Authors: Tricia Goyer
Lovina placed a perfect crust into a tin plate and started to flute the edges. “That's an amazing gift.”
Noah leaned even closer. “I'd love to get my hands on that. Collecting antiques is one thing, but reading about a person's experiences is another.”
Hope glanced to Noah, then to her sister, and back to Elizabeth. They all seemed to understand what this was about, but it still wasn't making sense to her. None of it.
“So, you want me to read it⦠to⦠to get ideas for my garden?”
“Well, that's part of it, but mostly I just thought you'd enjoy reading about what Pauline faced in 1942. There are many similarities between you and Pauline, even though you may not see them at first. You're an expert in the garden and she⦠” Elizabeth paused. She flipped open the front cover and traced her hands on the woman's name. “She wasn't a very good gardener at first, but that changed. And more importantly, she changed too.” Elizabeth shrugged. “Janetâmy friendâtold me her mother's story once, and then she let me read this. When I heard that it was time for a garden in this placeâbehind the pie shopâI knew Pauline's story was one you needed to hear.”
Hope nodded, still not understanding. Part of her was afraid to borrow such a priceless heirloom, but in another part of
her excitement bubbled up. She'd already skimmed through a few books on gardening in Florida, but maybe Pauline's journal would provide even more tips. It would be worth glancing through if nothing else.
Hope stretched out her hand, and Elizabeth handed over the journal. Then she pointed to Hope's pockets. “I even made sure there was a pocket big enough for the journal to fit inside.”
“Oh, I'm not going to carry it into the garden. I don't want to mess it up.” Hope opened it. Small, neat handwriting scrolled across yellowed pages. “I'll look through it and get it back to you next week.”
“Next week?” Elizabeth shook her head. “You'll never be able to get through it by next week. There is no rush.” She reached forward and patted Hope's hand. “Take your time. Savor the stories. There are even some recipes that Pauline wrote downâsome of her favorites. I've tried a few.”
“Recipes?” Lovina snickered. “Elizabeth, Hope has many talents but she doesn't really enjoy the kitchen very much.”
“You never know. I might like these recipes.” Hope glanced down at Elizabeth. “Maybe I'd like a copy of your orange fritters recipe too.” Then she jokingly raised an eyebrow at her older sister. “Just because I don't spend a lot of time in the kitchen doesn't mean that I
can't
cook.”
“And just because I don't garden doesn't mean I can't pull a weed,” Lovina huffed with a bit of humor.
Hope chuckled, and it felt good. Lovina had her pie shop, and she had her garden. And togetherâwell, they acted more themselves than they had since leaving Ohio.
Hope held up the book to take a closer look, and she also pushed all the questions about Jonas Sutter to the side. She'd worry about that later too. Today, she was excited to read the
journal and to discover its secrets, but for the first time since being in Pinecraft she also felt a small sense of belonging. Elizabeth had lived here for years. There were new people coming and going all the time, yet Elizabeth had thought of
her
. She'd reached out to her. Elizabeth had given her hope⦠not only for the garden, but in how she was seen in the community.
Hope gazed into Elizabeth's eyes. She tucked the journal into her pocket and then leaned close. “Thank you.”
Elizabeth nodded, smiled, and reached out her hand. Hope placed her hand in the older woman's grasp. The woman's skin felt paper thin, yet soft.
Elizabeth squeezed gently. “Enjoy the journal, and know that I am available if you ever need someone to talk to. Each of us needs a listening ear sometimesâsomeone to help us weigh our options, whether that means staying or leaving.”
“Leaving?” The word shot from Lovina's lips, and Hope straightened up. She pulled her hand back, surprised.
“I never heard about you leaving,” said Lovina. “You're not leaving Pinecraft, are you? Not now,
ja
?”
Hope's mouth dropped open, and she glanced over at her sister. “I haven't really mentioned it to anyone, but I have to admit it's been on my thoughts.” She turned back to Elizabeth. “I haven't told anyone except for Eleanor. Have you talked to her? Do you know my cousin?”
Elizabeth shook her head. “I know many Eleanors, and I'm not sure if any of them are closely related to you. Since most of us came from the same group of Anabaptists, I'm sure that most of us are related to each other somehow, but to answer your question I haven't talked to anyoneâwell, except to God.”
The older woman placed a hand over her heart. “He doesn't spill any secrets, but once in a while I have a sense of something to
pray for. Last year I started praying for this warehouse.” She swept her arms wide. “And when it was nearly done I felt called to start praying for a garden⦠” She pointed. “A garden out back. Oh, and once, while in church, I felt God telling me to pray for you, Hope. I started paying attention to you then, even though you like to keep to yourself, and that's when I heard that you'd been a wonderful gardener back in Walnut Creek, but you weren't having much luck here. That made me think that you've most likely started thinking about returning home to Ohio. After all, each of us loves to be in the place where we find the most success.”
A cool sensation rushed from Hope's chest and into her limbs. It was the same feeling she had once in a dream where she'd forgotten her dress and covering. In the dream she'd run from hiding place to hiding place but couldn't find any way to cover herself. She felt the same way now, but it wasn't a dream. She felt seen by Elizabeth in a way that she usually wasn't, and it made her uncomfortable. It was as if the wall she'd placed around her had been stripped bare. She felt vulnerable and exposed. Hope tucked the journal into the large front pocket and then crossed her arms over her chest, pulling them close.
Lovina still hadn't picked her rolling pin back up. Instead, she eyed her sister as though seeing her for the first time. She reached her hand to Noah, as if needing support, and he grasped it and took a step closer to her.
“Is this true, Hope?” Lovina asked.
“I have been thinking about going back. Maybe by May. I wrote Eleanor to see if she needed a
maud
and a gardener.”
“
This
May?” The color drained from Lovina's face, and Hope wished she'd said something sooner. “Butâbut we just put so much work into the garden out back. So much⦠” her voice trailed off.
“It was an idea, nothing more.” Hope pulled her arms tighter against her chest and shrugged. “I was simply testing the waters to see what Eleanor thought. I have no specific plans.” She thought about the entry she'd written in her journal and backpedaled, trying to tell the truth in a way that didn't hurt her sister even more. “Or rather, maybe it
is
a goalâa dream for the yearâbut that doesn't mean I don't appreciate the gift you've given me with the garden. I appreciate that more than you'll ever know, and I have no plans of leaving soon. It'll be a big decision if I do.”
Lovina nodded, and Hope noticed tears welling up in her older sister's eyes. “It seems as if we do have a few things to talk about, Hope. I'll try to see if I can get home early.”
“I'd like that.” Hope let her eyes flitter closed, and she focused on the pull of the journal in her pocket. Had Pauline faced many questions and doubts? Maybe so. And maybe she needed to understand those even more than receiving gardening tips.
Because harder than getting anything to grow in Pinecraft was trying to understand how to maneuver in this community.
Â
Peel oranges and separate into sections. One orange makes fritters for two or three. Remove seeds, if any, carefully, making the smallest possible incision. Dip sections in batter made of:
¼ tsp. salt
1 cup flour
2Â Tbsp sugar
1½ tsp. baking powder
â
cup milk
1 egg
1Â Tbsp melted butter
Mix salt, flour, sugar and baking powder, add milk gradually, egg well beaten, and melted butter. Fry in deep hot fat. Sprinkle fritters with powdered sugar, to which may be added, if desired, ½ tsp. grated orange rind. Serve hot.
*
*
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings,
Cross Creek Cookery
(New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1942), 197.
Those who fear the future are likely to fumble the present.
A
MISH
P
ROVERB
H
ope picked up her garden bucket and headed in the direction of home. Her heart ached remembering the pain in Lovina's eyes when she discovered that Hope had thought about leaving. She should have mentioned something sooner. Lovina had just put up a huge expense to create a garden for her. The least she could have done was to tell her sister the truth.
Then again, she didn't think Lovina had been completely truthful either. There was something about Jonas Sutter that Lovina was hiding. Hope just wished she knew what. It would be hard waiting until this evening to know. It would be even harder to get the look of Jonas's gentle eyes gazing at her out of her mind.
An Amish woman walked by in a sea-foam green dress. A small white dog trailed on a leash. The panting dog had a hard time keeping up. Hope smiled and called a greeting, but instead of stopping to chat, the woman continued on.
The streets of Pinecraft were filled with bicycles and those on foot. There were many more people out than when she'd left home this morning. And thankfully by the time she returned
home her other sisters and parents had already left for the day. It wasn't that she didn't want time to see them, but she did appreciate the quiet and the time to process her thoughts.
Her guess was that Mem and Dat had gone over to see how things were shaping up for the Haiti mission auction. It was a large event, drawing huge crowds every year and raising hundreds of thousands of dollars for the poor in Haiti. And maybeâwith that event coming to the area at the end of the week and drawing attentionâshe'd have fewer people poking around her garden. One could only hope.