.
So how had she offended Uncle Hall? He knew she attended church regularly and tried to incorporate her faith into every aspect of her life. But she’d obviously done something to anger him, although try as she might, Amie couldn’t think of what…
“There’s got to be some mistake.” Mom regarded Mr. Henderson with a frown creasing her forehead. “That run-down gas station? He left it to Amie? Why, I don’t think it’s even in working order.”
“Yes, it is, for the most part. There’s no mistake.” Mr. Henderson drummed his fingers on the documents. “Hal told me, himself, even before we’d put anything in writing, that he wanted Amie to have the service station and property.”
“What in the world is she supposed to do with it?” Dad sat forward, resting his forearms on the knees of his khaki-tan trousers. He shook his white-capped head. In his younger days, he’d been as blond as Stephen and Amie. “My daughter doesn’t know the first thing about operating a gas station—not that she’d want to. Look at her.” His hand indicated to Amie. “Sugar and spice and everything nice. Can you see her managing a filling station? I don’t even think she’s put gas in a car in her life. She usually gets Stephen to do it...or Dottie...or me.”
“Oh, Dad, I’ve filled my car’s gas tank plenty of times.” She folded her arms. Dad made her sound so inept—and she wasn’t.
He tossed a teasing grin her way, while Dottie and Stephen burst into hysterical laughter.
Amie bit down hard on her back teeth. So, she wasn’t aggressively competitive like her younger sister who wore her dark hair short and was majoring in sports medicine. So, Amie liked her hair long and softly curled. She enjoyed romance novels, feminine frippery, and she used make-up, bubble bath and fingernail polish. So, what?
“Princess,” Dad cajoled, “you’ve got to admit…it’s awfully amusing. You and a...a gas station.”
Her family laughed again and even Amie had to smile this time.
“Jim, are you certain there’s been no mistake?” Still grinning, Mom tucked one side of her silvery, chin-length hair behind her ear.
“I’m positive. Hal specifically stated that he wanted Amie to have his gas station and its surrounding acres.”
Mr. Henderson shifted his weight in the powder-blue, wing-back chair. “Now, Amie…” His eyes were round and soft with understanding. “You can sell the place or keep it and hire someone to manage it. There’s a fine young man who’s worked with Hal for the past thirteen years–ever since he was sixteen. Tom Anderson is his name. He also roomed with Hal. They lived in that two-bedroom apartment above what used to be a laundromat years and years ago. Now it’s just filled with junk.” Mr. Henderson wagged his head and smiled. “That was Hal’s other hobby – collecting junk. You name it, it’s probably stuffed into some part of those two buildings.”
He paused, obviously seeing the confusion on Amie’s face. “Let me explain. There are two buildings on Hal’s property, the service station with attached garage and a two-story building. The latter houses the laundromat area on the first floor, and Tom and Hal’s apartment on the second...well, now it’s just Tom’s place.”
Stephen didn’t hide his stupid grin. “Was there, um, a particular reason why my uncle and this guy shared an apartment?”
Mr. Henderson chuckled good-naturedly at the implication. “No. The only reason the two men were roommates is because Tom didn’t have anywhere else to go. Hal took him in and was something of a father-figure to Tom.”
Amie understood, as Uncle Hal sometimes referred to her as his “daughter in the faith.” Perhaps this Tom-person was Uncle Hal’s “son in the faith.”
Mr. Henderson cleared his throat. “In a way, Amie, you’ve inherited Tom, too.”
“Great.” She didn’t bother hiding her annoyance.
“There, there, take heart, my dear,” Mr. Henderson told her. “Tom is a nice fellow. Honest. Hard working. With his help, you might be able to figure out how to actually make Hal’s place into a profitable business.” He glanced around the room at all the Potters. “I believe you folks met Tom at the funeral a few weeks ago.”
“Oh, I know who you’re talking about.” Dottie leaned over and rapped Amie’s shoulder. “He was that geek with the dark brown, wavy hair and mismatched suit who looked as though he’d just stepped out of an old 1970’s sitcom.”
Stephen hooted, while Amie thought back on that sad day. She couldn’t recall meeting anyone of that description.
Mr. Henderson cleared his throat, appearing slightly agitated. “Look, folks, Tom’s a good man. He’s intelligent, even though he’s only got a high school education. But I know lots of guys his age with college degrees who don’t have a lick of common sense.”
“True enough, dear.” Mrs. Henderson placed her hand on her husband’s as if cooling his temper. Round and jolly-looking, the woman possessed a wide, double-chinned face and short auburn hair that was teased back off her forehead. “And you’re correct. Tom’s a smart fellow. Why, I remember Hal saying he would have been valedictorian of his senior class if it hadn’t been for—” She stopped short and swallowed the rest of her sentence after receiving a frown from her husband. “Oh, never mind,” she added, in an obvious attempt to cover her blunder. “It’s a long story anyway.”
“Tom didn’t move into the apartment with Hal until about two years ago,” Mr. Henderson offered, apparently feeling the need to somewhat explain the situation. “It was right after his youngest brother turned eighteen and went off to college. Tom sold the family property. Being the oldest in his family and with his mother dead and his father being a...well, he liked to tip the bottle, to put it politely. Tom kind of raised his siblings and Hal kind of raised Tom.” Mr. Henderson glanced at Amie from beneath his bushy brows. “Tom will be glad to help you out, whether you decide to sell Hal’s station or let him manage it.”
A sinking‒in‒quicksand sensation enveloped her.
“Oh, yes, and I imagine you’ll want to at least inspect the place before you make a decision.” Slipping his hand into the pocket of his trousers, Mr. Henderson pulled out a key. It dangled from a chain sporting a plastic rainbow trout the size of a large paperclip. “This is for the safe deposit box at the Tigerton bank. In it you’ll find the deed to the property and such.” He handed it to Amie.
She turned the key in her palm, still marveling at her inheritance – or curse—whichever the case may be. What would she ever do with an old service station filled with junk...and an “outdated” attendant?
“Amie?”
She met Mr. Henderson’s serious expression.
“I sincerely hope you’ll come to appreciate what Hal lef
t to you. He loved you very much and spoke fondly of you.”
“Thank you.” She wanted to cry. “I hope I’ll come to appreciate it too.”
~*~
Scorching July sunshine beat down on Tom Anderson as he watched the vehicle drive away, heading south on Highway 45 with Hal’s nephew at the wheel. The sun reflected off the red taillights that quickly disappeared into the distance. Tom hoped the guy would take care of the vehicle. Hal had babied his eighteen-year-old automobile with frequent oil changes and tune-ups. But Tom wasn’t so sure Stephen Potter would be as responsible. He’d seen the expression on the kid’s face when he first viewed the car. Tom could only describe it as utter disappointment. Must’ve been expecting a newer model.
Turning and heading for his apartment, Tom thought about Stephen’s sister, Dottie. She’d driven her brother up from Chicago to get Hal’s car. They’d both come to claim their inheritances and while Stephen seemed dissatisfied with the car, Dottie had appeared wide-eyed and calculating after tucking the jewelry box that Hal bequeathed to her under one arm. She surveyed Tom’s apartment with interested chocolate-brown eyes, inquiring over several pieces of wooden furniture, the tea cart, cane-backed chair, coffee table and matching end tables, all of which Tom refinished. Then she asked about their ownership.
Hal had purchased them at various rummage sales or found them sitting on the side of the highway with the trash.
Tom repaired, sanded, stained, and varnished them, but they’d both enjoyed them. Tom honestly didn’t know who possessed legal right to the items.
“Never mind,” Dottie had said, lofting her chin. “Amie owns the place. I’ll just ask her if I can have them.”
With a mournful sigh, Tom opened the door and climbed the steep, narrow steps to the apartment he used to share with a man who was more of a father to him than his biological dad. He walked through the kitchen where the red and white rubber-tiled floor had obviously seen better days.
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