Love Comes Home

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Love Comes Home Page 25

by Ann H. Gabhart


  “Who’s preaching the funeral?” Clay reached for the last piece of chicken, but Aaron snagged it first. The boy was never full these days.

  “Pastor Mike. He’s finally looking better. That boy came home from that German prison camp naught but skin and bones.”

  “At least he came home,” Clay said.

  “True enough.” His mother looked across the table at him. “There’s not the first reason for you to feel guilty because you’re breathing and Victoria’s Sammy is not. Folks die and those who are left go on. I did and she will too.”

  “You haven’t remarried.” Clay had never given thought to his mother remarrying, but maybe he should have. The other kids around the table suddenly got quiet as they waited for their mother to say something.

  “The good Lord sends me another good man like your father, I might think on it.” She poured Mary some water and buttered Willie’s bread. “You children don’t need to look so worried. I doubt there’s a man out there willing to take on this crew. So eat your potatoes before they get cold.”

  Beside Clay, Mary leaned over to kiss his arm. “We’ve got Clay.”

  “Yes, indeed, a good brother to you.” Clay’s mother looked around the table at her children. “We’ve made out since your daddy passed on. The good Lord has provided our needs, and if he were to send a new husband my way, it would take some considering before I’d take him up on the offer, as old as I am.” She laughed, but then her eyes settled back on Clay. “But your Victoria is in the spring of life. It would be good for the Lord to supply her with a husband for all the years lying ahead of her.”

  Your Victoria. He’d liked the sound of that even if there wasn’t any truth to it. Now as he cleaned up for the funeral, he should be thinking about Aunt Hattie and how Rosey Corner was going to miss her, but all he could think of was how he’d see Victoria in less than an hour. A man shouldn’t think about courting when he was getting ready for a funeral.

  That’s what he wanted to tell Paulette when she caught him before he went in the church. She said a friend was saving them a place. But instead he told her he had to sit with his mother to help with the children.

  “Willie gets restless when the services go on too long.” Clay kept his eyes on Paulette, but it took effort not to look around for Victoria.

  “Your mother doesn’t need help.” Paulette hooked her hand under Clay’s elbow and tugged him toward the church door.

  Clay glanced around, relieved most of the people were already inside. He didn’t want to embarrass Paulette. “I’d better sit with my family today.” He eased his arm away from her hand.

  Red raced across Paulette’s cheek bones. “You’d sit with Victoria if she asked you.”

  “She won’t ask me.” Clay kept his voice low.

  “You’re right about that. She’s never going to ask you to do anything.” Paulette’s voice rose with each word.

  He held his hand palm out toward her the way he might try to quiet Lillie or Mary. “Listen, Paulette, this isn’t the time or place for this. I’ll come by later.”

  “Don’t bother.” Paulette spun on her heel and headed toward the church door.

  “I’m sorry.”

  “You’re right there.” She looked over her shoulder at him. “You’re as sorry as they come and you’ll end up an old bachelor living in your mother’s house all your livelong days.”

  He stood where he was and felt as sorry as she thought he was. An old bachelor. If that’s how it turned out, so be it. Could be there were worse things than being a bachelor. Like marrying the wrong woman.

  He didn’t realize Victoria’s sister and her husband were behind him on the walk until the man spoke. “Afternoon, Clay.”

  It was obvious they’d both heard Paulette’s parting shot, but they looked too deep in their own troubles to give his problems much thought. Kate was pale as dandelion fluff and leaning heavily on her husband’s arm.

  “I’m sorry about the baby,” he said, and then worried he shouldn’t have mentioned the baby. Maybe they didn’t want to talk about it. “And about Aunt Hattie too,” he added awkwardly.

  Kate lightly touched his arm. Even her fingers looked too white. “Thank you, Clay.”

  He moved aside to let them go into the church first. She looked in need of a seat. But just as Paulette had stopped and looked back, so did she. “Don’t give up on her, Clay. Please.”

  “On who?” Clay said.

  But music started up inside and she turned back toward the church without answering. She didn’t have to answer anyway. He knew. His Victoria.

  He followed them up the steps and through the doors. The church was full, but his eyes sought and found Victoria on the front row. Dare he let hope spread its wings in his heart yet another time?

  32

  Tori saw Paulette come back in the church. Alone. She didn’t watch her all the way down the church aisle, but it was plain to see she wasn’t happy. Even after Tori turned her eyes back toward the front of the church where Aunt Hattie’s casket sat, she could hear Paulette and her friend whispering. She couldn’t hear what they were saying. She didn’t want to hear what they were saying.

  The older ladies in the church would be frowning at them if they didn’t hush. Some of them were probably already frowning at Tori for letting Samantha stand on the pew and look behind her. Graham was seated toward the back, and she kept holding out her arms to him and saying her baby-talk word for Chaucer. Graham thought it was funny that Samantha called him by his dog’s name.

  Tori should have stuck some crackers or a sucker in her purse to distract her. A funeral wasn’t the best place for a two-year-old, but she wasn’t the only child there. Nearly everybody in Rosey Corner was squeezed into the church. A few parents had let their children stay outside. Tori could hear them through the windows, pushed up to let in air. With every pew packed, it was a blessing the spring day wasn’t any warmer than it was. Even so, fans waved all around the church and some of the men yanked at their starched collars.

  Tori didn’t blame those mothers who let their children run outside. She’d considered asking one of the older girls to keep an eye on Samantha, but the road was so close. The other kids might get distracted playing together and Samantha could get away quick. Just the other day she had crawled under the fence and headed across the field without a backward glance. Going fishing, she said. So it was better to keep her in her lap whether she was restless or not.

  Besides, Aunt Hattie wouldn’t be bothered by Samantha smiling at the people behind her. She’d be smiling and saying the last thing she wanted from any of them was solemn tears. Happy tears. That would have been her order for them. Set your hands to clappin’ and your feet to dancing ’cause that’s what I’m a-doin’ up in heaven. Aunt Hattie’s words had a way of showing up in a person’s head.

  Mrs. Weber didn’t let her children stay outside either as she ushered them into a pew toward the back. Clay didn’t come in with them. When Samantha saw Mary and Lillie, she squealed with excitement. Tori shushed her, and Samantha let out a wail. Tori’s mother produced a small box of cookies from her purse. Mama was always prepared. Samantha happily settled down in her lap.

  Lorena leaned forward from her spot sandwiched between Mama and Daddy to whisper, “They’re here.” Tori twisted around to see Kate and Jay coming in the church. Lorena would have popped up to go meet them, but Mama put a hand on her leg to stop her.

  A hush fell over the church as Jay ushered Kate down the aisle. The news that she’d lost her baby had already swept through Rosey Corner.

  Kate looked so feeble that Tori hurt for her. When she was a kid, Tori had caught every bug going around and even now she kept a cold in the winter time, but she couldn’t remember Kate ever being very sick. She was the strong one. The one who made sure everybody was all right. But now she wasn’t all right. She leaned heavily on Jay, her face white with the effort of coming into the church. Jay looked sad and tired too. At the same time, they looked so
connected by their love that tears welled up in Tori’s eyes. Kate had Jay to love her through this.

  They walked to the front to gaze down at Aunt Hattie. Tori had viewed her earlier, but had no feeling that any part of Aunt Hattie’s spirit remained in that shell of a body. That didn’t keep the sight of her from bringing to mind a thousand memories, and Kate had to be feeling the same. Even more so, since she and Aunt Hattie were so close.

  After a minute, Mama took her hand off Lorena’s leg to let her go stand with Kate. It still somehow surprised Tori to see Lorena so tall, almost an adult now, and with such a big heart. That morning Lorena lay facedown on her bed, crying with abandon because she wanted to get all the tears out so she could sing at the services. But she must not have spilled all the tears. There with her arm around Kate, she reached her free hand up to swipe away tears. How often Tori had done the same, but rarely had she seen Kate do so.

  Tori couldn’t tell if Kate had tears in her eyes now or not as she stared down into the casket for long moment. Then she put her hand on top of Aunt Hattie’s hand and leaned down to whisper something to her, even though Aunt Hattie’s ears were past hearing.

  Purses all over the church clicked open as women pulled out handkerchiefs they hadn’t expected to need to say goodbye to dear Aunt Hattie who they knew was so ready to make the flight to heaven. But they shared Kate’s double grief with damp eyes and sympathetic hearts.

  Mama handed Samantha back to Tori so she could go to Kate. Jay moved to make room beside Kate, but he hovered behind them.

  Samantha pushed away the cookie Tori offered her and scrambled out of Tori’s lap to stand on the pew looking behind her again. “Cay,” she cried and reached out her arms.

  Clay was standing just inside the door. His broad shoulders and suntanned face were a stark contrast to Kate’s pale face. Tori pulled Samantha into her lap and turned back toward the front, but not before Clay’s eyes swept over her. She suddenly felt too still inside, as though waiting for something to happen.

  But nothing did. Another quick look over her shoulder showed Lillie scooting over and Clay lifting Mary up to perch on his knee so he had room in the pew beside his family. Tori’s heart began pounding up in her ears. What in the world was wrong with her? She was at a funeral. A person wasn’t supposed to think about anything but the person she was grieving. Certainly she shouldn’t be noticing how Clay looked so strong. Or remembering how safe she’d felt those few seconds in his arms after he’d kept her from falling at Graham’s pond. If she was thinking about anything besides Aunt Hattie or Kate, it should be Sammy.

  His funeral had been in this church. The telegram said he was dead, but there’d been no body. Perhaps that was why she had such a hard time giving up Sammy. Because she hadn’t seen him with the life gone from him the way she could see Aunt Hattie. If she’d had that last view of Sammy, she might have been convinced he was gone the way she could be sure Aunt Hattie had moved on up to paradise. Her head knew Sammy had moved on up to heaven too, but something in her heart refused to accept what her eyes hadn’t actually seen.

  Aunt Hattie’s son died in the First World War. He too never came home. His grave was in France. Aunt Hattie knew how it was, and yet, she had given her beloved son over to the Lord. That was what she told Tori to do. It was futile to try to hold on to what was already gone.

  The Lord gives and the Lord takes away. Tori had heard that from her more times than she could count. Then Aunt Hattie would go on. He took away from us, Victoria, but he didn’t never desert my Bo or your Sammy, and he won’t never desert me and you. That you can count on. Forever more.

  And now Kate had lost the child she so wanted. Tori bounced Samantha on her knees and offered her another cookie. She hoped the child would get sleepy when Mike started talking about Aunt Hattie. At last one of the deacons pulled the bell rope to toll the three o’clock hour. Mike stood up from beside Evie at the other end of the pew. He held Evie’s hand and whispered to her a minute. Whatever he said didn’t work. Evie shifted uneasily in the pew. Sitting was not easy for her, but then neither was standing. Her face was a confusion of emotions as she watched Mike step up to the casket to speak to Kate.

  Evie was worried about seeing Kate today or about Kate seeing her, so fully in the family way. That was all she’d talked about while they were getting ready for the funeral. That and how hard it was to find a black maternity dress.

  Tori had pulled the black dress she’d worn to Sammy’s funeral out of the back of the wardrobe. She had never wanted to wear it again and she hadn’t until today. A funeral dress.

  “Here I am about to pop with a baby and she’s lost hers.” Evie held her hands over her extended stomach as if to protect the baby inside her. “What in the world will I say to her?”

  Their mother came in the room in time to hear Evie. “You’re not about to pop, Evangeline. You’ve got weeks to go,” she told her with a touch of irritation.

  Evie let out a little breath, as though surprised by their mother’s words. “Only a few weeks.” She sounded close to tears.

  Mama wasn’t often cross with anyone, especially not Evie, but the last two days had worn her down. She’d even been short with a customer who had dallied over finishing her shopping at closing time. She apologized to the woman and added a bunch of bananas to her order without charging for them, but her smile had been forced. As they walked home, she’d confided in Tori as she never had before.

  “I know Aunt Hattie was ready, even anxious to go.” She spoke in little more than a whisper with her eyes straight ahead. “But I just don’t know what I’ll do without her.”

  Sometimes there were no right words to say. Tori took Mama’s hand the way she might have held Samantha’s hand as tears slid down her mother’s cheeks.

  But earlier that day, Mama’s eyes were dry as she set Evie straight. “Your sister won’t begrudge you a healthy baby when it’s time for your confinement.”

  “But it might make her sad,” Evie said.

  “She will be sad. She’s already sad, but that won’t have anything to do with you, Evangeline. And I guarantee you she’ll feel much worse if you back away from her because you feel a little uncomfortable. She’s hurting.” Mama took Evie’s hand and gave it a little shake. Then she reached for Tori’s hand too. “She needs her sisters. Both of you and Lorena too.”

  Now Mrs. Taylor moved to the piano and began softly playing a hymn. A signal of the time to begin. Beginnings and endings. Were they simply different sides of the same door?

  33

  The piano music meant it was time to begin the service, but Kate didn’t move toward her seat. Dear Aunt Hattie. She needed her to sit up and start talking to her. She needed her prayers and her wisdom in her ears.

  Almost as though she had an answer from heaven, Aunt Hattie’s words were in her head. Now, Katherine Reece, I ain’t wantin’ to listen to none of your nonsense. Any wisdom you ever got from me came straight from the Good Book. I’m knowin’ you has a copy of that Book. All the answers you might ever be wantin’ are between them covers if’n you read it with a prayerful heart. You’s on a bumpy road right now, but ain’t nary a one of us promised an easy road. Just ask your sweet sister Victoria about that. Sorrows come. With the good Lord’s help, we keep on going till the day comes, like it has for me, o glory, when troubles are over forever more. Your little baby child what only knew a flicker of life in your womb won’t never know a trouble one. Naught but love then and now.

  Kate’s mother circled her arm around Kate’s waist to turn her away from the casket. Kate kept her eyes on the little woman’s wrinkled face, but she wasn’t seeing her there. Instead Kate saw her out in the middle of the yard, her hands raised toward the heavens, talking to the Lord about whatever burden was on her mind.

  Kate thought about doing the same. Just lifting up her hands there in front of the church to surrender it all to the Lord. Then she realized she’d already done that. Maybe not the way Aunt Hattie would have,
but in the way she, Kate, needed to. She and Jay had given their baby to the Lord the night before.

  Now it was time to tell Aunt Hattie goodbye. Not that Aunt Hattie needed any kind of send-off. She was already with the Lord she loved so much, but the words and songs might ease the hearts of those who would miss her. Kate took one last look at Aunt Hattie’s peaceful face and knew without a doubt that Aunt Hattie would always be with her. Her words would echo in her head. Her prayers would sneak into her heart. But oh, how she was going to miss her voice in her ears and her hand on her cheek.

  Kate reached for Jay’s arm and Mama moved to let him step back beside her. Kate had hardly been aware of the full church as she’d walked down the aisle. All her attention was on the casket, but now she saw the packed church. Some of the women had hankies out, wiping away tears in between waving their fans.

  Evie worked her fan too and looked miserable as she watched Kate with worried eyes. She mouthed the words, I love you. Kate managed a smile and relief raced across Evie’s face.

  Mama sat down by Tori and lifted Samantha into her lap, but Lorena stayed beside Kate. Tomorrow Kate would tell Lorena about Miss Myrtle’s cousin and the man in Cincinnati named Birdsong. But not today. Today was Aunt Hattie’s. Today Kate couldn’t bear the thought of perhaps losing Lorena too. Some things were better put off until tomorrow.

  The church door opened and closed and people turned in their pews to see the latecomer. When they saw Fern, whispers circled around the church.

  “Oh good.” Lorena kept her voice low. “I was afraid she wasn’t coming.”

  Fern stopped just inside the door as though unable to move a step farther down the aisle without Aunt Hattie urging her toward one of the pews. She wore a print dress faded by too many washings, but it looked freshly pressed. Her gray hair was combed and tied back from her face with a strip of black cloth.

 

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