The Fruits of Fall

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The Fruits of Fall Page 5

by Amy Clipston

“If you work in the garden every day, we’ll pay you with room and board.” Wayne pointed out the barn doors. “You could do the weeding we can’t possibly keep up with. No matter how much we do on the days we can be here, and no matter what Tena and Emma do on their own, the beds are overrun with dandelions, ryegrass, and bull thistle. The garden is just too big for our resources, and it needs a lot of watering too. You can also do any maintenance Emma might need when the rest of us aren’t here. What do you think?”

  “Are you sure this is a good idea?” Alex asked.

  “Why do you ask that?”

  Alex rubbed his chin, hesitating. “I don’t think Tena wants me here.”

  Wayne nodded. “Maybe at first, but I’ve checked with her, and she’s supportive of the idea. So what do you say? Would you like to stay here and help us?”

  “I’d love it.”

  “Fantastic.” Wayne leaned over and shook Alex’s hand. “We all appreciate it.”

  “No, I appreciate it.” Alex seemed to ponder something as he took a drink of the water. “I didn’t think I’d wind up like this.” He gestured around the barn. “When I joined the army, I thought it would be my career. Well, I thought it would be a stable job, but then I was injured.” He pointed to his left leg. “I shattered my femur in combat, and when it didn’t heal correctly, I was discharged. I thought I’d be able to rebuild my life, but things haven’t turned out the way I thought they would.”

  Alex looked away as if shielding his emotions. “I’m thankful you and Emma believe in me, because it’s been a long time since anyone has.”

  Suddenly Wayne felt a calm cover him like a warm, comfortable blanket. It was as if God were whispering in his ear. He was supposed to help this man, and he knew it deep inside. Asking Alex to stay was the right decision, despite Tena’s hesitation.

  “We’re glad to help you,” Wayne said. And he truly was.

  Wayne smiled as he carried the empty plate and fork back to the house. As he sat and talked with Alex while he ate, the man must have thanked him at least ten times. If only Tena could see the appreciation in Alex’s eyes, she would see one of the reasons Wayne wanted to help him. He prayed God would soften Tena’s heart toward Alex soon.

  He looked toward the porch and spotted her sitting with the other young women as they talked and laughed. She was radiant as she smiled at something Mandy said. He once again imagined what it would be like if they could be more than friends.

  Ephraim came down the porch steps and met him. “Wayne, can we talk in private?” He nodded toward the garden. “Let’s walk over there.”

  “Of course. Give me a minute.” Wayne handed the plate and fork to Mandy, and then he followed Ephraim to the garden, near the tomatoes. They sat down on a bench in Emma’s flower garden. “What’s on your mind?”

  Ephraim scrubbed his hand down his face and then blew out a sigh that sounded as if it had worked its way up from his toes. “I’m going to ask Mandy’s dat for permission to ask her to marry me.”

  “Are you kidding me?” Wayne clapped his hands. “That’s fantastic!”

  “Shh!” Ephraim glanced toward the porch. “I don’t want her to hear us.”

  “I’m sorry.” Wayne punched Ephraim’s shoulder. “I’m so froh for you.”

  “Danki.” Ephraim shook his head. “I hope her dat will agree.”

  “I don’t think you have anything to worry about. The Benders think the world of you.”

  “I also hope she says yes.”

  “Don’t be gegisch. I imagine she’s been waiting for you to ask.” Wayne looked over at Tena. Would he ask her to marry him one day? The thought sent excitement ripping through his chest, surprising him. They’d never even been on a date!

  “Did you talk to Tena earlier today?”

  “Ya.” Wayne slumped back on the bench. “I had to convince her to give Alex a chance. The truth is she’s not just uncomfortable with him because, to her, he’s a stranger. She seems to be afraid of him.”

  “Do you know why?”

  Wayne’s heart constricted as he recalled how she’d cried when he pressed her to tell him why. He couldn’t bring himself to share the intimate details of their conversation. He was grateful she’d allowed him to hold her, but he also hadn’t wanted the hug to end. She’d felt as if she belonged in his arms, as if they were meant to be together. But if that were true, why wouldn’t she open up to him?

  “I tried. I think she’s afraid of all Englishers. She made me promise to ask him to leave if he said or did anything to make her feel threatened.”

  Ephraim’s expression grew serious. “Do you think he would hurt Emma or Tena?”

  “No. I truly believe he just needs someone to believe him in, and that’s what I intend to do.” Wayne angled his body toward his friend. “Now, tell me what you plan to say to Mandy’s dat.”

  CHAPTER 6

  I can’t believe September is almost over,” Clara said as she rubbed Hank’s chin. He was sitting on their spare stool inside the roadside stand.

  “I know.” Tena leaned forward on the counter and looked at the pumpkins sitting on the shelves Chris and Wayne had built the previous spring. “Next week is October.”

  “The month has flown by.” Clara turned toward her. “Alex is working out well. He’s done a great job keeping up with the weeding in the garden. Jerry told me he said he really likes working there because it calms him and he loves being outdoors.”

  “That’s nice.” Tena ran her fingers over the counter as she considered the past few weeks. She’d tried to get used to eating all her meals with Alex and seeing him around the garden and the house, but she couldn’t stop feeling nervous around him.

  She supposed he was pleasant enough and seemed respectful, and she no longer thought he would hurt them, at least physically. He was also hardworking, and he insisted on helping with the dishes even though she and Aenti Emma repeatedly told him it wasn’t necessary. But he was still an Englisher. She wasn’t willing to trust him like Aenti Emma and her friends seemed to, and she avoided him as much as possible. He could still be deceiving them.

  Wayne had asked Tena several times if she felt comfortable around Alex, and each time she told him everything was fine. Still, she looked forward to the day when Alex decided to leave and find a new place to live.

  “Everyone loves Alex.” Clara returned to rubbing the cat’s chin. “I heard Biena say he might work us all out of a job since he’s so gut at gardening. He planted all Emma’s spring flower bulbs before anyone else could offer.”

  Tena looked down at her fingernails. She’d bitten them to the quick.

  “All right, Tena.” Clara faced her. “I’ve known you for three months now, and I can tell when you’re avoiding a conversation. What’s going on?”

  “Nothing.” Tena shrugged and looked out toward the road. Now would be the perfect time for a car full of Englishers to come and start buying all our goods.

  When no car appeared, she decided to change the subject. “How are things with Jerry?”

  “They’re gut.” Clara’s smile brightly. “We can’t officially date until he’s baptized next year, but we’re enjoying spending time together.”

  “He’s really nice.”

  “Ya, he is, and he’s handsome too.” Her cheeks flushed, and Tena laughed. “My parents really love him. I can hardly wait until he’s baptized. We have so much to look forward to.”

  “Ya, you do.” Tena drew circles on the top of the counter with her finger as memories swirled through her mind. She recalled how her heart had raced when Lewis proposed and how her mother had cried tears of joy when Tena told her the news.

  Life was perfect back then—or so she’d thought. She believed she could never be happier, and then it all fell apart when she found Lewis kissing that woman behind his father’s dairy barn the day she’d surprised him with one of his favorite pies—cherry. The ground seemed to collapse beneath her feet.

  Lewis apologized for lying, but he also t
old her this Kendra Ramsey was his true love. He was going to leave the church and marry her.

  Tena’s world exploded in a million pieces, and she was certain she’d never love or trust another man.

  “Are you really going to go back to Indiana after Thanksgiving?”

  Tena’s gaze snapped to Clara’s, finding concern and possibly even disappointment there. “Ya, that’s what I told my parents and Aenti Emma.”

  Clara frowned. “We’re all going to miss you when you go, especially Wayne.”

  I’ll miss him too.

  Tena dismissed the thought. This wasn’t her home, and she wasn’t ready to trust any man. Her heartache was still too fresh.

  A dark-colored SUV pulled up in front of the stand, and Tena and Clara sat up straight.

  “Good morning,” Clara sang as a young woman with long, wavy blond hair, bright-blue eyes, and a wide smile approached.

  “Hi.” She turned to the tall man with her. He had dark hair and eyes. “I think this is the place. I heard they have the best produce in Lancaster County.”

  As the woman came closer, Tena’s stomach soured. With her flashy smile and fancy hair and purse, she reminded Tena of Kendra. She fought the urge to run to the house and barricade herself in her room to hide from her past.

  “I heard you have the best corn,” the woman said.

  “Really?” Tena forced her lips to curve into a smile as she pointed to the display of corn ears. “Please help yourself.”

  “Great.” The woman rubbed her hands together. “Do you have any bags?”

  “Ya.” Clara pulled out a handful from under the counter. “We have a box too.”

  Ten minutes later, the Englishers left with a box full of vegetables.

  “I think that was our best sale since we opened.” Clara put the cash in the money box.

  “Ya.” Tena looked toward her great-aunt’s rock driveway and let out a sigh of relief when she spotted Mandy coming toward the stand. She was ready to get back to the house—away from the Englishers who visited the stand and everything they represented to her.

  “Hi!” Mandy waved. “I’m here to relieve one of you.”

  “You can go,” Clara told Tena. “I’m not ready to do more chores yet.”

  “Oh, come, Clara.” Mandy bumped Clara with her shoulder. “Don’t you just love stooping over and weeding?”

  “I got my fill of weeding this morning.” Clara looked down at the cat. “I’d rather stand here and rub Hank’s chin for a while longer.”

  “I think he’ll enjoy that.” Tena started toward the driveway. “I’ll see you two later.”

  When she reached the top of the driveway, she looked toward the barn. Wayne, Ephraim, Chris, Jerry, and Alex were all hard at work giving it a fresh coat of red paint. Wayne waved at her from atop a ladder, and she waved back.

  As she walked toward the house, her thoughts turned to Wayne. He was handsome, kind, thoughtful, and generous. If she were ready to date again, she’d be blessed to have the chance to get to know him even better. But after what Lewis had done, she couldn’t risk her heart.

  Wayne sat in Emma’s glider later that evening and breathed in the cool early evening air. In the distance, the sun was beginning to set, coloring the sky with gorgeous hues of red.

  “Would you like some iced tea?” Tena sat down beside him and handed him a glass.

  “Danki.” He took a sip and smiled at her. “It’s appeditlich.”

  This was his favorite time of the evening. All their friends had gone home, and he and Tena could sit on the porch together and talk—alone. Tonight, he’d decided, he would finally work up the courage to ask her to date him! Surely he’d waited long enough. She seemed to have forgiven his role in inviting Alex into her life.

  “I’m glad you like it.” She turned toward the barn. “You got a lot done on the barn today. It looks great.”

  “Danki.” He looked up at the sky and then back at her. “Your hair reminds me of the sunset.”

  “What?” Her chestnut-brown eyes widened as she gaped.

  “Your hair.” He pointed to the sky. “It reminds me of a gorgeous fall sunset.”

  She stared at him.

  “What?” He laughed. “Why are you so stunned? No one has ever told you that?”

  She slowly shook her head.

  He set the glass on the porch floor and angled his body toward her. “Your hair is lovely, Tena. I can’t believe no one has ever told you that.”

  “No, no one has.” She shook her head and frowned. He was almost certain he spotted tears in her beautiful eyes.

  “Was iss letz?” he asked as alarm shot through him. “Did I say something wrong?”

  “No, it’s not you.” She took a deep breath. “I saw someone today who reminded me of her, and it brought it all back.” She pulled a tissue from her pocket and wiped her nose.

  “I’m sorry, Tena, but I’m confused. I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

  “I’m not sure who Aenti Emma might have told. I was engaged last year. In fact, I was supposed to be married next month. Lewis and I had it all planned. We were going to live with his parents and eventually build a little haus on his dat’s dairy farm.” She ran a finger around the rim of her glass. “Everything was perfect, or so I thought. One day I wanted to surprise him. I’d made his favorite kind of pie because it was exactly six months to the day before we were going to be married.”

  She paused and took a deep breath, her gaze still trained on her glass. “At first, I couldn’t find him out in his barn, where he usually was that time of day. And his dat wasn’t anywhere nearby. I saw a flashy little sports car in the driveway, but I thought maybe a customer had come to buy a quilt from his mamm.

  “When I heard voices behind the barn, I walked back there and found him kissing a woman. She was an Englisher with long blond hair and fancy clothes. I gasped and dropped the pie, and Lewis ran over to me. He apologized and said he was going to tell me soon. He also said this woman, this Kendra, was his true love, and he was going to leave the church for her. I was crushed.”

  She looked up at him, and the pain in her eyes nearly broke Wayne apart.

  “I’m so sorry,” he whispered, his voice sounding thin to his own ears.

  “I felt so stupid. I hadn’t seen the signs there all along. He’d been withdrawing from me, distant. He hadn’t told me he loved me in more than a month. I would say I loved him, but he’d just nod or say, ‘Me too.’ He told me he’d met her a few weeks earlier at a restaurant, and that he was going to leave the church and move in with her. She already had an apartment and a job lined up for him. I keep wondering what she had that I didn’t. Why wasn’t I gut enough?” Her voice cracked, and her tears broke free, streaming down her pink cheeks.

  “Tena.” Wayne pulled her against his side and took her hand. He was grateful she didn’t pull away. “Lewis is the one who made the mistake. There’s nothing wrong with you. He was misguided, and he didn’t realize he already had the most amazing maedel he could have ever hoped to find. You’re better off without him.”

  “That’s what mei mamm said.” She sat up straight and wiped her eyes and nose with another tissue. “But it still hurts, especially when I see someone who reminds me of Lewis or Kendra. When I saw that woman at the stand today, it was like reliving that horrible day. I came to Bird-in-Hand so I could forget it all and put it behind me, but it still hurts.”

  “Tena, you don’t need Lewis. He didn’t deserve you.” Wayne longed to take away her pain, to help her forget. He had to tell her how he felt about her. He took a deep breath and took her other hand as well. “In fact, I care about you. When I first saw you, I felt something stir deep in my soul. You’re the most beautiful maedel I’ve ever seen, and you’re also a wunderbaar freind.”

  He traced his finger down her cheek, and she shivered as her eyes went wide. “I love everything about you—your smile, your laugh, your sense of humor. I want to get to know you better and see where
this relationship could lead. And I would be honored to date you.”

  “Wayne, I-I’m not ready,” she stammered as she pulled away and stood. “I can’t do this. I’m still working through everything Lewis did to me. I can’t even think of dating right now.”

  “Okay.” He shifted to the far end of the glider as disappointment gripped him. His cheeks burned with embarrassment, and he rubbed at the back of his neck. “I understand. I never meant to pressure you. I’m fine with just being your freind if that’s what you need.”

  She bit her lower lip and studied him, and then she sank back down on the glider. He longed to read her thoughts. Had he completely misread her feelings for him?

  He swallowed a groan. How could he have been so blind as to assume she cared for him the same way he cared for her?

  “You know I’m not going to stay here past Thanksgiving.” She turned toward him. “You’re wasting your emotions on me.”

  “No, I’m not,” he said. “You’re important to me.”

  She shook her head and looked down at the porch floor.

  “Tena, please look at me.”

  She looked up at him and sniffed.

  “Don’t give up on yourself because of Lewis. He made the mistake, and you did nothing wrong.”

  “Let’s talk about something else, okay?” She gave him a watery smile.

  “Okay.” He looked toward the barn. “A few folks have told me they’re froh with Alex’s work. He’s done a great job in the garden, and he’s really gut at keeping up with the maintenance around the haus. Emma told me he fixed that one window in the schtupp that kept going off the track.”

  Tena’s spine went ramrod straight at the mention of Alex’s name. Wayne was still befuddled by her feelings toward the man. He needed to know why she was so afraid of him.

  “You’re still disturbed by Alex being here. Did he do something to upset you?”

  “No.” She shook her head. “I just don’t feel comfortable around Englishers. I’ve told you that.”

  He opened his mouth to defend the man, or at least ask her what it was about Englishers that prompted such as reaction. Surely it was more than her fiancé leaving her for an English woman. But he didn’t want to argue with her after she’d finally bared her soul to him. They would discuss this further some other time. He took a long drink from his glass and then stood.

 

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