Read Bittersweet Bliss (Saskatchewan Saga Book #5): A Novel Online

Authors: Ruth Glover

Tags: #Frontier and pioneer life—Fiction, #Scots—Canada—Fiction, #Saskatchewan—Fiction

Bittersweet Bliss (Saskatchewan Saga Book #5): A Novel (35 page)

BOOK: Bittersweet Bliss (Saskatchewan Saga Book #5): A Novel
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The sheer beauty of the awakened northland, the glory, the wonder of the possibilities, put a spring in Birdie’s step, a light in her eyes, and a blush on her cheeks.

“I declare,” Lydia said with awe to no one in particular, looking out the window, watching Birdie move down the lane, turning toward the schoolhouse and the last day of school.

Birdie’s heart-change had changed her in all ways. Her outlook, her expectations, her values, her confidence, her demeanor—all reflected the abandonment of self and the embracing of the One who promised, “If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new” (2 Cor. 5:17).

“I declare,” Lydia muttered again. “Even her clothes swish differently.”

And no wonder. The figure inside them moved with a vigor, a purpose, a satisfaction never felt before. The heart, its cry satisfied at last, welled happily, and the mind, no longer putting self first, was at peace. It couldn’t help but show; smiles seemed ready to break forth at any minute; Birdie came close to dimpling.

Part of it, of course, was the dreadful burden that had lifted when she had found Davey again, when Mr. Jacoby, reporting on Maurice Gann, said the words that set her free. Trying to grieve properly for someone once loved, Birdie found it difficult to do. It had been so long ago, and her memories were so miserable. So she laid this “unknown bundle,” as the church folks termed it, on the Savior.

How ready she was to cast her burden on the Lord. She was, over and over again, coming up with an old habit, a dark way of thinking, a negative reaction, a doubt, things she had put up with previously, imagining they were part and parcel of her makeup or had been bequeathed her as an evil burden to be borne. Now she was learning to grow in grace. What a glorious growth it was, what an abandoned casting.

The day was useless as far as studying was concerned; the children were wild to be released. Birdie devoted much of it to reading and reporting, favorites with all of them.

Finally, glancing at the Drop Octagonal and finding that this day, as all days, had slipped away (but with what satisfaction!), Birdie announced, “Time to fold up for the year, children. Take all your papers with you, your scribblers, your pencils. Leave the books and texts; I’ll lock them in the cupboard until school opens in the fall.”

“Miss Wharton,” it was Victoria Dinwoody, her face innocent but her eyes sly, “will you be coming back?”

“Why do you ask, Victoria?”

“Because my mama says...” Even Victoria, bold as she was, hesitated, wriggled, stuttered.

“Yes, Victoria? What does your mama say?”

“My mama says you’ll be getting married.”

Every activity stopped; every head lifted and poised. Every eye fixed on the teacher.

“It happens to most everybody sooner or later, doesn’t it, Victoria?”

“Yes, but...”

“But what, Victoria?”

“Nothing; I just wondered, that’s all,” Victoria murmured, flustered, and disappointed that she had nothing to go home and report.

“Whether I will be teaching or someone else, the school board will see to it. The announcement will be made in due time.

“Now, children, that will be all for the year, except—”

All heads lifted in the teacher’s direction; about to embark on their summer, they paused.

“Just one more thing,” Birdie said. “We have one honor, one special honor, to award. Before the year is over, I want to recognize the child who has made the most progress. You have all done well in many ways, and I’m proud of each of you. However, there is one who has come along well not only in his studies but in his deportment. So well, in fact, that we’ll bestow special recognition on him—Ernie Battlesea.”

Ernie, caught totally by surprise, gasped, turned red, sank back into his seat in a rare moment of shyness. Near pandemonium broke out—whistling, the stamping of feet, clapping.

“And to recognize and reward his diligence, we’re going to give Ernie the honor of
winding the clock
.”

The noise faded; small bodies sat up straighter; childish breaths were indrawn; childish faces were filled with awe.

Miss Wharton took the key from the drawer and, amid the silence and the attention, encouraged Ernie to clamber up onto a chair, guided his small hand to the proper place, and then—all by himself—he inserted the key and commenced winding. “One, two, three, four”—twelve times the children chanted the number, the proper number of turns. Then, with a flourish, face shining with his matchless accomplishment, Ernie turned. Turned and, being Ernie, couldn’t resist playing to the gallery (never had
he had such an audience). Sweeping his hand in a wide arc, Ernie pressed it against his middle and bowed. Bowed gallantly and bowed deeply. So deeply, in fact, he lost his balance.

Ernie’s great accomplishment and the favor of the winding of the Drop Octagonal was concluded to the screams of certain girls, the jeers of most boys, and the gasp of the teacher.

Setting Ernie on his feet, Miss Wharton used the opportunity to give the rascally boy a small hug. Flushed and proud, Ernie hugged her back.

The eager children were dismissed with the reminder that report cards would be forthcoming at the annual picnic.

If the Drop Octagonal was moved by the unusual experience, it gave no sign but ticked on as steady, as faithful, as reliable as ever.

One by one the children picked up their lunch pails for the last time, trooped through the door, casting smiles back and calling, “Good-bye, Miss Wharton. See you at the picnic.”

Wandering around the empty room, picking up crumpled paper, straightening a desk kicked crooked by some child’s impatient departure, moving to the window ledge to remove the pencil sharpener and empty it of shavings... Birdie stood transfixed for a moment, staring out at the birch ring and remembering.

What a distance she had come, and all due to the marvelous grace of God—

There was a sound at the door, and Birdie turned.

Silent, kindly, anticipating—Big Tiny. Slowly his arms opened, spread wide, waited.

Without a moment’s hesitation, leaving the sharpener, dropping the crumpled paper, Birdie Wharton walked, straight and true, into the waiting arms. Arms that, she felt quite sure now, had been waiting all the winter long, perhaps all the year long. As they closed around her, she laid her cheek on the broad chest with a sigh that seemed to speak of rest, of complete contentment, of total fulfillment. Birdie—her flutterings past, her aimless flight abandoned—had found her nest.

The bliss of the moment only increased when Big Tiny, not as patient a lover as might have been supposed, tipped her head with
his rough finger, bent his own, and kissed her. Kissed her tenderly... kissed her urgently... kissed her with enough passion to satisfy the tide of desire that surged warmly and generously through her starving heart and yearning body.

“Tell Victoria,” he murmured, when speech was possible, revealing that he had been waiting outside, “that you’ll be Mrs. Wilhelm Kruger before another school year rolls around.”

“Oh, Wil...” Birdie offered no argument, thought of none.

Later, much later, in his buggy, her hand in his big paw, she made her one confession. A hesitant confession.

“Wil, there’s been someone... someone I don’t know, who’s been sending me things in the mail. Rather intimate things.”

“Oh, ya?” Big Tiny’s head swiveled, and he cocked an eye at her. An eye in which curiosity gleamed, and speculation.

“But, Wil, it was all one-sided. I never once wrote to him—”

“No? And why not?”

“Why not? Well, I... I didn’t know his name, you see. In all honesty, I might have responded, might have thanked him, at the last, for bringing me to Christ. But I didn’t know his name—”

“Didn’t know his name?” Big Tiny asked, his eyes going wide, his voice filled with astonishment.

“Why, no. They, the letters, were anonymous... unsigned.”

Silence. Silence as though Big Tiny might be sorting through unusual areas of thought and finding it slow going.

The wheels creaked; the horse plodded.

A bluebird flashed past.

“‘The bluebird carries the sky on his back,’” Big Tiny said thoughtfully, following the swift flight of the bird with his eyes.

The silence became deafening. Slowly Birdie turned her eyes on Big Tiny’s face.

“Thoreau. Henry David Thoreau,” Big Tiny added as an afterthought.

“Are you telling me... are you saying... what
are
you saying, Wil!”

“Are
you
telling
me
,” Big Tiny said unbelievingly, “that you haven’t known, haven’t known all along, that I was the one sending those quotations?”

Birdie looked dazed.

“Wil, oh, Wil! Why didn’t you tell me—”

“But I did.” Now it was Big Tiny’s turn to look puzzled. “First thing. I wrote you right after...”

“Right after?”

“Right after I put the fear of my good right arm into that... that Buckley kid.”

Limply Birdie sank back. But her mind was working swiftly. Why should it surprise her that Big Tiny, with the sensitivity he had displayed, should discern what was going on with Buck? She recalled now that she had realized very quickly after she failed to meet him in the birch ring that the writer had changed. The messages had changed—

“My letter, Birdie. My first letter. Didn’t you get it? In it I explained that certain callow youths wouldn’t be bothering you anymore and that—if you didn’t tell me not to—I’d like to share with you the things I was reading. From that time on I just kept leaving them here and there, at the post office, in your desk...”

Birdie had a clear picture of the small chiffonier drawer at home and the letter she had locked in it—unopened, unread.

And to think that here, at her side, holding her hand, offering love enough for a lifetime, sat not only kind, generous, sweet-natured Big Tiny Kruger, her friend, but her soul mate. One and the same.

It seemed fitting, riding along in the curve of Big Tiny’s arm into the gentle spring evening, to find a quotation rising in her heart.

Softly she spoke it: “‘O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!’” (Rom. 11:33).

The “amen!” lifted from bush and tree, bird and beast, earth and sky and water, until Bliss echoed with praise.

W
ith school out, Hans and Gretchen accompanied Sam each time he came to the Bonney place to work. Soon they felt quite at home, rousting out the toys of former years, becoming thoroughly acquainted with all the buildings, digging into the cookies when hungry or settling for a slice of bread and jam, haunting the bush for early berries, hunting crows’ nests, trapping gophers.

Gopher tails, after all, brought a bounty of a copper a tail. And the array of candy choices at one cent apiece was exciting, even exhilarating, to a child of the bush: gumdrops, jawbreakers, hoar-hound squares or twists, mints, lemon drops, strawberry drops, cream balls, lady kisses; the choices were endless. Why, a child could linger, enthralled, over the candy counter half a day, given a chance. Hans and Gretchen, clutching grisly gopher tails, accompanied Ellie to Bliss and to the store at times, to return sucking a favorite candy, and totally blissful.

After a winter of potatoes, beans, porridge, bread, and a few shriveled vegetables, young appetites craved something sweet,
something store-bought, something
extravagant
. Older appetites were no different, and the first berries—wild strawberries, tiny, jeweled, luscious; or saskatoons, milder than blueberries, smaller than blueberries but blue in color—were gathered and relished with cream and sugar in a sauce dish or baked in a pie. As the sweetness exploded on the tongue, eyes closed in near ecstasy, and something long starved was satisfied.

Today, Ellie glanced with satisfaction at the bowl of ruby-red strawberries, freshly gathered as soon as Sam and the children had arrived, the children happily accompanying her to the meadow where the matchless berries spread like a carpet over the ground. On the table beside the strawberries sat a sponge cake, a delight in itself because the hens were laying once more and the twelve eggs necessary were available again. The kettle was boiling, and the best teapot was warming; Mum’s good dishes were laid out on the table along with serviettes snowy and white enough to satisfy the severest critic.

BOOK: Bittersweet Bliss (Saskatchewan Saga Book #5): A Novel
12.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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