Out of the Ruins

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by Karen Barnett




  Praise for Out of the Ruins

  “One of my favorite cities during one of my favorite eras. Out of the Ruins is a historically rich and heart-wrenching glimpse into the San Francisco earthquake and the resilient faith, love, and spirit that rises from the ashes—both in the city itself and in the hearts and souls of a man and woman destined to fall in love.”

  —Julie Lessman, award-winning author of The Daughters of Boston and Winds of Change series

  “Out of the Ruins, set in San Francisco in 1905 and 1906, is a shining example of historical romance. I was right there with the characters, breathing in the smoke and dust, shaking and falling with the earthquake. In this her second novel, Karen Barnett is an up-and-coming author, writing quality historical fiction that is realistic and grappling with faith issues woven in intrinsically. I’m pleased to be able to endorse Out of the Ruins.”

  —Lauraine Snelling, best-selling author of the Red River of the North series

  “An earthquake, a medical drama, inner turmoil, and a touching romance! Karen Barnett masterfully weaves these together with heartfelt emotion, believable characters, and impressive research. I couldn’t stop flipping pages. Out of the Ruins is a story to savor!”

  —Sarah Sundin, award-winning author of On Distant Shores

  “From the optimism of medical breakthroughs to the tragedy of the great San Francisco earthquake and fire, Out of the Ruins immerses the reader in the hopes and fears of unforgettable turn-of-the-century characters.”

  —Regina Jennings, author of Caught in the Middle

  “Karen Barnett’s exquisite touch with emotional interplay and romantic nuance shines in Out of the Ruins, thrilling readers with a powerful story set during San Francisco’s most enthralling and heart-wrenching moment.”

  —Michael K. Reynolds, author of the acclaimed Heirs of Ireland series

  Other Books by Karen Barnett

  Mistaken

  The Golden Gate Chronicles

  Out of the Ruins

  Beyond the Ashes (Spring 2015)

  Out of the Ruins

  Copyright © 2014 by Karen Barnett

  ISBN-13: 978-1-68299-845-8

  Published by Abingdon Press, P.O. Box 801, Nashville, TN 37202

  www.abingdonpress.com

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, stored in any retrieval system, posted on any website, or transmitted in any form or by any means—digital, electronic, scanning, photocopy, recording, or otherwise—without written permission from the publisher, except for brief quotations in printed reviews and articles.

  Scripture quotations unless otherwise noted are taken from The Authorized (King James) Version. Rights in the Authorized Version in the United Kingdom are vested in the Crown. Reproduced by permission of the Crown’s patentee, Cambridge University Press.

  Scripture quotations noted CEB are from the Common English Bible. Copyright © 2011 by the Common English Bible. All rights reserved. Used by permission. www.CommonEnglishBible.com.

  The persons and events portrayed in this work of fiction are the creations of the author, and any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Barnett, Karen, 1969-

   Out of the Ruins : Book 1 of The Golden Gate Chronicles / Karen Barnett.

   1 online resource. — (Golden Gate Chronicles ; Book 1)

   Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.

   ISBN 978-1-4267-8733-1 (epub) — ISBN 978-1-4267-8057-8 (binding: soft back, adhesive pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Sisters—Fiction. 2. Cancer—Fiction. 3. San Francisco (Calif.)—History—Fiction. I. Title.

   PS3602.A77584

   813’.6—dc23

  2014009927

  Printed in the United States of America

  In Memory of Brandon Aufranc 2000 – 2012

  Thank you to the brave scientists, doctors, and nurses who are working to make cancer a thing of the past.

  Acknowledgments

  Writing a novel feels like a solitary venture at times, but it takes many people to make a story come to life.

  Thank you to . . .

  My husband, Steve, and our two children. You three are my inspiration.

  My first readers: Katie Miller, Morgan Miller, Leiah Greene.

  Critique support: Heidi Gaul, Marilyn Rhoads, Patricia Lee, Tamera Bowers, Connie Hamon, and Michelle Ule.

  Radiology advice: Amber Nealy.

  The history-loving people of San Francisco, especially . . .

  Autumn and Anastasia Zimmerman, who escorted me around the city during my research trip and continue to send me books and links. Bless you!

  The San Francisco City Guides—a non-profit, primarily volunteer operation that offers educational walking tours of the city (www.sfcityguides.org)

  The Donaldina Cameron House (www.cameronhouse.org)

  Cheryl King and Old First Presbyterian Church, Sacramento Street

  The San Francisco Cable Car Museum (www.cablecarmuseum.org)

  The Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco (www.sfmuseum.org)

  The online resources of The Bancroft Library

  Mount Hermon Christian Writers Conference, particularly the intermediate mentorship track with Randy Ingermanson (2009), Brandilyn Collins (2010), and Mary DeMuth (2012).

  The American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW), especially the 2012 Genesis Contest coordinators and judges.

  Oregon Christian Writers (OCW) for encouragement, teaching, and introducing me to my publisher.

  Author Tricia Goyer, who read a snippet of this story back in 2009 and introduced me to my fabulous agent, Rachel Kent. Rachel, thank you for sticking with me through it all. Thank you to the entire Books & Such community.

  Ramona Richards, Cat Hoort, and all of the wonderful folks at Abingdon Press for taking a chance on this fledgling author. Thanks to Teri for your keen editing skills.

  And to my God—for quiet whispers of support, and for leading me with strains of “Come Thou Fount” every time I doubted my calling. Thanks, Jesus, for being patient with me.

  The mountains may shift,

  and the hills may be shaken,

  but my faithful love won’t shift from you,

  and my covenant of peace won’t be shaken,

  says the Lord, the one who pities you.

  Isaiah 54:10 CEB

  Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing

  Come Thou Fount of every blessing

  Tune my heart to sing Thy grace;

  Streams of mercy, never ceasing,

  Call for songs of loudest praise

  Teach me some melodious sonnet,

  Sung by flaming tongues above.

  Praise the mount! I’m fixed upon it,

  Mount of Thy redeeming love.

  Here I raise my Ebenezer;

  Hither by Thy help I’m come;

  And I hope, by Thy good pleasure,

  Safely to arrive at home.

  Jesus sought me when a stranger,

  Wandering from the fold of God;

  He, to rescue me from danger,

  Interposed His precious blood.

  O to grace how great a debtor

  Daily I’m constrained to be!

  Let thy goodness, like a fetter,

  Bind my wandering heart to thee.

  Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it,

  Prone to leave the God I love;

  Here’s my heart, O take and seal it,

  Seal it for thy courts above.

  Part 1

  1

  San Jose, California

  August 16, 1905

  The docto
r could be wrong.” Abby’s words cut through the suffocating silence in the bedroom. She placed her fingers on the sun-warmed windowsill, but it did little to thaw the chill gripping her heart.

  Cecelia’s voice barely stirred the air. “He’s not.”

  Abby glanced down at the novel she’d been reading, her thumb holding a place between the pages. If only she could stick her thumb on this day and prevent life from moving forward. When had time become the enemy?

  She rose from the window seat and paced back to the wooden chair pulled close to her sister’s bedside. The faded rosebud quilt covered Cecelia’s body like a shroud. Abby kept her voice crisp and no-nonsense. “Papa telephoned Cousin Gerald last night. Gerald thinks there might be doctors in San Francisco who could actually do something, despite what Dr. Greene says.”

  Cecelia opened her eyes, the flash of blue seeming out of place in her otherwise colorless face. Her unbound hair—once like so many strands of golden silk—now covered the white pillowcase, tangled and matted.

  Abby fingered her own brown braid. She hadn’t even bothered to pin it up this morning. “I’m not giving up, and neither should you.”

  Cecelia’s eyes closed again, dark circles framing their sunken depths. “I’m too tired. If God’s calling, I’m ready to go home.”

  Abby thumped the novel down on the bedside table. “Stop saying that. I’m not going to let you die and leave me here alone.”

  Her sister shifted under the covers, as if the very weight of the quilt caused her pain. “You’re—” she stopped for a breath, “not alone.”

  The deluge of fear returned, sweeping over Abby like waves across the shore. Who would she be without Cecelia?

  She returned to the window, staring at the summer sky strewn with a few lacelike clouds. Back when they were children, Papa always called Cecelia his “sky-girl” because of her blue eyes and her grace. And a sky-girl she remained, even as they aged. Until this illness, Cecelia had moved with charm and style, bringing light to a room simply by entering. Young men flocked to her side, anxious to spend a moment captivated by her beauty and her gift for conversation.

  Abby, a year younger—nineteen to Cecelia’s twenty—had none of her sister’s poise. Instead, she took turns stumbling over her tongue and her feet. And with her brown hair and eyes, and those incessant freckles, the only thing she ever attracted were mosquitoes on a warm summer evening. If Cecelia was the sky, Abby was the earth.

  So while Cecelia danced at the parties, Abby strolled in the family orchard, content to talk to the peach trees. There she could speak her mind without worrying about social graces.

  But if Cecelia left her . . .

  “Abby—” Cecelia broke off with a weak cough.

  Abby crossed the room in a heartbeat. “What is it? What do you need?”

  Her sister lay silent for a long moment, staring up at her. Finally, after a labored breath she pushed the words out. “Have you prayed?”

  “What?” Abby sank down into the high-backed chair where she had spent so many hours. “Cecelia . . .” Her voice faltered.

  Cecelia sighed, her eyelids closing. “I thought maybe you would make an exception . . . for me.”

  Abby’s heart sank down into her stomach. Her sister never did play fair.

  “Just talk to Him. It’s all I ask.”

  Fidgeting, Abby twisted the hem of her apron. Her sister’s ragged breathing snatched at her heart. Abby squeezed the fabric into a ball. “Fine. I will.”

  The corners of Cecelia’s mouth turned upward with a meager hint of a smile. “God will answer.” She stirred under the covers once more. “You’ll see.”

  When her sister’s breathing finally evened into sleep, Abby reached over and smoothed the quilt. As she gazed at Cecelia’s chalk-white face, Abby’s throat clenched. The doctor’s words chanted in her mind like a group of bullies in a schoolyard.

  She tiptoed to the doorway. Catching a quick glimpse in the looking glass, Abby frowned at her unkempt hair and wrinkled dress. Turning away, she continued down the hall, pausing to glance into the nursery where her brother napped. The sight of his flushed cheeks brought a different kind of ache to her heart. No one but four-year-old Davy slept well these days.

  She stole down the stairs and out through the kitchen, hearing her parents’ hushed voices in the family room. They must be discussing the doctor’s announcement, even though he’d left no room for debate.

  Pushing open the back door, Abby escaped into the fresh air, untainted by sickness and the decaying scent of fading hope. She trudged through the pasture and up the hillside toward the orchard, dragging the weight of her family’s problems with her. By the time she reached the edge of the trees, beyond sight of the house, the heaviness lessened and she picked up her skirts and fled.

  As she charged into the orchard, Abby’s throat ached with words held captive. First Dr. Greene discounts Cecelia’s symptoms, now he has the audacity to say we should prepare for the worst?

  Abby curled her fingers around the branch of a large cherry tree, placed a foot against the trunk, and hoisted herself upward into its leafy heights. Seeking to lose herself in the greenery, she climbed until her rust-colored skirt wedged between two branches. Holding on with one hand, Abby yanked the fabric loose with the other. Several years had passed since she had climbed one of these trees, and her arms and legs trembled with the effort. My skirts were shorter back then, and I never cared about soiling them. A grown woman doesn’t climb trees.

  Unless her sister is dying.

  When a bough bent under her shoes, she halted. Wrapping one arm around the trunk, Abby laid her head against the tree. She slapped the palm of her hand against the bark until her skin stung.

  Cecelia’s request echoed. “Just talk to Him. It’s all I ask.”

  Abby sighed, brushing a loose strand of hair from her face. Maybe prayer came easily to some people, but to her, God seemed too far away and indifferent. She took a deep breath and closed her eyes. “God, save her. I’ll do anything—anything you want.”

  The words sounded foolish, like a child wishing on a star. Abby forced herself to continue. “She believes You love us. If it’s true, then it makes sense You should heal her whether or not I ask. You know Mama and Papa couldn’t bear to live without her. And Davy—” her breath caught in her throat as she thought about her baby brother.

  Straddling a branch, Abby rested her back against the tree’s strength and let her legs dangle. “The doctor says there’s nothing more he can do.” Abby paused, letting the thought soak in. “So, I guess it’s up to You to take the cancer away.”

  Her stomach twisted at the word. Mama didn’t like it spoken aloud, as if naming the disease would make the nightmare real.

  The doctor had no such reservations. With today’s visit, he added an even more formidable word: leukemia. “Some cancers you can cut out, but leukemia is in the blood.” He raised his hands in surrender. “You can’t fight it.”

  Abby tightened her fist and pressed it against her thigh. Maybe you won’t fight it, but I will. Somehow.

  She continued her prayer, speaking as much to herself as to any higher power. “I—I don’t want to live here without her.” She picked at a piece of lace dangling loose from its stitching along the hem of her dress. “I don’t want to be alone.”

  Abby gazed up through the tree limbs. When her eyes blurred, the branches looked like jagged cracks in the sky. Was God even listening? Why should He care about her wishes? She’d never wanted anything beyond her family and the orchard she loved. The peach and cherry trees were better friends than any schoolmate, standing forever faithful in their well-ordered rows. She’d tended them by her father’s side since she was old enough to hold the pruning shears. Papa promised someday they would belong to her. What more could she need?

  The sound of footsteps crunching through the leaves stole the thought from her mind. She pulled her feet up to the limb and gripped the branch above her head to steady herself.
>
  A man strolled through the orchard, his hands thrust deep into the pockets of his gray twill pants, a dark jacket slung casually over one shoulder.

  Abby bit her lip and leaned to the side for a better view. As she shifted her weight, the limb cracked, the sound echoing through the orchard. Abby grabbed the branch above her just as her perch gave way. Swinging awkwardly, she wrapped her ankles around the tree trunk.

  “I’m okay,” she whispered, under her breath.

  “Are you sure about that?” An amused voice floated up.

  The man had removed his derby and looked up at her with eyes as brown as Aunt Mae’s irresistible chocolate fudge.

  From her clumsy vantage point, Abby examined his strong jaw and pleasing smile. Of course—he’s handsome, and I’m hanging from a tree like a monkey.

  “There’s a sturdy-looking branch just below you and to the left.”

  Stretching out a foot, she groped for the limb with her toe. Locating it, Abby tucked her skirts tight around her legs before scurrying down.

  The stranger reached up his hand to assist her on the last step to the earth. “I suppose I should apologize for frightening you.”

  Abby plucked a twig from her apron. “You surprised me.” She regretted not taking time to fix her hair before leaving the house. Or put on a hat. What must he think?

  A crooked smile crossed the man’s face. “Well, then we’re even, because no one ever told me girls grew on trees here in California. If I’d known, I might have gone into farming instead of medicine.” He slid his hands back into his pockets. “I certainly didn’t expect a beautiful woman to fall out of one.”

  A wave of heat climbed Abby’s neck. “I didn’t fall out.” She straightened her skirt, annoyed to find this smooth-talking stranger waltzing through her family’s orchard. Beautiful, indeed. She narrowed her eyes at him. “Who are you, anyway?”

  As he nodded, the light glinted off of his dark hair. “My name is Robert King—Dr. King. I’m Dr. Larkspur’s new assistant. Are you Miss Fischer?”

 

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