A New Day Rising (38 page)

Read A New Day Rising Online

Authors: Lauraine Snelling

Tags: #Red River of the North, #Dakota Territory, #Christian, #Norwegian Americans, #Westerns, #Fiction, #Romance, #Sagas, #Historical Fiction, #Large Type Books, #Frontier and Pioneer Life

BOOK: A New Day Rising
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"He is self-centered."

"Ja, and opinionated."

"That too." Haakan shifted the baby to his other arm.

"You want I should take him?" Ingeborg slowed her steps as they neared the house. Hjelmer headed straight to the barn and his bed.

"No, he is fine. Do you want to know what I think?"

Ingeborg stopped by the corner of the house. "Of course."

"I think-you-should go order the sulky plow. If it were my decision, and I had the money or was willing to borrow more, I would order two. Once your own sod was broken, you could let Hjelmer go break sod for others, thus bringing in some more cash."

"Would anyone have money for that?"

"Some do."

"Ja." Ingeborg nodded and rubbed her chin with a callused finger. "I will think about that."

The next morning they hurried to finish the chores and after breakfast harnessed the team for the drive to the Baards' house for church. Ingeborg wrapped the roasting pan that held two baked hens in a blanket to keep it warm and nestled the loaves of bread around it. A pot of beans that had been baking all night completed her contribution to the community meal. Hjelmer rode Jack so he wouldn't have to walk home later that night after spending the afternoon with Penny.

When Thorliff had pleaded to ride with him, Hjelmer had started to say no, but one look at Ingeborg changed his mind. Swinging the boy up behind him, the two rode off.

"Me ride. Me ride." Andrew sent his plea after them, but to no avail.

"Hush now. When you get bigger you can ride." Ingeborg sat him on her lap and got him giggling by playing the "what is this?" game. "What is this?" She poked him in the tummy. "And this?" She gently pinched his chin, then his cheek and pointed to his nose.

"Eye, Andrew, say eye." She touched the side of his right eye.

"Eye." He pointed to his nose. "Nose." He stretched up his hand and pointed to hers. "Nose." He turned to Haakan and reached as far as his arm would. "Nose?"

Haakan leaned sideways until Andrew could reach.

"Nose!" The little one shrieked and kicked his feet. His chuckle made Thorliff turn back to look to see what was happening.

"You are one smart little boy." Haakan grabbed a -tiny foot and shook it. Andrew gurgled again.

"Nose. Eye."

"He'll probably tell everyone his new words," Ingeborg said, a loving smile curving her lips. "I can just hear him in the middle of prayer time. Eye, nose!"

"Eye, nose." Andrew laughed and kicked his feet again.

If contentment were a piece of the sunshine, Ingeborg knew how it felt. Just like now. They stopped their horses by the sod barn at the Baards' and tied the team to the wagon wheels. Haakan removed the harnesses and hooked the bridles over the hams before pouring a measure of oats for each of the team. Then he helped Ingeborg get out the food.

"You watch Andrew, now," she called to Thorliff, who made a face but did as bid. "Just until we help Agnes get things set up."

They were all set to begin the service when another wagon drew up.

Ingeborg groaned. "The Strands. Here comes trouble."

6 just asking for trouble. Haakan debated whether it was time for a little man-to-man talk with Hjelmer. The looks he constantly arrowed at ingeborg were not only unnecessary but growing more unkind by the day. I wonder what his problem is? He thought some more, the jingle of the harness and clopping of trotting hooves providing the perfect counterpoint for deep thinking.

It had been bothering him for some time.

Ingeborg had been nothing but gracious, treating the boy with the same loving concern she treated everyone. Was the issue of her wearing britches the root of it? He could feel an inward chuckle. You had to admit the woman had spunk. He slanted a glance sideways to where she sat, properly attired since this was Sunday and they were meeting with the neighbors. She was quietly playing with Andrew, who could draw a smile from the soberest face.

Except from Hjelmer.

Haakan had watched the boy-man-Haakan was never sure which he was-fight against enjoying the little one. He usually left the house in the evening as soon as supper was finished. Granted he worked hard like the rest of them. One couldn't fault him for that.

Andrew's chortle and Ingeborg's chuckle drew Haakan's attention again. He leaned over so Andrew could touch his nose. At the action and accompanying laugh, a lump big as a burl on a Minnesota pine tree clogged his throat.

Dear Lord, was this to be his family? When had he begun to fall in love with Ingeborg? With a love that made the feelings he'd had for Mrs. Landsverk seem like a seedling next to an aged giant. He'd seen it that night at Lars' bedside when they all prayed for God to heal the foot. He shuddered at the remembrance of Metiz so calmly removing the putrefying flesh.

He could never remember a time when he had felt Jesus right in the room with them, but it had been unmistakable. If that didn't turn one into a praying, believing man, no doubt nothing would.

If you'd prayed the night of the blizzard, the frostbite might never have happened. That sly voice had been tormenting him lately. But leaving the God of his fathers on the shores of Norway had seemed a natural thing to do. After all, this was a new land with unbelievable opportunities, and he was young and strong and healthy-and dumb.

Haakan reached over and tickled Andrew's tummy. At the deep chortle, Haakan could feel the moisture threaten to overflow behind his eyes. Ach, how he loved these two boys. They'd reached right out with their child's hands and snagged his heart good.

What if Ingeborg wouldn't accept him? What if she didn't love him as he loved her? He thought he'd been reading the signs right, but about the time he'd get up the nerve to kiss her, she'd pull away or someone would interrupt. Would they ever have any time alone? Just the two of them?

He never tired of watching her, the way her smile lit the room, her laugh-oh, her laugh! Would that he could keep her laughing all the while. She needed more to laugh about in her life. It had been so hard.

Oh, Lord, help me bring joy to her heart and laughter to her lips. Let me be a father to these boys. Dear God, let her say yes. He could feel sweat trickling down his temple. What if she says no? He shook his head to clear away the abject terror at the thought of the rest of his life, spread before him like the pictures he'd seen of a desert, without Ingeborg.

Perhaps if he presented it like a business proposal, she would accept. The thought comforted him. He clucked the horses into a faster trot. Surely God would speak to him through the reading this morning. His mor always said that when you asked God for something, you should listen real hard to His Word, because that was how He answered.

Haakan knew, though, that wasn't the only way God spoke.

He heard a team coming up behind them and turned to see who it was. Lars sat on the bench seat, his ailing foot propped on the board in front of him where Kaaren had secured a quilt or some such for padding. But he was driving. The welcoming grin he tossed Haakan brightened the day even further.

"Kaaren," Haakan called. "How about reading the 'this is the day' Psalm?"

"1 planned on it," she called back. "I think we should open with that one every Sunday."

Haakan could feel the question in the steady gaze Ingeborg leveled at him. Soon, probably sooner than he was ready for, he would explain all.

Soon he would see her. Hjelmer felt like kicking the mule into a dead run. Penny would be waiting. Granted he couldn't do more than sit by her during the service, and then she would help serve the meal. But after the cleanup, they would elude the smaller children and walk across the prairie. Last Sunday they'd sat in the loose hay at the bottom of one of the stacks so carefully built by the haying crew and talked. And talked. Never had he been able to talk to anyone like he could with Penny. She made him feel like, like-

"Onkel Hjelmer, I'm about trotted out. Jack's got a backbone like a pole," Thorliff said, his voice jolting with the bounce of the mule.

"Sorry." Hjelmer pulled the mule back to a walk. Why had he let Thorliff ride with him, anyway? That was stupid.

Hjelmer retreated once again to his daydream. He'd told Penny of his dream of owning his own blacksmith shop and she'd shared hers about working in a store full of general merchandise like The Mercantile she'd seen only once. He wondered sometimes how he could break land for his own farm and run a blacksmith, too. Perhaps he'd have a livery with it. That way he could have a shiny black surrey with red wheels and a team of matched bays that would never see a lick of fieldwork. He'd even braid their manes like a pair he'd seen trotting on the streets of New York. When he rented that rig out, people would come for more.

He squeezed his knees, and Jack broke into a lope when they neared the Baard homestead. Other wagons were already there. One he didn't recognize, and he saw a couple others coming across the prairie.

Thorliff swung to the ground. "Mange takk." He stopped. "Thank you for letting me ride." All of them were trying to remember to use American words rather than Norwegian. It wasn't easy, so sometimes their sentences were a jumble of both kinds.

"You're welcome." Hjelmer didn't look at the boy. He was too busy searching the gathering for a glimpse of Penny. He'd even thought one night when sleep wouldn't come that maybe he should go to Grand Forks and find a poker game. That was a quick way to raise some money. Unless he had some prospects, Joseph wouldn't look kindly on a marriage proposal for his niece.

Ah, there she was. Their eyes met across the intervening space. Hjelmer could feel his heart leap. Yes, Penny, she was the one. He could see the blush pinking her cheeks clear from where he stood. The look she sent him as she turned to answer a question made his blood pound.

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