After the Storm Read online

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  “I’m not sure. It’ll depend on how much of the corn I can get harvested before then.”

  “Samuel, we need you to be at the meeting.”

  “Why? I’ve said all I have to say about the library.”

  “You need to say it again.” She leaned toward him. “Samuel, I know you’re a man of few words, but that may be the very reason why your words and the good sense behind them are heeded.” She glanced at Reverend Faulkner, who was sitting beside her on the sofa. “Do tell him how much we need him there.”

  “I don’t understand,” Samuel replied, pushing his other concerns aside as he focused on the reason for their call. “I thought everyone, including the mayor, had agreed the library would go ahead.”

  The minister sighed. “The diphtheria outbreak has unsettled people.”

  “That was last month, and there hasn’t been a new case in more than three weeks.”

  “True, but folks are leery of creating any reason to gather in town until they’re sure the sickness won’t break out again.”

  Samuel shook his head. “That’s absurd.”

  “Is it?” Reverend Faulkner folded his hands on his knees. “The outbreak came after the Centennial Day celebration.”

  “Which hardly anyone from River’s Haven attended, and look what happened out there.” He could not keep from glancing out his window where, on a sunny day, he could see a reflection off the windows on the highest floors of the massive building that had, until a few weeks ago, been the center of a utopian community. Diphtheria had ravaged the Community, leaving more orphans who were being taken care of in Haven or sent to relatives back east.

  Fortunately his kids had not sickened. He had watched for signs of the horrible sickness because Sean O’Dell had been one of the first to become ill. Sean had survived, but others had not.

  Alice nodded. “I have been trying to tell folks that, but no one wants to listen. They’re frightened, and they don’t want their children coming into Haven to visit a library.”

  “What about school?” Samuel asked. “No one is considering keeping their children from that, are they?”

  “We have almost eight weeks before the harvest is in and school can begin,” she replied.

  The minister patted her hand. “And to find a new teacher now that you’re about to be wed.”

  A warm glow of happiness coursed up Alice’s face, and Samuel looked away. He forced his eyes back to where Reverend Faulkner and the schoolteacher were now talking about the plans for her wedding. He kept a smile on his rigid lips. Giving folks more reason to gossip about him would be stupid. When he had not attended any of the weddings in Haven this summer, there had been veiled and quite candid questions about why he had stayed away.

  He had stayed away because he did not want to make a further fool of himself.

  The front screen door crashed open, and Megan ran in, crying, “The chicks are out!”

  “Damn,” he said when he saw her sister and brother behind her, then glanced at the minister. “Sorry, Reverend.”

  Reverend Faulkner gave him a sympathetic smile and stood. “No need to apologize. Do you want help gathering them up?”

  “I have three helpers.” He frowned at the children, who now wore expressions that suggested they had no idea how the chicks could have escaped as a thunderstorm approached.

  “Do you need some help with your helpers?”

  Samuel chuckled. The minister had raised quite a brood of his own, so he understood how a child’s help could create more trouble than anything else.

  “No, I think my helpers will be just the ones I need tonight.” Motioning for the children to precede him, he paused in the doorway. “I’ll try to get into town for the meeting. I know the children would like to have some time with their friends. Brendan must have mentioned Sean O’Dell at least a dozen times today, and Megan gave me a wistful look when she spoke about her friend Kitty Cat this morning.”

  Bidding his guests a good evening, and knowing he was being a poor host, Samuel rushed out into the yard to scoop up several of the two dozen chicks that were skittering in every direction. He nodded to Reverend Faulkner’s wave as he and the teacher drove back to town. They would be lucky to get there before the storm arrived, for thunder resonated around the house.

  Samuel was about to put the chicks back in the chicken coop when he discovered how they had escaped. One section of the wire was missing. He twisted the ends together, creating a much smaller coop. Putting the chickens in, he stood to see Brendan and the girls rushing toward him. Megan was carrying four chicks in her apron, and Brendan held two more. Lottie just jumped up and down in her excitement.

  He put a hand on her shoulder to keep her from bouncing on a chick. As he placed the chicks in the pen, he asked, over the rising wind, “Does anyone want to explain how this happened?”

  “Bunny needs lots of room. He’s glowing big.” Lottie smiled with pride.

  “You used this chicken wire?” he asked, not bothering to correct the little girl. Catching a chick racing past him, he put it back inside the coop.

  “We thought it was all right. You let the chickens wander about.” Megan’s lower lip began to quiver as her eyes filled with tears.

  He ruffled her hair. “The chickens, yes, but the little ones might wander so far they couldn’t find their way back.”

  “Then they wouldn’t have their mothers any longer.”

  Keeping his oath silent, Samuel nodded. Just when he thought the children had adjusted to living here, one of them made a comment like that. He sighed. He could not blame them for missing what they once had had. After all, he did.

  “Let’s get all the chicks rounded up and back in the coop,” he said, giving Megan a smile.

  She started to return it, then squealed when thunder clapped.

  “Megan, will you take Lottie inside and help her get ready for bed?” Samuel asked, taking two more chicks from Brendan.

  The little girl nodded, gratitude brightening her eyes. Taking her sister by the hand, they started toward the porch.

  Suddenly Lottie tugged away and ran back to say, “Dahi will help you.”

  “Thank you.” Samuel smiled. “And thank Dahi.”

  Giggling, Lottie ran back to where her sister was waiting fearfully on the porch.

  “She’s silly,” Brendan announced as he cornered a trio of chicks by the coop. He was almost buffeted from his feet by a gust of wind. “There’s no one named Dahi here.”

  “She believes there is. Why not let her have her fun?”

  “Because it’s silly.”

  Samuel had to agree with that, but he did not answer as he chased some chicks away from the road. Pulling his shirt out of his denims, he used it as Megan had her apron to hold the fluffy balls. He brought these back and made a quick count as lightning flashed overhead. All but one were there. When another bolt struck the river directly down the bluff from the farm, he grasped Brendan’s arm and hurried the boy up onto the porch.

  “The rabbit!” cried the boy.

  With a groan, Samuel ran back out into the yard. He picked up the small hutch. Seeing the last chick cowering beside it, he set it atop the wooden crate. He put the chick in the coop, then hurried up to the porch.

  Brendan dropped to his knees and peered into the crate. “He’s all right.”

  “And he’ll be fine here.”

  “I should check on—”

  “The animals in the barn will be nice and dry. You can check on them in the morning.” Opening the door, he said, “In the house, Brendan!”

  As the boy hurried inside, lightning flickered again. A motion near the road caught Samuel’s eye. He peered through the thickening darkness. He saw nothing moving but the tree limbs swirling in the wind. Pulling the door closed, he twisted the lock, so the wind could not snatch it open.

  The storm seemed to have energized the children even more than the runaway chicks. It took him longer than usual to calm them down, and he made certain the ch
apter of the fairy-tale book he was reading them was a short one. They were jabbering like irritated crows when he sent Brendan to the room across the landing and tucked in the girls.

  He was bidding them good night from the doorway when he heard a furious fist banging on the front door. He frowned. Who would be knocking on the door at this hour? At this time of year, when the beginning of the workday came so early, people stayed close to their homes.

  “Go to sleep,” he said when Lottie popped up with a curious grin. “In the morning, I’ll tell you who’s calling.”

  “But—”

  He laughed. “If the caller is for you, I’ll let you know.”

  “And if it’s for Dahi?”

  “He’ll be the first to know.”

  The girls’ giggles followed him out onto the narrow landing. Glancing in to see Brendan blow out his light, Samuel hurried down the stairs.

  He tried to shake off his uneasiness but knew callers at this hour usually brought bad news. The last time someone had come out here after dark was to let him know about the diphtheria outbreak in Haven.

  Thunder sounded like the tolling of doom. Shaking off his grim thoughts, he tried to persuade himself that this visitor was probably the minister or Alice, coming back to retrieve something they had left behind. He glanced into the parlor, hoping to see a glove or an umbrella.

  Nothing but his treasured books and paraphernalia he had brought from Cincinnati. Including that ugly fountain. He was no longer sure why he had insisted on bringing it along. Self-flagellation had never been his idea of a good time.

  Samuel opened the door, just as a fierce gust of wind drove rain through it. He did not get wet because someone was standing on the other side. A woman, he realized in astonishment when lightning flashed to give a hint of her appearance. A woman he did not know. Her dark gown was so tattered it flapped in the wind. She held her skirt to her by pressing a small bag against her leg.

  “Is this Samuel Jennings’s house?” she asked, her voice slurred.

  Had she been drinking? He grimaced. There were tales of the drifters who looked for work during the harvest. They worked until they had enough money to buy liquor for a drunken spree. “Yes. Who are you?”

  “Are you Samuel Jennings?”

  He frowned. “Yes, but who are you?”

  The woman opened her mouth. No sound emerged, and she wobbled like a feather tossed about by the storm. Her bag fell to the porch and popped open, revealing a hint of something lacy inside it. He caught her as she collapsed. Her face pressed against his chest, her heated breath rapid and shallow through his shirt.

  Was she ill? If so, he could not allow her into the house where she could infect his children.

  “Miss?” he asked softly. “Miss, can you hear me?”

  She groaned, and her head lolled across him so heavily that he knew she had lost consciousness.

  Samuel did not hesitate. He could not leave her with the rabbit on the porch in a thunderstorm. If he put her in the parlor—and kept his children away from her—she might recover without passing on whatever was afflicting her.

  Lifting her senseless form into his arms, he was astounded to discover she must be almost as tall as he. Her kerchief had concealed the top of her head in the darkness. As her arms dropped along his, her ragged shawl drew back to reveal a worn gown that once might have been black. It was now a dull gray. Over it was a white apron, that was, in spite of the rain, unblemished and starched. Had she put it on just before she knocked? That made no sense. But then, neither did her swooning in his doorway.

  He kicked her bag into the house, so it would not get soaked, then carried her into the parlor and placed her on the sofa. A small sound came from her when her head touched the cushions. It could have been a moan or a sigh of relief. Her eyes remained closed, and her face was almost as pale as her apron. Pulling the blanket off the chair, he draped it over her.

  Now what?

  No one had ever taught him what to do when a strange woman fainted in his arms. Determined to find out if she was liquored up or sick, he put the back of his hand against her forehead. He yanked it back. She was as hot as the inside of a stove. What sort of fever had she brought with her? He needed to get Doc Bamburger out here, if the doctor had recovered from nearly dying after his own bout with diphtheria.

  Samuel turned to go into the kitchen to see what he could find to make a posset to draw out the fever but halted when he saw Brendan standing in the parlor doorway.

  “Brendan,” he ordered, “stay away. She’s sick and—”

  The boy ran toward the sofa.

  Samuel caught him and lifted him off his feet. Setting him down by the door again, he asked, “Didn’t you hear me?”

  “Yes, I heard you, but—” He struggled to escape from Samuel’s hold.

  “She’s sick, and I don’t want you near her. I don’t need you getting sick, too.”

  “I know, but—”

  “So go back to your room and to bed. I’ll tend to her. When she wakes up, I’ll find out who she is and contact someone to come and get her.”

  “But, Samuel—”

  “Off to bed, Brendan.”

  The boy planted his feet, his gaze rocking from Samuel’s face to the woman on the sofa. “No.”

  “No?” Never had Brendan disobeyed him like this. “Brendan, I think you should go to your room.”

  Grabbing Samuel’s sleeve, he said, “No. Let me stay! Please.”

  He frowned, noting how the boy’s thin chest was heaving as if he had tried to lift a tree out of the ground. “Why do you want to stay here where this stranger could—”

  “She’s not a stranger.”

  “What?”

  Brendan looked up at him, his mouth working. Through a sob, he said, “She’s my mother.”

  Two

  “Your mother?” Samuel wanted to believe he had heard wrong.

  Brendan slipped past him and rushed to the sofa. Kneeling, the boy put his hand over the woman’s and leaned his head against her arm. Tears ran down his cheeks. He wiped his sleeve under his nose as he sobbed.

  Watching, Samuel could not think of a word to say. A condition Theo, his onetime partner in their Cincinnati law firm, would have found unbelievable. Samuel had always prided himself on being able, when he chose, to speak his opinions in any situation. He had been wrong, because his mind was blank now.

  As Brendan untied the kerchief on the woman’s head and lifted it off to dab it against her rain-soaked cheeks, red hair fell down over her shoulders. It was the same vibrant shade as the children’s. Beneath summer freckles, their skin possessed the same pale coolness of hers. Only a few freckles decorated her nose and high cheekbones. Had she had as many freckles as Megan when she was a child? Or was that an inheritance from their father?

  Samuel gripped the back of the closest chair, recoiling as if someone had struck him in the gut. Mother? Father? These kids had come to Haven on the orphan train. If they had parents, what had they been doing on the train?

  “Brendan?” He was unsure which question to ask first.

  “They said she was dead.” He wiped his nose on his sleeve again. “They said she was dead.”

  While Samuel fished his handkerchief from his pocket and held it out, Brendan continued to stare at the woman. The sound of soft footfalls was Samuel’s only warning before Megan pushed past him to stand behind her brother. Lottie wrapped her arm around Samuel’s leg and stuck her thumb in her mouth, a sign she was as agitated as her weeping siblings.

  Brendan took Megan’s hand. She stretched out her other hand to touch the woman’s cheek. When the woman groaned, Megan whirled in panic.

  “What’s wrong with Mama?” she cried.

  Samuel stepped forward, with Lottie clasping his leg. “She has a fever, so she must be sick. You need to stay away from her until we find out what’s wrong. If she has diphtheria—”

  “No!” cried Brendan, jumping to his feet. “Don’t say that, Samuel! Mama is her
e! Mama is alive! She’s not going to die now.”

  Taking the boy by the shoulders, he bent to look directly into Brendan’s eyes. “She’s very ill, Brendan, but she’s here and out of the rain now, and we’ll do all we can to make sure she gets better.”

  Brendan threw his arms around Samuel’s shoulders and pressed his face against Samuel’s already drenched shirt. Looking past the boy, Samuel held out his hand to Megan. The little girl clutched it as if she feared being sucked away by the storm.

  Over their heads, Samuel stared at the motionless woman on the sofa. He stepped forward and motioned for the children to move aside. For a long moment, they just looked up at him. Then, glancing at each other and sharing some message he was not privy to, they edged away.

  “Brendan,” he said quietly, “I know it’s still storming, but the worst of the lightning seems to have passed. Will you take the wagon into town and bring back Doc Bamburger … if he’s well enough to come? Tell him it’s important. Otherwise, I wouldn’t call him out on such a night.”

  The boy ran out of the parlor without answering. The front door slammed against the wall as he threw it open.

  On the sofa, the woman mumbled something.

  Samuel did not try to figure out what she was saying. In her fever, it could have been anything or nothing of importance. What was important was getting her quarantined somewhere away from the children.

  He lifted her into his arms again. Before he could ask, Megan stood on tiptoe and adjusted her mother’s head against his chest.

  “Thank you,” he said softly. “Megan, get your mother’s bag, which is out in the foyer, and bring it to the guest room.”

  The little girl regarded him through tear-filled eyes. “Will she be all right, Samuel?”

  “Please do as I asked. Then go upstairs.” He looked down at the littlest child, who was watching him with wide eyes. “Take Lottie up with you and say your prayers that your mother will be fine.”

  Megan hurried to her sister. Grasping Lottie’s hand, she ran into the hall and picked up the bag. She stuffed the lacy clothing back into it and, with Lottie trying to keep up, raced to the guest room at the back of the house.