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The Forever Man(12)

By:Carolyn Davidson


"Did you bring in everything from the barn, Pete?" Tate's query was pleasant, as if his son's ill will were not apparent.

"Yessir, it's on the porch like you told me." Green beans disappeared between his teeth, and he chewed diligently.

"Me too, Pa. I brung my stuff, my pillow and everything." Timmy's grin  encompassed the table and all three of his companions. "When can we  bring in the beds and stuff we brought?"

Johanna's head lifted, her gaze meeting Tate's abruptly. "You brought furniture with you?"

He nodded. "Some. I wasn't sure what we'd need. I didn't even know where  we were going. I brought a supply of tools, too, some I didn't figure  I'd want to have to replace. The boys wanted their beds and the feather  ticks their aunt Bessie made for them, and some trunks I made them."

"You didn't tell me," she said, thinking of the big double bed she'd  outfitted with clean sheets in her old bedroom. "We could have brought  their things in last night."

"We had enough to do last night, what with getting your mother's room all fixed up for you."

"Well, I'm sure we can get the boys' things into the house after dinner  and get them settled in. They'll want to put their clothes away in the  wardrobe and dresser."

"Most of my stuff is dirty. Pa has to wash it," Pete said gruffly. "We didn't stop to do the washing for a long time."

Tate's smile was teasing. "I wasn't going to tell Miss Johanna about  that till tomorrow, son. There wasn't any sense in scaring her off the  first day. It'll take half the morning to scrub out the pile of things  we've managed to accumulate."                       
       
           



       

"I'm used to laundry. My scrub board works real well," Johanna said  obligingly. "Bring your things on in and put them in the washroom."

"You wash indoors year-round?" Tate asked.

"Pretty much. It gets cold here early on. We're not far from the big  lake, and when that west wind blows, I don't enjoy being out in it, up  to my elbows in wash water. My father built a washroom for Mama when he  built this house. It's bad enough I have to hang things outside in the  winter. Mama used to carry them up to the attic sometimes, when the  weather got real bad, and string a line to put them on."

"What's wrong with a rack behind the stove?" Tate eyed the space between the cookstove and the wall, measuring it in his mind.

"I never thought of that. I didn't know they made such things," Johanna said.

"I can put one together for you. It won't hold everything at once, but  things dry pretty good. Beats standing out in a cold wind, with a wet  sheet flappin' in your face."

"Pa! Can we have pie now?" Timmy was plainly tired of the talk of  laundry day, and his voice was querulous as he attempted to change the  subject. His plate was empty of food, his fork still held upright in his  hand, and his eyes were glued to the apple pie sitting on Johanna's  kitchen cupboard.

She scooted her chair back from the table. "Let me clear these things  off first. Hold your fork tight, Timmy. You'll need it for the pie."

"I like mine in a bowl with cream over it," Tate said with a grin. "So does Pete."

"My aunt Bessie makes good pie," Pete offered stoutly.

Johanna's gaze met Tate's. It was easier this time. "Did you have apple trees on your place?"

He shook his head. "No, Bessie got them in town at the general store.  She used to dry them to use in the winter. The boys spent some time with  her … . She liked to fuss over them."

"We could have stayed there, Pa. Aunt Bessie said we could, remember?" Pete reminded him.

"It wasn't a good idea, son." Tate's firm words dismissed the idea, and  the boy sighed loudly, eliciting another stern look from his father.

The wedding had changed him, Johanna thought sadly. The cheerful child  of the night before had vanished, and she mourned his departure. It  would take some doing to bring him back, she feared. Rising from the  table, she quickly took up the plates, bringing the pie back with her.  The pitcher of cream she'd poured for their coffee was still over  half-full-probably enough for Tate's pie, too, she thought She watched  as he poured it over the slice she cut for him, watched as he lifted the  first bite to his mouth, watched as his lips closed over the forkful of  crust and filling. And felt a small bubble of rejoicing within her as  his smile pronounced it good.

"It's as good as your aunt Bessie's, isn't it, Pete?"

The boy was silent, eating slowly, as if unwilling to allow any enthusiasm to creep forth.

Timmy had no qualms about expressing his approval. "You're a good  cooker, Miss Johanna." It was high praise indeed, delivered with a  flourish of his fork, crumbs surrounding his mouth, his eyes shining  with glee.

"Yes, she is, isn't she?" his father agreed.

Johanna felt a blush paint her cheeks. She'd had more compliments during  the past two days than she'd had in years. Tate Montgomery would fix  himself a place in her life with his courtly manners and his gentle  smiles, if nothing else.





The sun had gone down in a burst of splendor, leaving an autumn chill.  Johanna had brought her shawl from the parlor, where it was usually  draped over her mother's overstuffed chair, awaiting her use on cool  evenings. Now she stood on the porch, watching warily as Tate carried  another load of his things from the barn. He was truly moving into her  house, and she felt a moment of apprehension as she considered that  thought.

"This is the last of it," he said, resting one foot on the bottom step.  He looked up at her, his eyes measuring. "What is it, Johanna? Are you  fearful that I'll forget my bargain with you? That I'll forget which  parts of the house I'm welcome in and which part is off-limits to me?"                       
       
           



       

She hadn't expected it, his ability to know her mind, and she clutched  the shawl closer, as if the wind had sent a chill through her. "No, I'm  not afraid of you, Tate. I told you that already. I've seen that you're a  gentleman. I'm sure you'll hold up your end of the bargain."

He climbed the three steps to the porch. "Open the door for me, will  you? I really loaded myself down this trip. I wanted to get all of it."

Johanna eyed the three boxes he carried. "Those look heavy. Can I help?"

"No." He shook his head. "They're mostly books. Some papers, too, and  the contents of my desk. It's a big thing-probably foolish of me to pack  it on the wagon, but I hated to leave it behind. I kept my records in  it, and all the paperwork it takes to run a farm and family in one  place, back in Ohio."

"There's a small room off the dining room you can have if you like,"  Johanna offered. Her face grew pensive as she thought of the evenings  she'd spent by herself over the past ten years, wondering what her  father did in that small room, while she sat by herself in the kitchen  or in the parlor.

"Is it furnished?"

"Somewhat. You may as well bring those things on in here," Johanna said,  leading the way. She went through the kitchen, into the formal dining  room, which had been used so seldom that she kept the table and buffet  covered with sheets. Across from the three wide windows was a door, and  it was there that she headed. Turning the knob, she stepped within.

"It's dark in here," she called over her shoulder. "But there's not much  to trip over. My father only kept a chair and ottoman by the window,  and a table for his lamp and account books."

Tate looked around in the shadowed interior of the small room. An air of  musty disuse assailed him, and he wrinkled his nose. "We need to open  the windows in the morning and let in some fresh air and sunshine," he  told her, bending to deposit his boxes on the floor against one wall.

"I haven't been in here since he died," Johanna admitted quietly. "It  was his room. I guess I didn't feel welcome, even after he was gone."

"You'll be welcome, once it's mine." As a statement of fact, it couldn't  have been any plainer. Tate would harbor no secrets from his wife. She  doubted he would leave his bedroom door ajar for her to peek inside, but  this room would be a part of the house once more.

Maybe she'd even remove the coverings from the dining room furniture and  use the room for Sunday dining, as they had when her mother was alive.  The thought cheered her.

"This is still your home, Johanna. When I pay off your mortgage this  next week, it will be in my name along with yours, but the house is  still whatever you want it to be."

She looked up at him, peering to make out his features in the dim light.  "That all sounds well and good, Tate, but as a man, you have more  rights than I'll ever have. I wouldn't have agreed to this if I wasn't  pretty sure of you. As far as I know, a woman only has the rights her  husband allows her, no matter what the deed says."