by Janette Oke
“Good news?” she inquired.
“I think so.”
“Then share it.”
“I quit my job.”
Ellie looked puzzled. “Ya quit yer job! Thet’s fine. I’m not complainin’ none … but … why is it such good news?”
“’Cause … I quit my job so I’d have time to git ready to go on home.”
“Home?”
“We’re free to go now. A man bought the LaHaye farm today.”
Ellie threw herself into his arms. “Oh, Lane!” she squealed. “Lane, thet’s wonderful!”
He picked her up and swung her around the room. “Thet’s what I think!” he shouted back at her. “Finally—we are really on our way.”
Marty and Clark both knew how eager Lane and Ellie were to be off to start their own home. So they rejoiced with the couple and welcomed the news of the farm’s sale. It was a happy time and a sad time, and the Davis tribe gathered together to celebrate the occasion and to prepare for another good-bye. There was much excited talk around the table. Lane had already made arrangements for their train tickets. There wasn’t much packing left to be done. Ellie had already carefully boxed everything she could spare, and Lane had crated it for shipment. In just a few short days they would be on their way.
Ellie was disappointed that she wouldn’t be able to see Clae and Luke before she left.
“Who knows how long it will be ’fore I see ’em again?” she mourned, and tears filled her eyes that just moments before had been full of anticipation.
“Maybe Luke can pay us a visit when he finishes his trainin’,” Lane said in a comforting tone.
Ellie agreed wholeheartedly, but Marty inwardly stated, Not on your life. Don’t want Luke staying out there, too.
Marty remembered back to another girl, just as eager to set out for the West. She’d had to let that daughter—her Missie—go, too.
Belinda cried. Ten people stood to go to her, but Marty waved them all back to their chairs.
“I’ll go,” she said. “She might be wantin’ to eat.”
Belinda was not hungry. Only bored. Bored and in need of a dry diaper. She hated to be wet and would not bear it for long.
Marty changed her, glad for the excuse to leave the family gathering for a few minutes. She held the wee baby close and laid her cheek against the soft little head. “I’m so glad thet God was wise enough to send ya to me,” she whispered. “Only He knew how much I would be needin’ ya.”
The baby grasped a tendril of her mother’s hair and tried to pull it to her mouth.
“Quit it, ya hear?” reproached Marty softly. “You’ll have yer fingers all tangled with it. There are better things to be eatin’, I’m thinkin’.”
The baby gurgled and changed her grip to the collar of Marty’s dress. Marty kissed her. It seemed like only yesterday she had held the tiny Ellie in her arms, and here Ellie was on the verge of leaving.
Again Marty studied Belinda. “Well, I still have you,” she whispered. “An’ no matter how quickly time seems to fly, it will be some time ’fore you will be goin’. An’ ’fore we know it, Luke will be home, too. Oh, not home to stay. Don’t s’pose he’ll ever be home to stay again. Not really. But at least he’ll be close enough to drop in now an’ then, I’m prayin’. Close enough thet I can see fer myself just how he’s doin’.”
She kissed the baby again and settled her on a hip for the walk downstairs. She was ready to rejoin the others now.
On the day of Ellie and Lane’s departure, they gathered at the stage station as they had done in the past.
Marty managed her emotions that day very well, she thought. In fact, she managed to hide her tears and even celebrate the occasion with Ellie.
“It’s a long, long ride,” she warned Ellie. “I thought me at times it would never end. Ya do eventually git there, but by then you’ll have had yer fill of train travel fer a while.” Ellie only smiled.
“Have ya got the package fer Missie?” Marty asked for the fifth time.
“Right here, Mama. Right here with the other things. I will see thet she gits it just as soon as we arrive.”
“Ya sure ya got everythin’ ya need?” This was Clark.
“Oh, Pa,” laughed Ellie, “they have shops out there, too.”
It was not long until their baggage was being loaded. The crated Rex complained some at his close quarters, but Lane rubbed his ear and assured him that he would be taken for a walk at every chance they got.
Ellie, who was holding Belinda until the last possible moment, bent her head to kiss the wee girl. “Know what I’m gonna miss the most?” she whispered. “Watchin’ ya grow up.” Then the tears were falling freely, and Marty reached out to draw Ellie and Belinda close.
The driver was soon climbing aboard and lifting the reins of the teams. The livery man held the horses’ heads and tried to quiet them, but they had been trained to run and were eager to be off.
There were hurried last-minute hugs and kisses, and then Ellie and Lane were climbing into the stage. It wheeled off in a swirl of dust. Marty pulled out her handkerchief to wave the dust from her face and dry her eyes.
They all turned back to their teams; no need to linger longer. Ellie was gone now. She was on her way to her dreams, and the rest of them were left behind to carry on dreams of their own.
On the way home from town, Marty raised her head and took a careful look at the world about her.
“I like it here, don’t you?” she asked Clark.
“Sure do,” he answered comfortably and seemed to feel that his simple words said it all.
“I don’t really think I’m hankerin’ fer the West, do you?”
“Nope.”
They rode on in silence for a while.
“We still have Nandry an’ Clare an’ Arnie here. An’ Luke will be back, too. An’ maybe someday even Clae an’ Joe will be back.”
“Yeah,” said Clark, “maybe so.”
“Thet’s more’n half of ’em,” continued Marty. “Thet’s pretty good, huh?”
“Thet’s real good—an’ ya even fergot one.”
Marty looked puzzled for a moment and then remembered the bundle of joy in her arms.
“Well, I did at thet. No offense, Belinda,” she said, lifting the small baby and kissing her cheek.
“I guess Belinda will fergive ya—this once,” teased Clark.
Marty fell silent again. She breathed deeply of the warming air. She loved the spring. There was always something so promising about it.
“Just think, Clark. ’Fore we know it, we’ll have two new grandchildren, too.”
Clark grinned.
“Best part of it is,” went on Marty, “they’ll be right here where we can enjoy ’em.” Clark agreed.
Marty looked about her. There was a nice green haze on the pastures. Leaves were beginning to open on the trees near the road. The blue sky looked as though it was willing strength to the green things to hurry and break free and come forth.
“Almost gardenin’ time,” mused Marty.
“Yup,” said Clark, taking a deep breath.
“Ya gonna help me this year?” It was said with teasing, and they both knew she was referring back many years when he had helped a very young Marty with her first attempt at a garden.
“Will ya let me?” he teased back.
“Iffen yer good.”
They both laughed.
“My, Clark,” she said after a few moments had passed, “but don’t thet first garden of mine seem like a long time ago?”
He looked at her, his eyes searching deep into hers. Then he reached over and took her free hand in his.
“Does it?” he asked. “Seems to me thet it weren’t all thet far from yesterday.”
TWENTY - NINE
The Legacy
Baby Belinda had been fed for the night. Marty and Clark lay with her between them, spending some time admiring the perfection of the tiny baby before they would tuck her into her own bed for the night. S
he hadn’t fallen asleep yet and lay studying the faces she had learned to love. One of her hands firmly clasped a finger on her father’s hand. The other tiny baby fist was knotted in the front of Marty’s gown. And so she held them both. Not just with childish fingers, Marty thought, but with cords of love.
As Marty gazed at the baby lying between them, she thought again of Ellie. So much had happened to Ellie in such a short time.
“It’s really somethin’, ain’t it?” she murmured. “I still find it hard to believe. It sounds like somethin’ you’d read in a fairy tale or somethin’. Who would have thought any of ours would be left a legacy?”
“An’ one of such size, too,” agreed Clark. “Oh, true, Lane ain’t startin’ off a millionaire, but he sure has ’im a better start than a lot of young men.”
“I trust ’im with it, though,” said Marty. “It won’t go to his head none. He’ll be responsible and givin’, and he’ll put the money to good use.”
“I been thinkin’ a lot on legacies lately,” Clark said, brushing one of Belinda’s curls between his fingers.
“Like what?”
“Well, the kinds of legacies one can leave behind.”
“Kinds?”
“Well, there’s the money kind. Everyone is familiar with thet. Not thet we all git one, mind ya—but at least ya hear of one now an’ then, like happened with Lane.”
Marty nodded in agreement.
“But there’s other kinds, too.”
Marty waited for him to go on. Belinda let go of her grasp on the gown and waved a hand that hit Marty lightly on the chin. Marty caught the small fist and put it to her lips.
“Take this here little one now—we gotta plan what we’re gonna be leavin’ her with. An’ I’m not talkin’ money in the bank. I’m talkin’ character—faith … love fer others … an unselfish spirit … independence … maturity.”
Marty knew where Clark’s thoughts were leading them. She nodded silently.
“We’ve got a big job ahead of us, Marty. It’ll be fun—but there will be work and care there, too.”
“I was thinkin’ the other day,” admitted Marty, “here I go again! The diapers, the fevers, the teeth, the potty trainin’. Oh, Clark. There’s so much ahead of us.”
“Then it will be school, an’ teachin’ chores, an’ friendships, an’ ’fore we know it—beaus!” said Clark.
“It’s kinda scary,” Marty whispered.
“Scary?” laughed Clark. “Maybe. It’d be even more scary iffen we didn’t have some pretty good examples before us.”
“Examples?”
“Our other kids. Not a rotten apple in the bunch.” Marty smiled, thinking of each one of their family.
“Sometimes I feel so proud of ’em,” she admitted.
“Me too,” he agreed with her. “Me too.”
“Like Kate an’ Clare. I was so afraid. So afraid they wouldn’t be able to handle losin’ thet baby. They wanted it so much, Clark. So very much. Yet not a trace of bitterness. They truly took it like real … real mature Christians. They even seemed to grow sweeter an’ … an’ wiser. I was so proud of ’em.
“An’ Ellie,” Marty went on. “The way she just stepped in an’ took over when Nandry was havin’ her hard time an’ showed her where she was wrong without pointin’ fingers or causin’ hurt. Ya shoulda heard her, Clark. You’d have been so pleased.
“An’ Nandry, too. I had me no idea she was carryin’ all thet load of bitterness from the time she was a little girl. An’ yet, when she saw her wrong, she … she just asked the Lord fer His fergiveness.”
Clark swung his daughter up into the air and then laid her on his chest. “Yep, little one, yer gonna have to learn ’bout fergiveness, too.” Belinda just stuck her thumb in her mouth and laid her head down against her pa.
“Then there’s Arnie,” Marty continued. “At his age, an’ already a deacon in the church, an’ a good one, too. An’ Clae an’ Joe servin’ in a church, an’ Missie an’ Willie startin’ a church out there in their own home, an’ our Luke studyin’ to be a doctor.
“Ya know,” she said thoughtfully and with a smile, “yer right, Clark. There ain’t a rotten apple in the whole bunch.”
“Luke. I’m thinkin’ we chose his name well.”
“Meanin’?”
“Luke. Luke the physician.”
“Never thought on thet before. Guess we did name ’im well, didn’t we?”
Belinda lifted her head and reached for Clark’s nose with her wet little hand. He chuckled and adjusted her to better see her in the light.
“I’m afraid yer goin’ to spoil her with all yer fussin’,” scolded Marty.
“Spoil her?”
“She gits held an’ rocked an’ cuddled so much she’ll git to think thet it’s all thet her pa’s got to do.”
“I did it with all the others, too, an’ you yerself just agreed there ain’t a bad one in the whole bunch,” Clark reminded her.
Marty smiled. It was true. He had given a lot of love and attention to each one of the babies.
Clark turned serious. “What did we do right, Marty?”
“Is it important?”
“I think so. We’ve got Belinda here. We can’t afford to go wrong on this one, Marty.” Clark kissed his baby on her forehead.
Marty thought in silence for a moment. “Fact is,” she finally said, “I don’t rightly know what we did right. We made mistakes—I know I did. Lots of ’em. God knows we tried to do what was right. Maybe thet’s what He honored—our tryin’.”
“Lots of parents try … an’ fail,” Clark reminded her.
It was a sobering thought and one that Marty knew was true.
“We need faith, Clark,” she said softly. “We need to really hang on in faith. God didn’t fail us before—we need to trust ’im with Belinda, too.”
“Trust ’im,” echoed Clark. “Trust God—an’ work an’ spank an’ train an’ pray like we had it all to do on our own.”
“Guess it all has somethin’ to do with thet legacy ya were talkin’ ’bout. So much depends upon what we leave our children—not to ’em, but within ’em.”
“Wish it was as simple as passin’ on the family heirlooms.”
“Meanin’?”
“Ya don’t just pass on faith. Ya have to pass on a desire fer ’em to find a faith of their own. Ya have to show ’em daily in the way ya live thet what ya have is worth livin’ an’ fightin’ an’ workin’ fer. A secondhand faith is no good to anyone. It has to be a faith of their own.”
“Thet’s the secret,” Marty agreed with feeling. “A faith of their own. I am so thankful to God thet each one of our children made their own decision to let God be in charge in their life.”
“An’ it doesn’t stop there—it goes on an’ on. They teach an’ train our grandchildren, an’ with God’s help, they can teach our great-grandchildren. It can go on an’ on, an’ never end till Jesus comes back,” added Clark.
Marty smiled. “It’s a mighty big thought,” she said. She reached out a hand to touch the head of the baby Clark was holding. Their baby. “An’ to think it all starts with a little bundle thet God himself dares to trust us with.”
“No,” said Clark, and his words were carefully weighed. “It starts long ’fore thet. It starts with a Father who loved us enough to send His Son. It starts with a man an’ a woman determined to follow His ways. It starts when two people are willin’ to give a child back to the Lord. It starts with all thet—but there never needs to be an end to it. It’s the kind of legacy thet truly lasts.”
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