A Springtime Heart

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A Springtime Heart Page 24

by Marta Perry


  Ham and Bean Chowder

  3 cups chicken broth

  1 can condensed cream of chicken soup

  2 potatoes, cubed

  1 cup cooked ham, cubed

  1 cup corn

  1 small onion, diced

  2 Tablespoons butter

  ¼ cup flour

  ½ cup warm water

  1 Tablespoon parsley

  1 can white beans, drained

  Salt and pepper, to taste

  Heat the chicken broth and soup in a large saucepan. Stir in the potatoes, ham, corn, onion, and butter. Simmer on low heat for 2 hours.

  Place the flour and water in a small container and stir or shake vigorously until smooth. Stir the mixture into the soup. Stir in the parsley and beans. Cook slowly for another 30 minutes. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

  Broccoli and Cheese Soup

  6 cups chicken broth

  1 cup onion, chopped

  1 cup celery, chopped

  3 potatoes, diced

  10 ounces frozen or fresh broccoli, chopped

  10 ounces frozen or fresh cauliflower, chopped

  2 cans cream of mushroom soup

  1 pound Velveeta cheese, sliced

  Salt and pepper, to taste

  In a large saucepan, combine the chicken broth, onion, celery, and potatoes; bring to a boil. Simmer for 30 minutes. Add the broccoli and cauliflower; heat through. Add the soup and cheese, stirring until the cheese melts. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Simmer until the vegetables are cooked.

  Dear Reader,

  I hope you’ll let me know if you enjoyed my book. You can reach me at [email protected], and I’d be happy to send you a bookmark and my brochure of Pennsylvania Dutch recipes. You’ll also find me at martaperry.com and on Facebook at MartaPerryBooks.

  Happy reading,

  Marta

  Turn the page for an excerpt from

  A CHRISTMAS HOME

  A Promise Glen Novel

  by Marta Perry

  Available now from Berkley

  The buggy drew to a stop near the farmhouse porch, and Sarah Yoder climbed down slowly, her eyes on the scene before her. Here it was—the fulfillment of the dream she’d had for the past ten years. Home.

  Her cousin, Eli Miller, paused in lifting her cases down from the buggy. “Everything all right?”

  “Fine.” Wonderful.

  Sarah sucked in a breath and felt the tension that had ridden her for weeks ease. It hadn’t been easy to break away from the life her father had mapped out for her, but she’d done it. The old frame farmhouse spread itself in the spot where it had stood since the first Amish settlers came over the mountains from Lancaster County and saw the place they considered their promised land. Promise Glen, that was what folks called it, this green valley tucked between sheltering ridges in central Pennsylvania. And that’s what she hoped it would be for her.

  The porch door thudded, and Grossmammi rushed out. Her hair was a little whiter than the last time Sarah had seen her, but her blue eyes were still bright and her skin as soft as a girl’s. For an instant the thought of her mother pierced Sarah’s heart. Mammi had looked like her own mother. If she’d lived . . . but she’d been gone ten years now. Sarah had been just eighteen when she’d taken charge of the family.

  Before she could lose herself in regret, Grossmammi had reached her, and her grandmother’s strong arms encircled her. The warmth of her hug chased every other thought away, and Sarah clung to her the way she had as a child, when Grossmammi had represented everything that was firm and secure in her life.

  Her grandmother drew back finally, her blue eyes bright with tears. She took refuge in scolding, as she did when emotions threatened to overcome her.

  “Ach, we’ve been waiting and waiting. I told Eli he should leave earlier. Did he keep you waiting there at the bus stop?”

  Eli grinned, winking at Sarah. “Ask Cousin Sarah. I was there when she stepped off the bus.”

  And she’d seen him pull up just in time, but she wouldn’t give him away. “That’s right. I was wonderful surprised to see my little cousin—he grew, ain’t so?”

  “Taller than you now, Sarah, though that’s not saying much.” He indicated her five feet and a bit with a line in the air, his expression as impudent as it had been when he was a child.

  “And you’ve not changed much, except in inches,” she retorted, long since used to holding her own with younger siblings and cousins. “Same freckles, same smile, same sassiness.”

  “Ach, help!” He threw up his hands as if to protect himself. “Here’s my sweet Ruthie coming. She’ll save me from my cousin.”

  Ruthie, his wife of three years, came heavily down the back porch stairs, looking younger than her twenty-three years. She looked from him to Sarah, as if to make sure Sarah wasn’t offended. “You are talking nonsense.” She swatted at him playfully. “Komm, carry those things to the grossdaadi haus for Sarah. Supper is almost ready.”

  “Sarah, this is Ruthie, you’ll have figured out,” Grossmammi said. “And here is their little Mary.” The child who slipped out onto the porch looked about two, with huge blue eyes and soft wispy brown hair that curled, unruly, around her face.

  And Ruthie couldn’t have more than a month to go before the arrival of the new baby, Sarah could see, assessing her with a shrewd eye. When even the shapeless Amish dress didn’t conceal the bump, a woman knew it wasn’t far off.

  Eli loaded himself up with Sarah’s boxes, obviously intent on getting everything in one trip. “Surrounded by women, that’s what I am,” he said cheerfully. “And now there’s another one.”

  He stopped long enough to give Sarah a one-armed hug, poking her in the side with one of her boxes as he did. “We’re wonderful glad you’re here at last, Cousin Sarah.”

  Sarah blinked back an errant tear. Eli hadn’t lost his tender heart, that was certain sure. And Grossmammi looked as if she’d just been given the gift of a lifetime. As for Ruthie . . . well, she had a sense that Ruthie was withholding judgment for the moment. That was hardly surprising. She’d want to know what changes this strange cousin was going to make in their lives.

  As little as possible, Sarah mentally assured her. All she wanted was a place to call home while she figured out what her new life was going to be.

  Eli, finally laden with all her belongings, headed toward the grossdaadi haus, a wing built onto the main house and connected by a short hallway. Grossmammi had lived there since Grossdaadi’s death, and when Sarah walked into the living room and saw the familiar rocking chairs and the framed family tree on the wall, she felt instantly at home.

  “You’re up here, Sarah.” Eli bumped his way up the stairs until Sarah retrieved one of the boxes and carried it herself.

  He flashed her that familiar grin. “What do you have in there? Rocks?”

  “Books. I couldn’t leave those behind. I just hope there’s a bookcase I can use.”

  “If there isn’t, we can pick one up at a sale. The auction house is still busy, even this late in the year. Almost December already.”

  “Grossdaadi used to say that any farmer worth the name had all his work done by the first of December.”

  “Ach, don’t go comparing me to Grossdaadi,” he said with mock fear. “Here we are. I hope you like it.” He stacked everything at the foot of the old-fashioned sleigh bed. “Ruthie says supper is about ready, so komm eat. You can unpack later.”

  She’d rather have a few minutes to catch her breath and explore her new home, but Ruthie was her hostess. It wouldn’t do to be late for their first supper together. With a pause in the hall bathroom to wash her hands, she hurried downstairs and joined Grossmammi to step the few feet across the hallway—the line that marked off their home from Eli and Ruthie’s.

 
; The hall led into the kitchen of the old farmhouse. Ruthie hurried them to their places at the table and began to dish up the food. Sarah glanced at her, opened her mouth to offer help, and caught Grossmammi’s eye. Her grandmother shook her head, ever so slightly.

  So something else lay behind the welcome she’d received. Best if she were quiet until she knew what it was.

  This was a little disconcerting. She’d dreamed for so long of being here, but those dreams hadn’t included the possibility that someone might not want her.

  Nonsense. Ruthie seemed shy, and probably she was anxious about this first meal she’d cooked for Sarah. The best course for Sarah was to keep quiet and blend in.

  But once the silent prayer was over and everyone had been served pot roast with all the trimmings, it wasn’t so easy to stay silent, since Eli seemed determined to hear everything about everything.

  “So what was it like out in Idaho? I didn’t even know there were any Amish there.” Eli helped himself to a mound of mashed potatoes.

  “Not many,” she admitted. “It was a new settlement.” She didn’t bother to add that anything new was appealing to Daad—either they understood her father already, or they didn’t need to know. “Ruthie, this pot roast is delicious. Denke.” The beef was melt-in-your-mouth tender, the gravy rich and brown.

  Ruthie’s face relaxed in a smile, and she nodded in acknowledgment of the praise. “And your brothers and sister?” she modestly moved on. “How are they?”

  “All married and settled now.” They’d wisely given up finding a home with Daad and created homes of their own. “Nancy’s husband is a farrier in Indiana, and the two boys are farming—Thomas in Ohio and David in Iowa.”

  “Far apart,” Grossmammi murmured, and Sarah wondered what she was thinking. To say it was unusual to have an Amish family so widespread was putting it mildly.

  “They all invited me to come to them,” she said quickly, lest anyone think that the siblings she had raised were not grateful. “But I thought it was best for me to make a life of my own. I’m going to get a job.”

  Eli dropped his fork in surprise. “A job? You don’t want to be working for strangers.”

  She had to smile at his offended expression. “Yah, a job. Some work I can do in order to pay my own way.”

  That wasn’t all of it, of course. Her desire went deeper than that. She’d spent the past ten years raising her brothers and sister, and it had been a labor of love. What would have happened to all of them after Mammi died if she hadn’t?

  But that time had convinced her of what she didn’t want. She didn’t want to become the old maid that most large families had—the unmarried sister who hadn’t anything of her own and spent her life helping to raise other people’s children, tending to the elderly, and doing any other tasks that came along. She wanted a life of her own. That wasn’t selfish, was it?

  Even as she thought it, Eli was arguing. “You’re family. You’ll do lots of things to pay your own way. You can help Ruthie with looking after the kinder, and there’s the garden, and the canning . . .”

  He went on talking, but Sarah had stopped listening, because she’d caught an apprehensive expression on Ruthie’s face. This, then, was what Ruthie was afraid of. She feared Sarah had come to take over—to run her house, to raise her babies . . .

  Ruthie actually did have cause to be concerned, she supposed. She’d been in complete charge of the home for the past ten years, through almost as many moves and fresh starts. It wouldn’t be easy to keep herself from jumping in—with the best will in the world, she might not be able to restrain herself unless she had something else to occupy her.

  “I’ll be happy to help Ruthie anytime she wants me,” she said, using the firm voice that always made her younger siblings take notice. “But I need something else to keep me busy.”

  “And I know what,” Grossmammi said, in a tone that suggested the discussion was over. “Noah Raber needs someone to keep the books and take care of the billing for his furniture business. I’ve already spoken to him about it.” She turned to Sarah. “You can go over there tomorrow and set it up.”

  Sarah managed to keep her jaw from dropping, but barely. She’d intended to look for a job, but she hadn’t expected to find herself being pushed into one as soon as she arrived.

  “But . . . bookkeeping? I don’t know if I can . . .”

  “Nonsense,” Grossmammi said briskly. “You took those bookkeeping classes a couple of years ago, didn’t you?”

  She nodded. She had done that, with the hope of finding something outside the home to do. But then Daad had gotten the idea of moving on again, and she had given it up. Did she really remember enough to take this on?

  “Mostly Noah needs someone to handle the business side,” Grossmammi went on. “The man loves to work with wood, but he has no idea how to send a bill. That’s where you come in.”

  “But Noah Raber.” Eli looked troubled. “Are you sure that’s a gut idea? Noah’s situation . . .”

  “Noah’s situation is that he needs to hire someone. Why shouldn’t it be Sarah?” She got up quickly. “Now, I think we should do the supper cleanup so Sarah can go and unpack.”

  Grossmammi, as usual, had the last word. None of her children or grandchildren would dare to argue when she used that tone.

  Carrying her dishes to the sink, Sarah tried to figure out how she felt about this turn of events. She certain sure didn’t want to continue being in a place where she was only valued because she could take care of children.

  But this job . . . what if she tried it and failed? What if she’d forgotten everything she’d once known? Noah Raber might feel she’d been foisted on him.

  And what was it about his situation that so troubled Eli? She tried to remember Noah, but her school years memories had slipped away with all the changes in her life since then. He was a couple of years older than she was, and she had a vague picture of someone reserved, someone who had pursued his own interests instead of joining with the usual rumspringa foolishness. Was he interested in offering her the job, or had Grossmammi pushed him into it?

  But she’d already made her decision in coming here—coming home. She shivered a little as a cold breeze snaked its way around the window over the sink and touched her face. There was no turning back now.

  * * *

  —

  “Why didn’t you put your shoes together under the bed like you’re supposed to?” Noah Raber looked in exasperation at six-year-old Mark, dressed for school except for one important thing—his right shoe.

  “I did, Daadi.” Mark looked on the verge of tears, and Noah was instantly sorry for his sharp tone. Mark was the sensitive one of the twins, unlike Matthew. Scoldings rolled off Matty like water off a duck’s back.

  “It’s all right.” He brushed a hand lightly over his son’s hair, pale as corn silk in the winter sunlight pouring in the window. “You look in the bathroom while I check in here.”

  There weren’t that many places where a small shoe could hide, but the neighbor kids were already coming down the drive, ready to walk to school with the twins. With a quick gesture he pulled the chest of drawers away from the wall. One sock, but no shoes.

  From the kitchen below he heard Matty’s voice, probably commenting on the fact that the King children were coming. But a woman’s voice, speaking in answer, startled him out of that assumption. Who . . . ? Well, he had to find the shoe before anything.

  When his mother had been here, this early-morning time had run smoothly—he hadn’t realized how smoothly until he’d had to do it himself. Still, it had been high time Mamm had had a break from looking after his twins, and her longing to visit his sister Anna and her new baby was obvious. Naturally he’d encouraged her to go, insisting he and the boys would get along fine. If he’d known then . . .

  “I found it!” Mark came running in, waving the shoe.
“It was in the hamper.”

  He started to ask how it had gotten there and decided he didn’t really need to know. The important thing was to get them out the door.

  “Let’s get it on.” He picked up his son and plopped him on the bed, shoving the shoe on his foot and fastening it with quick movements. “There. Now scoot.”

  Mark darted out the door and clattered down the stairs, running for the kitchen. Noah followed in time to see Mark come to an abrupt halt in the kitchen doorway. He stopped, too, at the sight of a strange woman in his kitchen.

  “Who—” He didn’t get the question out before Matty broke in.

  “This is Sarah. She’s come to work for you, Daadi.”

  The woman put a hand lightly on Matthew’s shoulder. “Only if your daadi hires me.” She smiled. “Matthew and I were getting acquainted. This must be Mark.” Her eyes focused on Mark, hanging on to Noah’s pant leg, but she didn’t venture to approach him.

  “I’m sorry. I don’t . . .” His mind was empty of everything but the need to get the boys off to school. “Just a minute.” He turned to his sons. “Coats on, right this minute. And hats and mittens. It’s cold out. Hurry.”

  Apparently realizing this was not the time to delay, they both scrambled into their outer garments, and he shooed them toward the small mudroom that led to the back door. “Out you go.”

  “I think—” the woman began, following him.

  “Just wait,” he snapped. Couldn’t she see he was busy? “Have a gut day, you two. Mind you listen to Teacher Dorcas.”

  He opened the door, letting in a brisk wind. A hand appeared in front of him, holding two small lunch boxes. The woman was standing right behind him.

  “Aren’t these meant to go?”

  Instantly he felt like a fool. Or at least an inept father, chasing his sons out without their lunches. He grabbed them, handing them off to the boys, and saw to his relief that, by running, they reached the lane to the schoolhouse at the same time as the other children.

 

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