“I know the type. Seen enough of them around my husband’s business. You mind what I’m telling you, missie, and stay away from that one.” Netty upended the tub and let the soapy water pour onto the ground. “Fellow like him, he’s got himself just one ambition. Don’t have to see him to know him. All them early risers out there, they’re
ambitious
. But that fellow, now, he’s only got himself
one
ambition. He is dead set and determined to rule the roost. He knows you’re competition, too. Makes him nervous.”
“Maybe you’re right.” Jodie rose to her feet, brushed off her skirt, and said quietly, “I am grateful, Netty. For everything.”
Netty bobbed her head in her quick, birdlike motion. She looked long and hard at Jodie. “Never had me a youngster of my own,” she said slowly and Jodie thought that she saw a shadow in the narrowed eyes. “But I’ll say this—if ever I’d been graced with a daughter, I’d have thanked the good Lord if she’d been like you.”
In her lovely mint green gown that set off her hair and delicate coloring, Bethan stepped into the church. She paused to inhale the fragrance of all the flowers and wondered how on earth they had managed to gather so many lilies in January.
It was so sweet of Carol to ask her to be a bridesmaid. They were not really close even though they did have warm respect for each other, but Carol had the rare ability to understand instinctively what her man wanted. Dylan had reacted with astonished joy to the news that Bethan was to be bridesmaid, all the thanks Carol ever could have asked for. Bethan’s own gratitude was another tie in the new family bonds that were being forged by this wedding.
The church was full. Every face turned and smiled as Bethan preceded the bride down the aisle. It seemed as though Carol’s ethereal beauty had rubbed off on all of them today, and even roughhewn country people had a winsomeness they rarely exhibited on their own. Even Moira, not fully recovered from her ailment, looked positively glowing.
Bethan accepted the bride’s flowers, stepped back a pace, and carefully dabbed at the tear in the corner of her eye. Though she had come to love Carol dearly, the wedding meant an end to the hope she had held that Jodie would somehow return to faith and that she and Dylan would resume their courtship. Bethan had longed for Jodie to return to Harmony—to become a part of her family. Now this was not to be. “But, Lord,” Bethan prayed fervently again, “please bring Jodie back to you, back to her faith, even if she doesn’t come back home—”
Bethan’s attention suddenly was caught by the new assistant pastor. Had he smiled? At her? In the three months since Connor Mills had arrived, the whole town had been talking about him. How his fiancee had died not six weeks before their wedding day, just over a year ago. How his heart was firmly given to the Lord. How the children of the church seemed drawn to him like a magnet, and how he had the nicest smile anybody could recollect ever seeing.
Connor stood to one side of the wedding party, the black pastoral robes making his hair look even more blond. Their eyes met, and Bethan sensed as much as saw the sorrow he carried. The shared burden touched her heart, making her eyes well up again. She wiped her eyes once more, glad for the acceptance of tears at wedding ceremonies. No one there would ever guess just why she wept.
She turned her attention to the service.
“Do you, Carol Simmons, take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband, to have and to hold, for better or worse, richer or poorer, in sickness and in health, until death do you part?”
“I do,” came Carol’s reply, her voice bell-like and as radiant as her face.
Bethan was so happy—for Dylan, for Carol, yes, and even for herself. It felt so good to have a reason to smile.
But even that thought drew her back once again to Jodie. If only Jodie were here to share in the moment, it truly would be a perfect day.
JODIE RETURNED TO COLLEGE
the week before the fall term was scheduled to begin. There was little to keep her in Harmony. Her father really didn’t need her help in the store, and he moved silently about the house, occupied with a world only he could see. He seemed somehow disconcerted by her presence, as though he had become accustomed to his solitude. Which made the summer months difficult, because she wanted to stay at home, out of sight. Any excursion through the town meant she ran the risk of seeing Bethan—or, worse, Dylan and his new wife. She did not know how she would ever manage such a contact. The few times she had gone out had been to see Amanda Charles, who was leaving to take up a position in Winston-Salem, where her fiance had a new job. With Amanda gone, there would be one less thread tying her to Harmony, one less reason to come home. So it was with a sigh of relief that she returned to Raleigh after the summer holidays, to the quiet college halls and her beloved research.
Jodie had spent her entire summer reading of other scientists’ findings, delving through the reports of scientific journals. The first day her father had come across her perusing a journal article on immunology, he had glanced at it over her shoulder, then stopped and squinted at the page before looking at her askance. She was growing into someone he neither knew nor understood.
She would have liked to tell him how important she felt this research might someday become. How it had even begun to fill the hollow points of her life, the ones caused by her loneliness and the loss of her mother and the loss of Bethan’s friendship. Maybe the loss of Dylan, too. Though time and distance had made her wonder if that could ever have worked. Particularly now when she realized how exciting and fulfilling her studies and research had become. Some days, when she was able to unravel a particularly knotty problem, she even felt if perhaps she had been able to begin work earlier, she just might have saved her mother’s life. If not, then perhaps someday she could help to save another young girl from having to face the distress she herself had endured.
“Well, would you look at what we have here.”
Jodie almost jumped from the lab stool. She saved her microscope from toppling over with one hand, then snapped, “What do you mean, sneaking up on somebody like that?”
Lowell Fulton approached her lab station, hands open and outstretched toward her. “I’m sorry. I just didn’t realize anybody else was here, is all.”
“Well, I am.” The sharp edge to her voice had been honed now by a full year of isolation. She swept back her hair and again bent over the microscope. “Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m busy.”
But Lowell didn’t respond to her dismissal. “Yeah, so am I. Guess we had the same idea, trying to get an early start on the year’s work.”
Jodie made a noncommittal noise, wondering what it would take to make him leave her alone. The first day back, and already the unpleasantness was resuming.
But he didn’t turn away, just stood watching her for a moment, making her hands unsure of themselves in spite of her resolve to not let his presence affect her.
“I’ve done a lot of thinking over the summer,” he said casually.
“That must have been a novel experience,” Jodie muttered.
Lowell acted as though he had not heard. “I was wondering if maybe you’d like to be my lab partner this year.”
The surprise was enough to bring her head upright in an instant.
“What?”
“Just a thought.” His tone was easy, his face clear. “I watched the way you handled your work last year. You came up with some great results. Even old Dunlevy said so.”
“And so you thought you could hitch your wagon to mine, is that it?”
A cloud passed over his features, but Lowell shrugged and said, “That’s not it at all. I just thought you might be able to use my help.”
“
Your
help?” As though his work was better than hers? She could scarcely believe her ears. “Thanks, but no thanks. Now if you’ll excuse me, as I’ve already said, I’m busy.”
Jodie turned back to her microscope. Lowell hesitated, started to say something, then turned and walked away. But she could not concentrate on the task at hand. Imagine the nerve, she thought, her chest tight with anger. All last year she had fought against his cold shoulder and the snide comments of the other fellows, and suddenly he thought he could just waltz over and pretend everything was fine. Jodie struggled to push the incident away. But her thoughts did not easily let go. Her memory seemed etched with the look on Lowell’s face when she had brushed aside his offer. He deserved nothing better, said one part of her mind. Was he really declaring a truce? another part asked. Why? Was it truly just for his own gain? She did not know him well, had no reason to try, nor any reason to make an attempt. Yet there was something about the whole exchange that did not sit well. Again she fought to concentrate on her lab work. But there remained the unsettling feeling that she had just made her first big mistake of the school year.
Another year had passed with a speed Bethan would not have believed possible. Twenty months after her brother’s wedding, another autumn arrived, and the countryside overflowed with sounds. They filled Bethan’s world and her heart to bursting. She had always remembered seasons and events first by sound, second by smell, and only third by sight. It was a fact she never talked about with anyone, for fear of ridicule. A summer night was an orchestra of wind and whispering pine and tinkling chimes and crickets. Conversations escaped through open windows, giving porch-sitters reassuring company. Dogs shouted excitedly in the hot distance. Summer was a crowded time for sounds. Winter, on the other hand, was the season of silence and muted tones— softness blanketed by snow, dripping icicles on frosted eaves, gentle tinkling of silvery wagon bells. Each season had its own sounds, its own smells. Together they blended to fill Bethan’s senses with Harmony and home. For this reason more than any other, Bethan could never think of living in a city. She would lose too much of her secure circle of sounds.
As always, thoughts of the world beyond Harmony brought Jodie to mind. But Bethan was becoming accustomed to dealing with them, learning how to push them aside before they worked their way inward to where they could cause her real pain. She skipped up to Dylan and Carol’s front door, pushed it open, and called inside, “Anybody home?”