by Lilah Rivers
Reuben said a quick prayer and the two dug into the food. Laila had to admit, it was good. She’d done a good job. She could tell by the way he was eating and the smile on his face that he was just as satisfied.
“This is great, Laila. You outdid yourself with this. It’s a shame Pa won’t be here to have some.”
Laila refused to let the thought get her down. Pa was a good man. He was just a lost soul and she would do anything she could to find a way through to him.
She was beginning to feel helpless, though. It was disheartening. She reached across the table and patted his hand.
“I’m just glad you are, Reuben. I’d be so alone without you.”
Reuben gave her a warm smile and set his fork down on the plate so he could pat the hand she’d rested on his other one. “I love ya, sis. I’m blessed to have you, too. We gotta be strong for Pa. He really needs us.”
“I’m worried,” Laila said, softly, the stress obvious in her voice. “I don’t think he’s going to pull himself out of this and I don’t know what to do to help him. You know he’s in town gambling and drinking. He’ll come in here drunk and pass out on the couch. He won’t be any good to help you tomorrow.” She stopped, her heart heavy. She dropped her head.
Reuben squeezed her hand and leaned forward, his voice dropping low. His care for her soothed her. “Now, now, Laila. Pa will come back to us. We just have to pray for a miracle. God will help us if we remember that He’s in charge, right? That’s what we believe, isn’t it?”
Laila pulled in a deep breath. He was right. They had prayed since they were little, taught by their mother not to be formal about it but just to talk to Him as if he was right there listening. She’d imagined God listening to her prayers all her life. Now, when she needed to the most, she hadn’t been praying.
“I do need to pray over this, Reuben. I haven’t been. I feel… so ashamed.”
“No, don’t do that, either.” His “big brother” voice came out, making her smile, softly. “Just pray and maybe something will change. Believe it will change. We can only do so much. And right now, that’s just to love Pa. Even in his current condition.”
They were quiet for a few moments. Laila found herself breathing easier. He was always so good at calming her heart. She was so glad to have him as her older brother.
“Feel better?” he asked after a prolonged silence.
She looked up at him, smiling. “Yes, I do. Thank you, Reuben.”
He grinned and pulled his hands from hers. “Thank goodness. My hands were getting sweaty.”
They both laughed.
Chapter 4
A commotion downstairs and the sound of their dogs barking wildly woke Laila from a light sleep. She was just dozing off, trying not to let her worry keep her up all night. She was immediately alert, sliding her legs out from under the light quilt. She’d heard her father make noise coming in before but he’d slammed the door with purpose. That meant he was either more drunk than usual or nearly sober.
Laila pushed her feet into the slippers by the bed and grabbed her robe as she ran to her door. She was through it quickly but her father was already at the top of the stairs. She’d never seen him look like he did and panic struck her.
“Pa! Are you okay? What’s going on?”
“Laila! We must wake your brother! I… I have exciting news! I want to tell you both together!”
Laila’s confusion fogged her brain, making it hard to think straight. “News? Are you all right? What do you mean?”
“Come on, come on!” Bart was just outside Reuben’s door and had paused to give her a moment to catch up to him. When she was next to him, he grabbed her hand and gave her a wild-eyed look. “Everything will change now, Laila! Everything will change!”
His excitement was catching. Laila followed him into Reuben’s dark room. Her father held up his lantern and crossed the room to the bed, where her brother was lying sound asleep.
Bart dropped on the side of the bed and set the lantern down on the night stand. He grabbed Reuben by the shoulders and shook him gently.
“Reuben, Reuben, wake up! I have something to tell you! We’ve got our miracle. Oh, son, we got our miracle!”
Laila bent at the waist, resting one hand on her father’s shoulder. “Pa, what’s all this about? Reuben is so tired from working all day. Are you drunk? Are you…”
“Stop it, girl!” Her father shrugged her hand off his shoulder and replied in a scolding voice. “I’m not drunk! I’m completely sober! I haven’t had a drop since… well, it doesn’t matter when. Point is, I’m not drunk! And I’ve come into a windfall! Look what I have! Look, Reuben! Look!”
Laila watched as her father whipped a folded paper from his vest pocket and hold it up in front of her brother. Reuben was just waking up, rubbing his eyes and trying to focus. He was mumbling incoherently.
She snatched the paper from her father’s hand and moved closer to the lantern. She unfolded it and read the words on it with growing excitement and apprehension. It looked like a promissory note. When she saw what it was for and who had signed it, chills ran up her spine.
“Pa,” she said breathlessly, looking over her shoulder at him. He was grinning from ear to ear. “This is from Jarrett Raines! Where did you get this?”
“What is it, Laila?” Reuben asked, still half-asleep. He groggily reached over and took the paper from her, rubbing one hand through his hair as he stared at the writing. It only took a second for him to comprehend what he was reading. He pushed himself to a sitting position and read it again. He pulled his eyes up to meet his father’s. “Pa. What is this?”
“What does it look like?” their father asked, his voice high-pitched from the adrenaline running through him. He pushed himself to his feet, practically hopping in place. “It’s from Jarrett Raines! I won! I won two hands! Three thousand dollars and 30 head of cattle! We are back on our feet! We can fix everything now! Pay off all the debts with some left over! Plenty left over!”
Laila was numb for a moment, trying to understand how this could have happened. Her father had never put himself in a game that would cost him so much if he lost. She looked up at him.
He hadn’t lost. He’d won.
Tingles ran over her body, making the hair on her arms and the back of her neck stand on end.
“This is real?” she asked, softly, taking the paper back from her brother. He was staring at her, blinking.
“It’s real!” Bart began to laugh and dance around the room. He lifted his arms up in the air and twirled around, snapping his fingers. “It’s real! I won! I won, Rebecca! I won!” He put both hands to his lips, kissed them and threw the kisses toward the ceiling. “I won, I won!”
Laila was overcome with the need to laugh. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d been so happy. Her father wasn’t drunk. He’d won big and they were to get a great deal of money and cattle to add to their herd, bringing them close to where they had been when they lost so much that winter five years ago.
Nothing would bring back her mother. But to have her father back would mean so much.
Reuben’s face lit up. He threw the covers from his legs and jumped to his feet. In seconds, he was by Laila’s side. He grabbed her up by her hand and her waist and spun her around the room, throwing his head back and laughing.
She twirled around, her nightcap slipping from her head, falling to the floor, where she accidentally trod upon it as her brother danced with her. She let her head fall backwards and gazed at the ceiling as it rotated above her.
“We’re back!” Reuben shouted, his glee flowing out with his words. “We’re free again! Praise the Lord! Thank You, God! Our prayers have been answered!”
Laila fell into giggling, and her head was spinning when Reuben finally stopped twirling her around. “Oh, Reuben! Such a way to have a prayer answered! Gambling! Of all things!”
Reuben’s laughter came through his voice. “Well, it had to come somehow!”
He gathere
d her in his strong arms and lifted her off her feet, spinning her around in circles. He only did it a few times before he stopped and set her down again. He looked down at her briefly before pulling her into a hug.
“Everything’s gonna be all right again, Laila. I’m sure of it.” He pulled away but when she looked up at him, his eyes were on their father, who was still dancing a jig in the middle of his round woven carpet. “Pa! Pa, tell your daughter everything is gonna get better now.”
Bart stopped dancing and strolled over casually. He stopped a few feet from her and tilted his head to the side, giving her a goofy grin she hadn’t seen since she was a small child.
“Everything is gonna be all right, girly-girl,” he said, using an old sailor’s accent. “I promise!” He jabbed his index finger toward the sky and hopped over to envelop her in his slender arms. She hugged him tight, noticing how bony he’d become.
That worry was for another time, she told herself. Right now, her family needed to be happy.
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