Read A Measure of Mercy Online

Authors: Lauraine Snelling

Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #Historical, #General, #Religious, #ebook

A Measure of Mercy (11 page)

“Don’t we all?”

Samuel stopped behind them. “Mr. Landsverk?”

Joshua turned to answer. “Yes.”

“Would you like to join our baseball game? We play out in the pasture as soon as everyone is finished eating. Most all the men and boys play.”

“And the girls cheer,” Astrid added.

“Will you be cheering?” He smiled down at her as gently as he had when she’d cried all over his shirt.

At the look in his eyes, she could feel her cheeks growing warm. “Yes. I’ll be there.”
After I have a talk with Reverend Schuman,
she suddenly decided.

8

I
nteresting to feel pulled two ways. One part of him wanted to go with Astrid whether she had invited him or not. The other was pleased he’d been invited to play ball, and he headed for the field with the Knutson boy, whichever one he was, Trygve or Samuel? Joshua definitely had trouble telling them apart. He stared after Astrid, striding purposefully across the yard. Not strolling but pounding the grass with her heels. Was she angry?

“Have you ever played baseball?” Thorliff asked as he stopped beside him.

Joshua nodded. “The town near my pa’s farm has two teams. I usually played first base or pitched.”

“Good. You can be on our team.”

“How are the teams chosen?”

“Used to be the men against the boys, but now we just choose up sides. It’s more fun if we are fairly evenly matched.”

Joshua shot one more look after Astrid and walked with Thorliff to the game. The diamond was marked with gunnysacks filled with sawdust on the bases and a worn holey rug for home plate.

“What do you use for a backstop?”

“The catcher just better not miss. Makes for a sure home run if he does. We’ve been talking about putting in a real field over at the school, backstop and all. Somehow building houses seems more important than a backstop.”

“You’re on our team,” Trygve called from the pitcher’s dirt mound.

“Nope, sorry. We got him,” Thorliff answered.

“But I asked him first.”

“Too bad. I brought him over.” Thorliff glanced at the man beside him, a couple of inches taller than his own six feet. “With arms as long as yours, you ought to be able to catch about anything. You say you can pitch?”

“Not the best but adequate.”

“Good. We flip a coin to see which team is up first.”

With the arrival of two Geddick boys, the teams were full. Thorliff and Trygve joined the others at home base to flip the coin. Trygve called heads. Tails came up and he groaned.

“Thorliff, you always win.”

“Only when Hjelmer is on my team.” He looked around at the players. “You all know Joshua Landsverk?” When the Geddicks shook their heads, he introduced Joshua, and the others said their names. “Okay, let’s play ball.” He assigned the batting order, and the rest of them went to sit in the shade of the barn to wait their turn. “You have to watch out for cow pies,” Thorliff told Joshua, “though we try to clear them away from the playing field. A bit sloppy if you slide into a base through one.”

And me in my best clothes. Do most people go home to change after
church?
He looked around. Seems like they did or brought work jeans along.

Haakan sat down beside him. “Glad to see we have a new player.”

“You don’t play?”

“Used to but had a bit of a medical problem this winter, and my docs say I have to take it easy. I could do outfield fine, I think.” He tipped his head to the side. “I take it you’ve played before?”

Joshua told him what he’d told Thorliff. “Who is that playing second base?”

“That’s Gerald Valders. He was on duty at the telephone exchange, so he couldn’t come to the dance last night. His brother, Toby, is playing for us.”

“Telephones, eh? They have ’em in town at home, but Pa drew the line there. Said he didn’t need any such newfangled machines to eat up what little he makes.”

“Plenty of folks feel that way until there is an emergency. Then they realize telephones can save lives.”

The crack of bat on ball grabbed their attention. With a line drive right over second base, Hjelmer charged toward first base, rounded it, and headed for second.

“Here, here!” Samuel leaped for the throw and missed tagging Hjelmer by mere inches.

“I’m safe!” Hjelmer yelled, getting up and dusting off his hands. “Good try there, young man.”

Samuel glared at him. “I’d a had you if you’d stood up.”

“That’s why I slid.” His reply made the others laugh.

“What brought you back to Blessing?” Haakan asked Joshua.

I can’t tell him I couldn’t get his daughter out of my head.
“I got tired of farming.” He paused, wishing he could tell the whole story, but now was neither the time nor place. “I remembered liking it here until the grasshoppers ate my harvest and the blizzard near to froze me to death. So I came back, hoping there might be other work here besides farming.”

“That was a hard year for many folks.”

Can’t tell him I was going back to see if I could talk Fiona into
changing her mind either. Needless to say, she hadn’t, but that might
have been because she was married to someone else by then.
Romance hadn’t been easy for him.

“So you’re going to work for Hjelmer putting up windmills, eh?”

“Looks that way.” Joshua picked a blade of grass and tossed it away. “I’ve always liked putting things together.” He watched one of the Geddick young men take a stance with the bat over his shoulder.

“There’s plenty of work around here for any enterprising man. Blessing is growing far more than we ever dreamed.” He raised his voice. “Come on, Geddick, hit that ball.”

Joshua reminded himself that no matter how much he wanted to see how Astrid was doing, he needed to stay here with the game. After all, if he wanted to live here, he needed a job and friends. Or there would be no possibility of getting to know Astrid.

“Strike one,” yelled the catcher when Geddick stood there and took the pitch.

“Come on, that looks—”

“Strike two.”

“Come on, Heinz, you can do it. Don’t let him buffalo you,” Hjelmer yelled, leading off second.

Trygve spun and fired the ball to second base. Samuel caught it and ran after Hjelmer, who was now sprinting for third base.

“Tag him, tag him,” the outfielders shouted.

But Hjelmer slid out from under the tag and stood up safe.

“You cheated!”

“No I didn’t. You just didn’t run fast enough. In this life you gotta be ready for anything.” Hjelmer dusted off his pant leg.

“Ain’t that the truth,” Haakan muttered under his breath.

Joshua turned to look at him. The man now wore deep lines from the sides of his nose to the commas of his mouth. His eyes were more sunken, the robust strength that Joshua remembered no longer there. He seemed to clamp and open his fist as a reflex action. Whatever had happened to him? While he looked older, he still seemed in good health. Joshua nudged Thorliff. “Why don’t you ask your pa to be umpire? You know, call the strikes and foul balls?”

Thorliff stared back at him, then gave a slight nod and leaned around him. “Pa, why don’t you go out there and be the umpire. Then we’ll have a fairer game.” When Haakan ignored him, Thorliff leaned over and poked his father to get his attention. “How about you go out there behind the batter and play umpire?”

Haakan nodded. “Not a bad idea. I think Geddick is getting a bad rap.” He stood and raised his arms. Play stopped. Thorliff stood too. “Pa’s going to play umpire out here, so Trygve, you better be more careful how you pitch.”

“Yeah, don’t hit your old onkel, or you’ll get to milk all the cows tonight.”

Trygve groaned. “One more thing to slow down the game.”

“That’s what you think.” Haakan went to stand behind the batter and snugged his fedora down on his head. “Let’s go.”

Trygve lobbed one in.

“Ball two.”

“Hey, he already has two strikes.”

“Yes, and it should be ball three, but I was giving you the benefit of the doubt.”

Trygve heaved the next one in. Geddick swung, caught it, and the ball sailed out into left field. He ran to first, then second, and Hjelmer ran home.

“You’re up next,” Thorliff said, motioning to Joshua.

Joshua hit it on the first pitch, the ball arcing up and away. The two fielders ran back and still the ball kept on going. Geddick ran toward home plate, with Joshua steamrolling after him.

“Oh, blast.” Lars, who was playing outfield, kicked the ball out of the fairly fresh cow pie and let it roll in the grass to get it cleaned up.

“Two more points—we’re three ahead.” Thorliff clapped the two runners on the back. “And it’s still the first inning. Joshua, you can play on my team anytime.”

“That was an accident. I’ve never hit like that before.”

“That’s what being back home where you belong does for you.”

Joshua stared at Thorliff. Was this really home, or was he here only because of Astrid? “I’ll have to think on that.” He sat down next to Hjelmer and watched the game while he wondered where Astrid was. Other women had come out to watch the game but not her.

“Hi there, Astrid,” Pastor Solberg greeted as Astrid mounted the steps to the porch. He turned to his guest. “This is Miss Astrid Bjorklund, our resident doctor-in-training.”

“How do you do, sir.”

“Very well.” The reverend Schuman smiled, yet his eyes seemed tired. Or maybe he was weary in general. He cleared his throat. “I saw you in church.”

She watched him clear his throat for the third time. When she thought about it, he’d been doing that during the service too. “May I ask you a few questions?”

“Of course.” He motioned to the empty chair beside him. “Why don’t you sit down while we talk.”

“I’ll leave you alone, then.” Pastor Solberg started to stand, but the pleading look Astrid sent him settled him back down in the rocker again. “I guess they can play ball without me for a change.” He leaned forward and, resting his elbows on his knees, clasped his hands. “What is bothering you?”

“How do you know something is bothering me?” The question slipped out before she could clamp it off. That didn’t sound very polite.

“Ah, Astrid, how many years have I known you?”

“All my life.”

“Then shouldn’t I be able to sense unrest when I see it?”

Astrid glanced at the other man watching her. He cleared his throat again.

“It’s about something you said, Reverend, about needing those medically trained workers in Africa.”

“We need people like that desperately. You have no idea how severe the crisis is there. Jesus calls us to heal the sick.”

“But what about here? Doctors are needed here too.”

“I’m sure they are. Do you feel God is calling you to be a doctor?”

“In most ways I already am one. I’ve been in training for over a year and working for Dr. Elizabeth for two or three years. My mother was the one everyone called for medical help before Elizabeth moved here. I thought I wanted to be a nurse, but I’ve decided to become a doctor and will be taking more intensive training.”

She stared at the man and watched his Adam’s apple bob again. What was wrong with his throat? “But I don’t want to go to Africa.”

“Who said you had to go to Africa?”

“I thought you were speaking right to me.”

“Then perhaps I was. Sometimes God works that way.”

“But I don’t want to go to Africa. I don’t even want to go to Chicago. I want to stay here.” Tears threatened again.
I will not cry.
I will not be a big baby
. How embarrassing. “How do I know if this is God calling me?”

“You ask Him.”

“But what if it is Him?” she asked in barely a whisper.

Reverend Schuman leaned forward. “Then you have to make a decision—to go or to stay. What I usually find is that if it is God, He will keep calling you. Remember Samuel? He said, ‘Here am I, Lord.’ ”

“At least he didn’t have to go to Africa.”

Pastor Solberg chuckled. “There’s my Astrid.”

“He was given a rather large assignment, though. But it didn’t happen until God had trained him for the job. He will lead you step by step, and if you follow those steps, you will know what His will is. You also check what you hear against the Scriptures. How did God call people?”

“He struck Paul blind.”

“True. How did He call the disciples?”

“He said, ‘Follow me.’ But they could see and hear Him. Jesus was a real person and went up to them and told them what to do.”

“True. We have to listen both inside and out. But He will make His will clear to us.”

Astrid sighed and leaned back in the chair, setting it to rocking with one foot.

“Does that answer your questions, young lady?”

“I have one other.”

“What’s that?”

“How long have you had the problem with your throat?”

Solberg rolled his lips together, glanced at the surprised look on his friend’s face, and burst out laughing. “She’s like her mother, direct and observant, without an ounce of coyness in her.”

Astrid waited for him to answer.

He squirmed a little in his chair, almost like a child who’s had to sit too long. “Why?”

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