Legacy of Love. Christine Johnson
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She couldn’t hide her bewilderment. “Then why didn’t he take the treasure?”
“Read it,” Brandon urged.
He was deliberately holding back, and she could tell by the teasing smile on his lips that he had a surprise in store for her.
“We can discuss it when you’re finished,” he added. “We’ll set aside an evening when you and your mother can come to the house for supper.”
It sounded almost like a date, with Ma as chaperone.
She clutched the book tightly. “I’d like that. Maybe next week?”
His smile faded. “Perhaps. If the store’s ready. Speaking of which, I’d best get back so you can work.” Without further comment, he nodded farewell and departed into the wintry day.
Disappointed, she fingered the book. What had she said? One moment he wanted to talk over supper. The next he couldn’t make time.
She turned toward the desolate house and the hard work that awaited her. Only then did the realization hit. He only saw her as a housekeeper. The offer to talk was meant to appease her and nothing more.
Anger flushed through her. He didn’t care what she thought about the Egyptian excavations. If she wanted to gain his respect, she needed to make something of herself.
Tomorrow she’d take the train to Belvidere and apply at the cannery.
Chapter Five
Anna never took the train to Belvidere. Ma insisted they decorate the apartment for Christmas instead. Since her mother could barely walk, that left the work to Anna. She gathered pinecones and evergreen boughs, while Ma strung corn she’d popped over the fire. Branches of money plant added pearly white disks to the display. She stuck cloves into apples and hung them from old ribbons. Considering the decorations cost so little, Anna thought it looked pretty good.
“It’s not as nice as home, though,” she mused.
Ma looked up from her needlework. “This is home now.”
“Are you sure no one will mind that I cut off some pine branches?” No one of course referred to Brandon, on whose property they’d gathered the boughs and cones and dried flowers.
“Mr. Brandon gave his permission. He even unlocked the garage doors so you could get a saw.”
No matter how many times Ma reassured her, Anna still felt like a thief. They might live here, but only as guests.
Just walking into the garage portion of the carriage house had felt like an invasion of his privacy. As a child she’d often wondered what lay inside the thick stone walls. How disappointing to discover it contained the same things as every other outbuilding. In former days carriages must have been parked where he now kept his automobile. Along one wall stood a tool bench with dozens of old tools hanging from nails that had been pounded into a board attached to the plastered stone wall.
The plaster had been a surprise. It was to be expected in the apartment, but why would anyone plaster a garage? Yet someone in the past had done just that. Judging by the dingy film of dirt, dust and cobwebs, the plastering had been done years ago.
Anna had found a rusty old handsaw that managed to cut through thick boughs after jerking the teeth back and forth against the wood.
“I’m sorry I couldn’t cut a tree for us,” she apologized again to her mother.
“We don’t need a big old tree in this little room. We’d never be able to walk around it. If you ask me, the branches are perfect. Smell the pine.”
Anna inhaled deeply. The warmth of the fireplace had released the piney scent from the needles.
“It’s wonderful,” Ma said from her perch before the fireplace, her head back and eyes closed. “That smell always makes me think of Christmas.” She chuckled, eyes still shut. “Remember when your father cut down that ten-foot-tall tree? He insisted on stuffing the thing into the living room. We had needles everywhere. I was still finding them in August.”
“That must have been before I was born.”
“I’m sure you were there, but maybe you were too little to remember.” Ma sighed. “Such good memories.”
Anna hoped her mother didn’t get misty-eyed. “We’ll start new memories.”
“Yes, we will. And keep some of the old. That reminds me. I promised we’d bring plum duff for dinner tomorrow.”
“Plum duff?” Anna couldn’t hide her surprise. She loved the traditional steamed Christmas pudding, but Ma spent days preparing it. “There’s not enough time. The fruit has to be ripened.”
Ma waved a hand. “Mariah mixed the fruit and nuts with the suet a week ago. She dropped it off this afternoon.”
Anna looked around and saw nothing.
“I had her take it to the kitchen. You’ll have plenty of time to mix the ingredients and steam it.”
“Me?” Anna tried not to panic. “You want me to make it?”
“It’s not that difficult. I wrote down the recipe. It’s on the table.”
Anna glanced over to see that indeed Ma had jotted down her recipe. But knowing which ingredients to use wouldn’t ensure it turned out. Ma always said plum duff was temperamental.
“It’s Saturday afternoon,” she pleaded, “and Brandon probably doesn’t have the ingredients.”
Ma smiled sleepily. “I had him call in an order this morning. The mercantile should have delivered everything by now.”
Anna’s jaw dropped. Ma had not only ordered items they couldn’t afford, she’d somehow managed to suck Brandon into her scheme. “How will we pay for this?”
“Don’t fret. Mr. Brandon put it on his account.”
“He did?” Anna choked. “Why would he do that? We’ll pay him back.”
“Now don’t you go doing that. He insisted, wished us a merry Christmas. What a fine gentleman. He stopped by while you were cutting the boughs. He wanted to make sure you found everything you needed.”
Anna struggled to piece together this very different picture of Brandon Landers. “He always seems so...gruff, like he’s angry with me.”
Ma smiled softly. “The Lord puts people in our lives for a reason.”
“Well, I can’t imagine why he put Brandon in ours.”
“I’m sure you’ll find out one day. He’s such a nice man...” She yawned.
Anna glanced outdoors. It must be nearly four o’clock. If they weren’t going to be up all night, they had to start the plum duff soon.