The Memory of Love (previously titled A Different Kind of Heaven) ©1998 by Barbour Publishing, Inc.
Healing Sarah’s Heart © 2000 by Barbour Publishing, Inc.
Print ISBN 978-1-63409-953-0
eBook Editions:
Adobe Digital Edition (.epub) 978-1-68322-160-9
Kindle and MobiPocket Edition (.prc) 978-1-68322-161-6
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted for commercial purposes, except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without written permission of the publisher.
All scripture quotations are taken from the King James Version of the Bible.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously.
Any similarity to actual people, organizations, and/or events is purely coincidental.
Published by Barbour Books, an imprint of Barbour Publishing, Inc., P.O. Box 719, Uhrichsville, Ohio 44683, www.barbourbooks.com
Our mission is to publish and distribute inspirational products offering exceptional value and biblical encouragement to the masses.
Printed in the United States of America.
The Memory of Love
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Epilogue
Healing Sarah’s Heart
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Epilogue
Callie Troyer watched the woman lying on the handmade wooden bed. Even from across the room she recognized the hopelessness of the situation. If she didn’t do something soon, there would be two more graves in God’s Acres, and the Solomon name would again mark them both.
“Child … comes … too soon!” the young woman screamed, pain twisting her delicate features into a tortured mask.
Callie hurried to Suzannah’s bedside, her nerves ready to snap. What could she do? She had already administered every concoction the Delaware tribe’s medicine woman—Helping Hands—had taught her how to make before the woman had returned to Pennsylvania. Suzannah was Callie’s dearest friend in all the world. But Callie had not known enough to help her the last time Suzannah was with child—she miscarried—and Callie knew no more now than she had then.
Another contraction lanced through Suzannah’s body, and she grasped Callie’s hand, her white-knuckled fingers digging into flesh. “Make it stop!”
The image of two tiny graves, barely nine months old, passed through Callie’s mind.
“I am trying, Suzannah,” she said, squeezing her eyes shut and praying silently that they both be able to accept whatever happened as God’s will.
The door to the log cabin swung open and Callie turned toward the sound, expecting to see Suzannah’s husband or mother. What she saw instead left her speechless. A rugged man, cast in handsome silhouette by the afternoon sun, strode into the room as though he had every right to be there. Finding her voice, Callie moved between the man and Suzannah. “Who are you, and why are you here?”
“I have come to help,” he replied matter-of-factly. He glanced around the sparsely furnished cabin as if assessing the situation. His gaze settled on Callie.
Lake-blue eyes held her doe-brown ones for a moment. His scrutiny made her uncomfortable, and she quickly looked away. Her gown was worn, threadbare in places, and was wrinkled from her long vigil. To make matters worse, her bonnet hung on a peg near the door. Nervously, she reached up to touch the blond curls that lay across her shoulders, thinking how improper it was for him to see her bareheaded.
But impropriety couldn’t be a concern right now. Forgetting the bonnet, Callie swallowed her discomfort and lifted her gaze to his once again. She fixed her hands defiantly on her slender hips. “I do not need your help.”
“I—I do,” Suzannah gasped behind her.
His face was serious as he crossed the room, his dusty black boots kicking up straw put down to cover the dirt floor as he walked. He tossed a slouch hat through the air, settling it frighteningly close to a burning taper on the table. Shrugging off a buckskin jacket, he proceeded to dig a gnarled twig out of a large buckskin pouch he carried.
“Take this,” he ordered Callie. Against her will, Callie took the twig. “Mash the end,” he continued, paying no heed to what Callie thought of the matter. “Mix it in hot water.” Authority echoed in the room, and he turned back to hold the other woman’s slim wrist in his hand.
Suzannah did not resist him—Callie absorbed that much before she moved to do as he had commanded. But Suzannah is not herself, Callie thought. She is delirious with pain and remembered grief of what happened before. Callie paused and glanced back at the stranger. Perhaps she should insist he leave. But how? And what if he had the ability to make Suzannah’s contractions stop?
Fighting churning emotions, Callie poured hot water from a kettle into a bowl. Her hands shook, but she carefully followed the man’s instructions. Grabbing the end of an antler she had used earlier to mix her own remedy, she crushed the twig’s bark. A bitter odor wafted up with the steam and she waved a hand at the offensive smell.
“Three minutes,” he commanded.
Callie turned to look at him, thinking once again to tell him to leave. He met her gaze squarely, and when she noticed that his somber eyes flickered with warmth and compassion, she held her tongue. That did not diminish her questioning thoughts though. How had he found them? Schoenbrunn Mission was at least a four-day ride on horseback from Fort Pitt. Strangers simply did not just happen upon the settlers here, and if they did, they were usually traders. He didn’t appear to be a trader. So who was he?
She looked at the candle’s flame dancing in the pale yellow liquid in the bowl and remembered what she was supposed to be doing. He had said three minutes. She must keep track. “One hundred one, one hundred two, one hundred three …” she began.
“Quietly. I am praying,” he requested softly.
This not only surprised Callie, it unnerved her. But she counted on silently as he transformed from a man of power to a man of prayer. His hair, blacker than his boots and wavy, was creased where his hat had rested. His face was rugged and tanned. All in all, she thought he looked rather arrogant, but a certain charm seemed to be present in his eyes as they appraised her.
Callie felt the warmth of a blush tint her cheeks. What was he looking at? The braid she had not kept up properly on the back of her head? She shook herself. The church had rules about unmarried men and women associating with each other. And she could imagine what Levi would say if he found out she was interested in this stranger. Better to concentrate on the rules than to think about the blueness of his eyes. She mashed and stirred, all the while biting her lower lip.
When the time was up, she came forward hesitantly. “Here.” She handed him the bowl, wrinkling her nose at the odor; she was curious to see what he would do with it.
He took the bowl, his large, nimble fingers spanning it easily, and passed it under his nose. He dipped his hand into the liquid. When he raised it, golden drops trickled from his fingers before he smeared them on Suzannah’s upper lip.
“What is it?” Callie whispered, forgetting her concerns about him for the moment.
“Just watch.”
Mystified, she circled around the end of the bed and sat on the far edge.
“Are you still here, Callie?” Suzannah’s words were slurred now, and she looked as if she could not hold her eyes open.
“I am here,” she assured, reaching out to pat Suzannah’s hand. He glanced at her as if he disapproved. Callie quickly pulled her hand back to her lap.
Silence grew heavy. She had to say something. Why not demand again that he tell her who he was? Bravely she raised her chin to do just that. She had missed her chance. Was he praying? Or sleeping? She couldn’t tell, but her curiosity to know him better was overwhelming her good sense.
“The only thing wrong with curiosity is that sometimes the cat does not come home,” Ruth Lyons, Suzannah’s mother, always said. Surely there was no harm in watching him though. For a moment.
Dark locks of hair clung to his forehead. There were lines around his eyes and mouth, but they simply added character. He is probably a Magicworker, she thought. But Magicworker usually meant “black medicine.” Somehow, Callie did not think this man had anything to do with witchcraft.
She glanced at the woman who had taken her in five years ago and helped her adjust to the Christian life she now led. Sleep had eased the tension on Suzannah’s face, and the worry was gone from her lips. Suzannah’s life, and that of her unborn child, did not appear to be in danger.
The stranger had helped Suzannah—something Callie had not been able to do. Callie felt inadequate—and irritated. But the fact that Suzannah was resting, the dark smudges under her eyes already beginning to pale, was more important just now, Callie reminded herself.
Her gaze traveled back to the stranger. His eyes shifted to an icy blue, and she shivered as a tiny dimple at the corner of his mouth caught her attention. She was suddenly undecided about the way he looked.
“Callie?” Suzannah’s hands cradled her abdomen tenderly, as if rocking a baby bird to sleep.
Callie scooted toward the head of the bed, aware the gap between her and the mysterious man had closed to inches.
She reached out to hold Suzannah’s hand. “I am here.”
“So … good,” Suzannah murmured before her head rolled to one side and she fell asleep.
Callie turned a questioning look his way. She could only hope her expression did not betray the awe she felt for him. He said nothing if it did. He only smiled, a smile that said he was a traveler, a drifter, a man no one would tie down.
“She will be all right.” His words filled Callie with the tiniest ray of hope.
It seemed unreasonable, this urge she felt to trust him. She didn’t know him. How many times must she remind herself of that? If he was a Magicworker, he would be gone tomorrow, taking with him his knowledge and all the other wonders he had in his bag. Which would leave her here, in the eastern part of what some called “O-he-yo,” with no help for Suzannah if this happened again. If I can get my hands on some of his remedies, it will not matter if he does go, Callie thought. I must learn what I can before he disappears.
“What did you give her?” she asked.
Faint laughter danced in his eyes. “Family secret,” he drawled.
“You are not going to tell me?” She was not afraid, only curious, and she wondered why she felt so at ease with a man she didn’t know.
He shook his head and a renegade swatch of hair fell across his forehead. He raked it back with his hand.
Callie crossed her arms in front of her. “Why not?”
“Man should never give away his secrets too easily.”
“You have others?” She couldn’t believe she had asked the question, but there it was, out in the open between them.
A shadow swept across his face. “Every man has things he does not reveal to just anyone.” He glanced around the room and wrinkled his nose at the assortment of pouches she had left lying on the table.
“Oh,” she said, her eyes tracking his gaze and seeing the piles identifying her attempts to help Suzannah. He just studied the scene, absorbing it, as if it told him everything he needed to know.
“I am not really trained in this sort of thing, you see….” she started. He faced her, his jaw tightening as he peered from under dark brows. “But I am the only one we have here who … oh, never mind. You do not want to know that.”
“Go on. I will listen,” he said patiently.
Callie gritted her teeth then went on. “Helping Hands was our local medicine woman. She decided to go back to Pennsylvania, and before she did, I made her tell me whatever she could. It was not enough,” she finished in a rush as tears sprang to her eyes. She couldn’t help but remember how she had failed nine months ago.
“I see.” He turned back to Suzannah.
Callie had other questions she wanted to ask, but her mouth refused to utter them. Why were his boots so dusty? Why were his eyes so blue? How had he happened to find the settlement they had established?
“Life is full of questions, is it not?” He unfolded his legs in front of him and leaned back in the chair.
Callie glanced at Suzannah and was about to deny she had been thinking of asking anything, when he cocked his head toward her friend.
“She will give birth early. Twins.”
Air spilled from Callie’s lungs and she choked back a gasp. She recovered her composure quickly. “Yes, she did,” she said coolly. “Nine months ago. Little girls. We lost them.”
He frowned and shook his head then pointed to the bulge of Suzannah’s abdomen. “She is carrying twins now.”
Callie had suspected the same thing, but had not told anyone. How did he know? She pressed her lips into a thin line.
“You knew, did you not?” he probed.
She could only nod and hope he didn’t press her for more information.
“One of them …” He pressed his thumb and forefinger to the bridge of his nose, and when he did, his tattered shirtsleeve fell back, revealing a bloodred scar running down his right forearm.
Callie wondered about the injury; it made him seem even more mysterious. But she squared her shoulders and forced the question aside. “What?” Her jaw quivered. “What about one of them?”
“Not now,” he mouthed.
He hadn’t shut the door all the way, and cool mid-April air penetrated the room. Callie pulled her shawl tighter around her shoulders. She thought about shutting the door but didn’t move.
“Shall we pray?” His hand covered hers without permission. It was a rider’s hand—strong, callused, but gentle. His words echoed not only in her head but in her heart.
“Dear Lord, we commend this woman and her unborn children into Your care. We ask that You watch over them, protect them, hold them in Your hands.”
Relief flashed through Callie. He was not a Magicworker, then; they didn’t believe in God. At least she didn’t think they did. His strong tenor floated around her. She could feel herself relaxing.
If they hadn’t been praying, she would have jumped up and jerked away from him. After all, she was responsible for Suzannah’s health, not him! Besides not knowing what he had given Suzannah, Callie had no idea who he was! She stiffened.
Seemingly in response, he brought the prayer to a close and released her hand. Then he crossed his legs and placed his hands, fingers entwined, on top of his right knee. Callie watched, torn between wanting to ask him to leave and wanting to know about what he had done to help Suzannah.
“Amen,” he whispered, drawing her back to reality.
Callie repeated the word. She moistened her lips. Silence fell between them. In the background, Suzannah’s even breathing rose and fell. A gentle breeze slipped in through the still-open door. It swirled around Callie’s feet, lifting the hem of her long gray skirt.
“Survival belongs to the fit,” he said seriously, his brows narrowing, becoming two slashes of brown.
What did he mean by that? She was worn out from sitting, and pacing, and hoping, and from praying that Suzannah’s pains would stop.
She motioned toward her friend. “How did you know what to do?”
He leaned forward slightly. “Family—”
“Secret,” she interrupted, feeling a tiny thrill of excitement that she could joke with him so easily.
He winked, long-lashed lids momentarily concealing the blue depths from her.
She let out a long breath.
“Someday …” His voice faded.
“Someday what?” she challenged. Why did she feel she must banter with him?
“You will see.”
She hoped she appeared unruffled. “What if I do not want to see?”
An easy smile played at the corners of his mouth. The dimple she had seen earlier grew deeper. “You will,” he promised.
Callie had no doubt she would. But what exactly was it she would see?
Joshua watched as Callie busied herself cleaning up the table. The dreary gray dress had a bit of tea-colored lace around the neckline. Sleeves added a touch of lightness to her attire, and her slender frame was accented by an apron tied tightly around her waist. But what held his attention were her eyes, newborn fawn in hue, and no less mesmerizing now than he had found them before. They revealed every emotion Callie felt, whether she wanted them to or not.
As if she sensed him scrutinizing her, Callie wiped her hands on her apron and moved to stand at the foot of Suzannah’s bed. She gazed at him for a moment before bluntly asking where he was from.
“Pennsylvania,” he replied, giving up only as much as he judged safe for the moment. It hurt, not being able to reveal everything, but intuitively he sensed that doing so would ruin any chance he had with her.
Her eyebrows arched in surprise, and if the knock had not come at the door at that moment, Joshua knew she would have said she was from there also. Instead, she raced to fling the plank door open wide. A wiry, rumpled man gave Joshua a cursory glance then raced to the bedside and knelt by the woman. Out of the corner of his eye, Joshua caught Callie grabbing a bonnet from the peg and tying the strings beneath her chin before she leaned against the wall.
The emotional—the physical and mental stress of traveling across Indian territory and not knowing what he would find—had drained Joshua. He asked himself for the thousandth time if he had done the right thing—coming here, slipping through a break in the mission fence, and listening as Callie stood outside the cabin conversing with this man who now knelt by the pregnant woman. Watching. Waiting. Until he heard the woman inside cry out and knew instinctively he could help.
Mentally, Joshua berated himself. This was no time for questioning his decision. Coming here was the only thing he could do. He had planned this for five years, praying fervently all that time that Callie would take one look at him and remember who he was.
Callie could remember how many times she had looked at him—the “stranger,” as she had begun to think of him. The muscles of his jaw formed lines tears would follow, if he ever allowed them to fall; but somehow he didn’t give the appearance of being soft and sensitive. Yet his powerful body moved gracefully, every movement calculated and smooth. There was a smattering of freckles across the bridge of his nose, apparently caused by being too long in the sun.
Now, he disappeared into the early evening darkness toward David Zeisberger’s cabin, where she had insisted he go to properly introduce himself to the elder. Watching him leave, she was possessed by a strange urge to call him back and demand explanations. No, she wouldn’t do it. She was not going to give him the satisfaction of knowing she was curious. So she had no answers.
Callie glanced over to the table where Suzannah’s husband, Abe, sat. He had been in his work clothes since early this morning, and his clay-brown hair carried creases where he had run his fingers through it the last time. When she had admitted Abe to the cabin, he barely noticed the outsider as he crossed the room, sat beside his wife, and began to pray over and over, “Please, God, not again.”
The same petition had echoed deep in Callie’s soul as well. She had been called to the cabin that morning, fearing the worst and hoping she was wrong. The worst didn’t happen, but not due to anything she had done. She shook her head to rid herself of her dark thoughts then cleared her throat. The sound apparently startled Abe, for he stretched and looked across the room at her.
“How can you be sure she will be all right?” He gazed at his wife. Asleep, Suzannah looked like a delicate flower that might fall apart in a strong wind. Cinnamon hair lay in soft curls around her neck, contrasting with her pale face.
How could she explain what she didn’t know herself? But Abe was not asking about the babies, and that allowed her to speak with a confidence she didn’t feel. “I am sure,” she stated, averting her eyes.
Abe sighed. “Where did that fellow come from, anyway? He did not come through the mission entrance.”
“No?” She had guessed Abe had directed the stranger to the Solomon home. Uneasily, Callie began to wonder about the wisdom of her decision not to challenge the man.
Abe rubbed his hands together. “No. Pretty sure about that. I was sitting out there—keeping myself occupied, you know?”
Callie knew very well what Abe meant. The last time they had been through this, Abe had sat on the same tree stump. That memory reminded her she needed to tell Abe about the twins Suzannah now carried, but Callie kept thinking of two patches of brown dirt and the words the stranger had murmured, “One of them …”
Callie wiped at her eyes, unable to find a way to say something that would cause Abe more grief than any man deserved to bear.
“You do not have to stay if you are tired,” Abe admonished. He pushed away from the table before bending over and hanging his hands between his knees. “I can come get you if she gets worse.”
“I will be fine.” Callie looked at Suzannah, who lay with a hand across her brow. “Besides, you need rest, too. Brother David said he would put you up for the night. Why do you not go on over there?”
Brother David Zeisberger had the largest cabin in the mission. A two-story building, it had been built with extra rooms upstairs for the many friends who came from time to time. Inviting one of their own to spend the night was one way of taking care of the flock.
Abe raised his head. “I would rather be here.”
Callie couldn’t blame him. When he left earlier, his whole world had been falling apart. I am sure he can scarcely believe Suzannah is not losing the baby, Callie thought. She corrected herself: twins.
“He never said who he was, did he?” Abe looked at her intently.
“No, he did not,” Callie confessed, wondering if that sounded as strange to Abe as it did to her. Why hadn’t she asked his name? On top of that, why had she allowed a stranger to treat Suzannah, of all people? What had she been thinking? To hide her frustration, Callie moved to check on Suzannah. As she positioned herself to listen for Suzannah’s breathing, a lingering bitter odor from the medicine used earlier rose up to greet her. The smell made no sense, but there was no time to explore why.
Abe paced the floor for a while then turned to face her. “What did he do?”
There was a hint of disbelief in his voice, and it caused Callie to pause momentarily. She checked Suzannah’s pulse. Slow and steady, unlike her own. How do I know it was him? How do I know what I had already done did not have something to do with it? But she knew Abe was aware of what had happened the last time Suzannah had been entrusted to Callie’s care. The memory caught in the back of her throat.
“He called it a family secret,” she finally admitted.
“I am glad she is safe … but, a family secret, Callie? And you do not know what he used?”
Callie straightened Suzannah’s bedding and ran a hand across her forehead. “Suzannah is fine now.” She returned to sit at the table and noticed the candle was almost burned out. She lit another, and the haze of beeswax filled the air as the flame danced and caught.
Across the room, Suzannah stirred then pushed up on one arm. “Callie?” she called in a trembling voice.
Callie raced to the woman’s side, with Abe close on her heels. “What is it?” She dreaded what she might hear.
“Pain. Again.” Suzannah bit her lip, and Callie saw her own tears reflected back in Suzannah’s amber eyes.
It was unkind, but Callie’s first thought was that the stranger had not solved the problem after all.
Joshua knocked at the door that had been pointed out to him when he left the Solomon home. It was late evening now, his favorite time of day. Soon the nighttime owls’ calls would replace the sound of rain crows, and the moon would illuminate the trees.
Through the yellowed paper covering a window, the blurry silhouette of a man could be seen. Joshua knew he had found the man he sought. It had been five years since he’d had any contact with anyone in the settlement, and he was not sure how his appearance would be received.
David Zeisberger opened the door carrying a handmade candle that cast eerie shadows on the wooden frame and drew attention to the smudges under his somber gray eyes.
“Joshua! Is it really you?” David studied him as if he did not believe what he saw. “Of course it is,” he continued. “No other man would dare travel so far alone! And who else would arrive at this hour?”
Joshua smiled. “I am glad you remember me, Brother David.”
“You are a man not likely to be forgotten,” David replied. “Except by her …” he added quietly as he drew Joshua into the cabin.
Joshua looked around, absorbing the room David called home. It was small but neatly kept. A spindly legged table sat in the middle, surrounded by four chairs made in the same rough style. A wooden bowl filled with porridge was surrounded by eating utensils, and the aroma of baked bread hung in the air. A handwoven throw rug lay under a sturdy shelf Joshua identified immediately as the elder’s work space. A scattering of papers covered the top—notes and sermons David planned to speak from in the future.
“It is good to see you!” David’s words were heavy with German heritage. “But you did not come here to visit with me, did you?” He filled mugs and offered one to Joshua.
Joshua took a seat at the plank table where David motioned. “You are right of course. I guess you could say memories could not keep me away any longer,” Joshua responded, feeling the familiar twinge of regret that always accompanied the word.
“I see.” David settled into his chair and sipped at his coffee. Steam wafted up, disappearing just before it reached his chin.
“My family lost everything. We couldn’t keep any of the orphans. I thank God daily that you happened to be in Philadelphia during the flood. If you had not been, who knows what would have happened to them….” Joshua drew a deep breath as regret once again pressed against his heart.
Am I doing the right thing? The thought slipped into his mind, forcing him to contemplate what had already happened. He had expected her to dispute his right to walk into the home and tend to the woman. After all, her quizzical expression had revealed that she had no idea who he was, and several times she had looked as if she thought to do just that. Each time she had said nothing, letting her silent gaze speak for itself.
David’s eyes flashed with curiosity, and his comment was more statement than question. “You have come to stay, then.”
Joshua drained the cup, which had cooled while he and David spoke. “If you do not think my presence here will be disruptive, that is my hope.”
“We would have to find something for you to do.”
“Do not forget that after the disaster I spent some time in medical school.” Joshua closed his eyes, remembering. “I did not quite finish the entire course, but I will help any way I can. If there is nothing here for me, I will …”
His words faded into nothing. To find, after traveling so far, that Calliope did not remember him would be the end of all he hoped for. In his youth he had been impatient. He did not seem to have learned much patience since then.
Embers snapped in the fireplace behind him and Joshua glanced into the flames. Would the dream he had nurtured for years die when she discovered who he was? No, life would be a bitter battle if that were so. He had trusted in God to keep her safe and God had answered that prayer. Joshua had found her. But how could he tell her he had come to keep the promise she had given shortly before the flood? His good intentions had been swept away when he’d entered the cabin a few hours earlier and she’d had no obvious reaction to him.
“Finding work is not the problem,” David said, interrupting Joshua’s reverie. Joshua glanced to the slight-statured man who always seemed to have the time and capacity to answer any question he had ever asked. “I do not brag when I say leading a group of Indian followers is not an easy thing to do. We were fortunate to leave Pennsylvania and the pressure of white settlements, where people suspected I was forming some sort of Indian revolt.”
“How many accompanied you here?” Joshua asked.
“Five families last spring. A hundred more people joined us last fall, taxing our meager stores throughout the winter.” David waved a hand in the air. “But that is not the point of our discussion. We were talking about finding work for you, were we not?”
Joshua nodded.
“We are not exempt from illness. But it would mean—”
“I would have contact with Calliope,” Joshua interjected. “Is that what you are afraid of?”
The corners of David’s eyes flared. “Calliope? I had forgotten that was her name before …” David straightened his shoulders and folded his arms in front of his chest. “How did you find her? We left no trail that I know of.”
Joshua noticed David had not asked how he had found them. Just her.
“Martin Mack.” Joshua had run into Martin when the missionary made a fortuitous trip to Philadelphia. David and Martin had worked for years converting Delaware Indians, and anyone else they could, to Christ before David had led his group away from developing hostilities.
“Did he know what you really were looking for?” David asked pointedly.
Joshua was hurt that David would think he had hidden the truth. “Do you think I would lie to him?”
“Forgive me. I did not mean to imply you had.” David gave Joshua a half-smile. “It is just … having you suddenly show up … I am not sure what it will do to her.”
“She has already seen me.” He explained the situation with the Solomon woman and his attempts to help her. Joshua shifted against the wooden slats of the chair, which suddenly seemed hard and uncomfortable. “And she did not remember who I was. Does that make it any easier?”
Callie sipped the remains of a cup of tea she had brewed. She propped her elbows on the table and watched as the dull light outside the window began to brighten. Bread crumbs lay on the tabletop, and she swept them into a pile. Suzannah was asleep again. Abe paced back and forth; his worried steps making soft crunching sounds on the straw-covered dirt floor.
Hours ago it had all seemed so hopeless, Suzannah panting and crying in pain, twisting her arms around her distended abdomen as if she could arrest the delivery. Now, Suzannah’s face was calm; and though her springy curls lay limp against her forehead, she showed no signs of discomfort. Whatever the stranger had given Suzannah had worked. But for how long? Callie wondered. And what would happen if he left and she had none of the medicine he had used?
She couldn’t let him go without bargaining for some of his potions, Callie decided. She would do whatever it took to present her friend with two beautiful living infants to replace the ones Suzannah had lost.
“Since she is resting, I am going home, then to service,” Callie said softly. “I will return after that.” She glanced at Suzannah one more time to assure herself the crisis was over.
Abe’s eyes followed hers. “All right.”
Strolling down the path, Callie recalled how the stranger had marched into the cabin as if he had a right to be there.
The sounds of awakening children carried through the walls of the log cabins sprinkled about the hilltop where the mission stood, and she pictured the children rising and racing outside to play before eating. Interspersed among the sturdy cabins were simpler, temporary structures built of saplings and bark laced together. Callie and Sarah were fortunate to have one of the finished homes that had ended up being too small for families, and it was toward this structure that she was heading.
“Morning.” A deep rumble jolted her from her thoughts.
“Good morning,” she replied automatically, though the resonance of his voice sent her pulse racing. She put a hand up to shield her eyes from the early morning sunlight. He hadn’t gone! Hope rose within her as she realized she still had the opportunity to ask him to leave some of the medicine that had helped Suzannah behind when he left.
“The woman?” His voice had turned flat, with no trace of the compassion he had shown last night.
“Sleeping. And her name is Suzannah.” Callie didn’t know why, but she wanted him to call the woman by her name.
“No problems?”
Callie thought back to what she had done shortly after he left. “Not really,” she hedged.
He inhaled sharply. “She needed another dose, then?”
Callie paused then answered. “Yes. She did.”
He rested his hands on his hips while he looked at some distant point. “Powerful medicine should be used sparingly.”
Callie paled. If she had done anything she shouldn’t have, she would never forgive herself. “Did I hurt her?”
“I would not have left it if it could cause harm.” He reached out to touch her arm in what she assumed was a gesture of friendship. Friendship or no, his touch was warm, and tingles surged through her. She struggled to look calmly up into those magnificent blue eyes.
“I did not get a chance to ask last night….” she began. “Who are you?”
He left his hand on her arm while his gaze swept the length of her plain dress, stopped at her wrinkled apron, then traveled on to the worn moccasins on her feet.
I should be insulted by his scrutiny, Callie thought distractedly. But she wasn’t. She had the eerie feeling she knew him, but that was impossible, wasn’t it? If she had met him during the last five years, she would have remembered. A shadow covered her heart. What about the years before that?
He was staring at her shoes, and Callie remembered the moccasins she had thrown on in haste yesterday morning. He pointed to them. “Your shoes?”
“I made them.” She wondered why he was so interested in her footwear. The moccasins were soft and supple and worn by nearly everyone at the mission. “It is just something I learned from the Delawares,” she said, as if it did not take weeks of hard work to make a pair just the right size.
He lowered the saddlebag from his shoulder to the ground, and she watched as his eyes roamed over the settlement. A small smile flirted with his mouth as he watched some children tossing sticks into a pile near the clearing.
“Did you introduce yourself to Brother David?” she asked. If he had, she would run over there and find out. She could not call him Magicworker to his face.
“Aye-ya.”
No, she told herself, she was twenty-three. She would not run to Brother David. “Who did you tell him you were, then?”
Morning sun highlighted a patch of gleaming black hair and brought out his ruddy complexion. “Joshua.”
She stared. “That is it? Just Joshua?”
“Just Joshua.” A grin crinkled his lips.
“I suppose the rest is a family secret, too?”
“Could be,” he drawled.
He was enjoying dragging this on, she realized. She wasn’t. This family secret business was becoming frustrating. But she did like talking with him, liked the way he cut his sentences short as if there were better things in life to move on to.
Move on! There was that thought again that he might leave. Why did it dismay her so? It is because of what he knows about medicine, she told herself.
He chuckled suddenly. “No. There is more. It is Johnston.”
“What?” She was so convinced he was leaving that the name had thrown her off balance.
“Last name is Johnston.”
“Oh. Your name. I thought you meant that is where you are going.” Callie posed a finger under her chin. “Joshua Johnston.” She liked the way the words rolled off her tongue. She reminded herself that she should be on her way home to wash up and change then off to church, before returning to Suzannah.
“Going to check on Suzannah,” Joshua said, withdrawing his hand from her arm. The spot he had been touching grew cold.
Callie stepped back. “Me? No. I am on my way home.”
They stood quietly for a moment, and under his scrutiny she lost track of her thoughts.
“No. Me. That is where I am going,” he said.
Callie could not resist smiling a little. It seemed to amuse him.
“Good thoughts?”
“Only that I hope Suzannah will be all right,” she assured him. “What did you mean when you said, ‘one of them?’”
“She will.” Joshua said it so softly she had to lean forward to hear him. “Sometimes a double birth is difficult, as you indicated had already happened.”
“I hope so.”
“Your name?” He held a finger in front of his lips.
A look of confusion drew her brows together.
“Going to work with you, so might as well know your name,” he quipped in a way that said he did not care if he learned it or not.
She crossed her arms in front of her. Should she tell him? She knew his name, and a fine one it was.
“Callie Troyer. And what do you mean work with me?”
He was leaving, wasn’t he? That’s what men of his sort did. They floated in and drifted out, leaving only a memory and gradual healing behind. Why did the thought of him going seem so depressing?
“Your elder asked me to stay.”
Callie swallowed hard. Brother David, staunch Christian and Moravian missionary, had asked him to stay? What did Brother David know that she didn’t? Did he expect an epidemic? Or worse, did he not trust her to care for the settlers anymore?
There is an advantage, she told herself. If he stays, then she would have access to his medicine, and that would help Suzannah and anyone else who might come down with an illness she couldn’t handle.
She frowned, motioned down the path. “You know where the Solomon cabin is. Her husband is with her,” she snapped.
“Where a man should be when his wife is in danger,” Joshua said.
“You do not think that is strange?” Most men had little to do with their wives when illness or childbirth happened.
“Absolutely not.”
“You should be going, then. To check on Suzannah, I mean.” She stepped back to indicate she was finished.
“On my way.” He picked up the saddlebag and slung it over his shoulder. “And Callie?”
“Yes?” she replied, telling herself she should not look so eager.
“Have you not remembered me yet?”
Callie squinted into the sun to explore his face. “Remember you? I surely do not think so.” Yet, inside her ran a tremor of hope. If he knew her …
His brows narrowed, drawing the small lines around his eyes tighter. His jaw was covered by a light dusting of beard that she hadn’t noticed last night. Beneath the work shirt he wore, his shoulders looked a yard wide.
Not sure what to say, she added, “I do not recall ever meeting you.” She spoke evenly, hiding the thread of excitement that ran through her. She would definitely have remembered him if she had ever met him.
“I thought not.” Joshua shifted the bag on his shoulder.
“But I should?”
He nodded, a brief dip of his head that caused a tuft of hair to escape from beneath the brim of his hat. He took off the hat and tossed his head to return the lock to its rightful place. The movement was simple, yet sunlight caught and danced in his eyes.
“From where?”
“Pennsylvania.”
A giant hand squeezed her chest. “I did live there—once. Before … well, before I joined up with the Moravians.”
He stared at her as if he expected her to continue. She didn’t.
“So did I,” he admitted, settling the slouch hat on the back of his head at a jaunty angle that she thought framed his face nicely.
“I think perhaps you have confused me with someone else.” She laughed. It felt so easy to talk with him. And he was a traveler, someone who would leave soon. Surely she could risk a few minutes of joy with someone she would not see ever again once he was gone.
Joshua’s eyes held her prisoner. “No. I have the right person. You lived in an orphanage, right?”
“Yes,” she muttered. “But that was five years ago. Since then I have traveled and lived with Brother David and his flock.”
Joshua crossed his arms in front of him. “I know when you joined them.”
There was pain in his words and she wondered why something like that would cause him so much hurt. She looked nervously around the mission. “You knew Brother David then, before this morning?”
He nodded. “I helped after the flood.”
“The flood.” Callie sighed and shook her head. “I do not recall much about that part of my life—only what my sister Sarah remembers. Since she is younger than I, she is not much help.” She didn’t remember anything from before that, either, but Joshua didn’t need to know that.
“I figured as much.” He stepped toward her.
Tendrils of worry stirred in the pit of her stomach. She turned to a safer topic. “I have heard the west end of Philadelphia was swept away.”
He set his lips in a grim line. “It was terrible. No warning. Heavy rains. People were lost. We saved those we could.”
A shadow veiled his consistently warm eyes. Something had hurt him in the flood—Callie sensed it instinctively. Not wanting to drag up memories she didn’t possess but he obviously did, she offered, “It must have been quite a shock.”
“You could say that.” He turned away, leaving her feeling as if she had touched on a sensitive area that she should have stayed away from.
“If there is nothing else, I must go.” She started walking toward her home then turned around abruptly. “Oh! I have not said a proper thank-you for what you did for Suzannah last night.”
“That is not necessary. It is what I have been trained to do.” His words were strained. Why did everything she said make him uneasy?
“Callie!” Sarah rushed toward them, her strawberry-blond braid flopping up and down as she ran. A smile curved Callie’s lips in welcome as she momentarily forgot about Joshua.
Sarah was sixteen—gangly, awkward, and likely to say whatever crossed her mind. But knowing she could have lost Sarah made Callie love her that much more. As Sarah came to a stop, Callie reached out and patted her cheek.
“I want you to meet someone who once lived in Pennsylvania, Sarah,” she began, turning to introduce her sister to Joshua.
But he was gone, half the settlement away, and knocking on the Solomon cabin door. Callie felt as if she were watching the scene from far off and gave Sarah a weak half-smile. “Guess he was in a hurry,” she said. “You will have to meet him later.”
Sarah gazed at the handsome figure he cut, his head coming almost to the top of the doorframe. “I will make it a point to. He looks mighty good from this distance.”
Callie held up a hand, but Sarah rushed on. “Do not bother to chastise me for thinking that. By the light in your eyes, your thoughts are exactly the same.”
“Why, I never!” Callie exclaimed, though a red tinge of a blush filled her cheeks.
“Have you been at the Solomons’ all night?” Sarah asked, changing the subject. “Is Suzannah all right? Is there a baby?”
Callie straightened Sarah’s braid. “One at a time,” she said gently. “I was just on my way home to tell you. She will be fine. No baby yet. Which is a good thing, I might add.”
“No baby? What did you use? Last time you said you did not have anything to make her pains stop.”
Callie’s stomach curled into a tight knot. “Actually, he gave her something to make her sleep.” She rubbed her arms, which suddenly felt as if she had been swimming in an icy river.
Sarah kicked at a pebble and her head bobbed as she watched the stone hop across the grass. “Levi came looking for you a few minutes ago.”
Callie stiffened, the knot in her stomach growing even larger. “I thought the hunters were not due back for another week?”
Sarah shrugged. “Got back early.” She grinned. “Says he has something important to ask you.”
Two days’ worth of tiredness washed over Callie. “No rumors, Sarah. I am not marrying him.”
Sarah smiled dreamily. “He thinks you are. And is it not about time you settled down?”
Yes, it probably was about time she settled down. Most women her age had been married for five or six years, but Callie could not see spending the rest of her life with Levi. There was nothing specifically wrong with him. He was Suzannah’s brother and could outhunt any of the Delawares in their mission. However, hunting was not high on her list of requirements for a mate.
Her thoughts stopped as quickly as they had begun. She had no right to categorize what she wanted in a husband. God put man here first then added woman to walk with him. She should be thankful Levi seemed to care about her, especially since others in her life had found her relatively easy to cast off.
“How about breakfast?” she queried to change the subject.
“Already ate,” Sarah said. “You going to church?”
“As soon as I clean up.”
“I told Levi he would probably find you there.” Sarah giggled as she hurried away.
Callie clasped her hands in front of her and stared at them. Levi Lyons was back. He had something important to ask her. She knew what that would be. Why did the thought scare her so?
Marriage was a blending of souls, a merging of dreams. It was having someone beside you through good and bad. Someone who cared about you, someone who believed in God, and you, and made you more than you ever thought you could be by yourself. The problem with Levi Lyons was that he did not do those things for her.
She wanted a love like Suzannah and Abe had. A love that knew no bounds, encouraged hope, and made tomorrow seem like an exciting promise instead of just another day. And there again, Levi did not measure up.
Perhaps there is something wrong with me, Callie mused. Maybe, in the end, it was best she not fall in love. Even though it meant she would be alone, at least she would not have to face carrying a child for nine months only to lose it.
Joshua’s rugged profile haunted her and she tried again to remember him. The attempt was fruitless, but she vowed that the next time she saw him, she would demand he tell her more about what he apparently knew. A colt whinnied, and Callie walked across the path and stroked his mane.
“Hey, fellow,” she said to the bay whose head reached almost to her shoulder. “You hungry?” The colt tossed his head and Callie chuckled at his seemingly human response.
People were moving about, headed toward the meeting house for the morning service. She forced her feet to carry her home to the sparsely furnished cabin she and Sarah shared. Home to eat, to change clothes, to put on something a little more respectable than this worn-out, dingy gray dress.
The morning service lasted long enough for a few hymns and a short sermon. Most Moravian congregations were separated into “choirs,” which consisted of groups of single men, single women, widows, widowers, and married couples. The Delawares refused to be separated from their families in such a manner, so they were allowed to scatter as they wished throughout the building.
Callie arrived at the meeting house as Brother David strode in a back door. Sliding onto a bench in the back, she glanced around the building that was the first permanent structure always built at a Moravian mission.
Love, sweat, and laughter enabled the settlers to assemble the logs that became a thirty-six-by-forty-foot worship center. No windows were included in the design, and candles positioned down the walls every five feet provided soft golden light by which the settlers prayed, worshipped, and had fellowship.
The sleek dark heads of the Delaware Indians, called “Praying Indians” by some, filled the seats ahead of her, their broken English mingling with their native language. Almost a year had passed since she had traveled with Brother David and his flock to establish the settlement they called Schoenbrunn. The name meant “Beautiful Springs,” and Callie was not alone in thinking it perfect.
Deep in the wilderness where a bear roamed occasionally and wolves howled at night, Schoenbrunn Mission sat on top of a rolling plain with a roaming river not far away. Grace was abundant here, for the mission thrived on loving Jesus and the freedom to do so.
Callie admired the way the whole village worked to overcome obstacles and concentrate on the positive. No one talked about it, especially the Delawares, but danger lurked. East and north of them, the French and British were hoarding land and running out natives who had lived there for generations. Even though the Moravians had located miles from white pioneers who Brother David said would keep pushing farther west until they ran out of land, it worried Callie that they might not be safe even here.
Several of the children she worked with in Sunday lessons smiled at her, and their broad-faced grins affirmed for her that they were doing the right thing. They didn’t seem to mind that she was one of few whites living here. Nor did it matter that they had only known her for five years.
At the front of the room, Brother David raised his arms and bent his head. His coat fell open to reveal a gray vest over a white shirt and knee-high moccasins. “Shall we pray?”