Past Forward- A Serial Novel: Episode 15 (16 page)


Do you really think anyone would be interested in seeing something like this?


If you had regular tours, I

d find the ones most appropriate for my older daycare kids
,
and I

d bring them out one summer day.
You could have hayrides and picnics…

The dreamy tones to Becca

s voice told Willow that her guest was romanticizing her life.


How would I show the work involved though?
Making soap is fun

candles too.
But this is all work.
Sun
up until sundown from around February, thanks to the greenhouse, through October at the least.
It

s hard work.
How do you take away the romantic idea that it

s just playing Laura Ingalls three hundred sixty-five days a year?

Concentrating on Willow

s words, Becca shrugged.

I

m not sure.
I mean, it

d be a lot of work giving those kinds of tours
,
and if you don

t have time to spare, it probably wouldn

t work
.”


I

ll talk to Chad.
He

s always saying that children should all have my childhood.
I disagree.
I think that if everyone had the same kind of childhood, the world would be a very uninteresting place.
But, maybe he has a point about everyone experiencing a taste of it
,
just as I

d like my children to taste the occasional day in the city going to museums or the zoo
.”

Becca held up another finished soap sleeve and smiled.

I like them.
Why is it called Walden Farm instead of Finley or Tesdall?


Chad named it for Mother.
She loved Thoreau

s

live life deliberately

and

sucking the marrow out of life
,

and that

s what this farm was about

enjoying every moment of every day to its fullest.
So
he thought we should name it.
I think Bill is working on changing our holdings over to some kind of corporation with that name
too
.”

The living room clock struck four-thirty.
Becca

s eyes widened in surprise
,
and she quickly began clearing her paper mess.

I have to go.
Gram is going to be wondering where I am
,
and what I

m doing.
Adric gets home in a little while
.”


How is it going?
Are you hoping to keep seeing him next month too?


I think I will.
He

s being very

oh, I don

t know the word.
Attentive perhaps.
He

s good to me
;
he

s a little affectionate,
and from the way Lily was talking, he hasn

t done that yet.
Sometimes I think I see something in his eyes that tells me he

s even more attached than he says, but I don

t know.
I

m just so happy that it looks like there

s a chance, you know?


Well,

Willow teased,

Don

t keep the man waiting too long.
There

s another gal from next month just waiting to step into your shoes
.”


Don

t I know it,

Becca agreed ruefully.

It makes me sick to think about it
,
but if I

m who the Lord wants for him, I guess I need to have a little more faith
.”

 

 

Chapter
1
09
 

 

Willow pounded beef while Becca stirred the sauce on the stove.

Now when those flavors taste right, let me know
.”


What is the purpose of the beef again?

Becca had never heard of

pizza

like this.


Well, the first pizza Chad bought me was mostly bread with a little sauce and a lot of cheese.
Almost no meat
—nothing
to stick to your ribs until the next meal
.
S
o I put a thin slice of beef over the bread before I
add
the sauce
.”


Have you thought about Italian sausage instead of beef?

Shaking a bottle of olive oil, Willow shrugged.

I

ve never had Italian sausage
,
but Chad bought me this olive oil.
He says it

ll taste better on the bread than the butter
.”

Chad entered the kitchen with a basket of greens and a few well
-
ripened tomatoes.

I didn

t remember if you wanted the green onions or not
.”


Yes.
But if you didn

t get them, don

t worry about it.
It

ll be fine without them
.”

He held up a bunch triumphantly.

Score!
I remembered it all then
.”


I can

t believe you guys have ripe tomatoes from a
garden
!


Greenhouse,

Willow corrected.

Now that I have the greenhouse, I can have ripe tomatoes all year
.”

Beef pounded, Willow scrubbed her hands and then began washing the lettuce.
She paused, examining it closely.

Is this lettuce from the garden?


Well, it looked ready, why?


Loopers.
I

ve got to get out there and soap them before we get eggs.
I

ll do that before dinner
.”
Willow quit rinsing the greens and immediately left for the barn.


Loopers.
What are they?

Chad shrugged and started washing the leaves looking for whatever had bothered Willow.

Becca, your guess is as good as mine.
Apparently it

s something we don

t want in the garden though
.”

Willow arrived with a large spray bottle and filled it as Chad washed.
Then she dropped a large squirt of dish soap in the container and shook it vigorously.

Don

t let me forget Chad
.”


Why not do it now?


Best to do first thing in the morning or late afternoon.
That

s when the obnoxious critters are out
.”

Becca and Chad exchanged confused and amused glances.
Willow
took the scrubbed greens and tore them, filling
a large wooden salad bowl with them.
Deftly, she chopped tomatoes, onions, radishes, and cucumbers.
Before she could ask Chad for the croutons she

d made at breakfast, a car crunched in the driveway.


I think Josh is here.
Why don

t you go get him?

Willow waved
Chad
out the door and pointed to a bowl on the top of the stove.

Becca, can I have that bowl please?

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