Heart of the Country

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Authors: Rene Gutteridge

Tags: #FICTION / Christian / General, #FICTION / General

BOOK: Heart of the Country
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Visit Tyndale online at
www.tyndale.com
.

Visit Rene Gutteridge’s website at
www.renegutteridge.com
.

TYNDALE
and Tyndale’s quill logo are registered trademarks of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.

Heart of the Country

Copyright © 2011 by John Ward. All rights reserved.

Cover design © 2013 FOX. All rights reserved.

Designed by Ron Kaufmann

Edited by Sarah Mason

Published in association with Yates & Yates (
www.yates2.com
).

Published in association with the literary agency of Books and Such, Janet Kobobel Grant, 4788 Carissa Ave., Santa Rosa, CA 95405.

Heart of the Country
is a work of fiction. Where real people, events, establishments, organizations, or locales appear, they are used fictitiously. All other elements of the novel are drawn from the author’s imagination.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Gutteridge, Rene.

  Heart of the country / Rene Gutteridge ; based on the screenplay by John Ward.

    p. cm.

  ISBN 978-1-4143-4829-2 (sc)

1. Fathers and sons
 
—Fiction. 2. Inheritance and succession
 
—Fiction. 3. Fraud
 
—Fiction. 4. Prodigal son (Parable)
 
—Fiction. 5. North Carolina
 
—Fiction. 6. Domestic fiction. I. Ward, John, 1970- II. Title.

  PS3557.U887H43 2011

  813´.54
 
—dc22 2011032760

ISBN 978-1-4143-6771-2 (ePub), 978-1-4143-6772-9 (Kindle), 978-1-4143-6770-5 (Apple)

Build: 2013-07-31 10:11:52

In memory of Joyce Bernhardt, who was both the heart and the country.

R. G.

To my two children, Cali and Jack, with a father’s unconditional love.

J. W.

Contents

     
1: Catherine

     
2: Luke

     
3: Faith

     
4: Luke

     
5: Faith

     
6: Luke

     
7: Faith

     
8: Luke

     
9: Faith

     
10: Olivia

     
11: Faith

     
12: Catherine

     
13: Olivia

     
14: Faith

     
15: Luke

     
16: Catherine

     
17: Faith

     
18: Olivia

     
19: Luke

     
20: Faith

     
21: Catherine

     
22: Faith

     
23: Olivia

     
24: Faith

     
25: Olivia

     
26: Catherine

     
27: Faith

     
28: Luke

     
29: Olivia

     
30: Faith

     
31: Catherine

     
32: Faith

     
33: Olivia

     
34: Faith

     
35: Catherine

     
36: Olivia

     
37: Faith

     
38: Luke

     
39: Olivia

     
40: Luke

     
41: Faith

     
42: Olivia

     
43: Luke

     
44: Faith

     
45: Luke

     
46: Olivia

     
47: Faith

     
48: Luke

     
49: Faith

     
50: Luke

     
51: Faith

     
52: Olivia

     
53: Luke

     
54: Olivia

     
55: Luke

     
56: Faith

     
57: Luke

     
58: Faith

     
59: Luke

     
60: Olivia

     
61: Faith

     
62: Luke

     
63: Calvin

Acknowledgments

Rene Gutteridge:

I would like to first and foremost thank John Ward for allowing me to share in the creative endeavors of his vision for
Heart of the Country
and to be a part of his journey on this project. He’s fantastically gifted and I loved working with his material. I’d like to also thank the entire Tyndale team, as well as my editors, Jan Stob and Sarah Mason, and Karen Watson, for seeing the possibilities of John’s script as a novel. I’d like to thank Janet Grant, who continues to believe in me and my writing abilities. Thanks also and always to Sean, John, and Cate, who support me to no end and love me even more. The three of you are the heart in my country. Last, but not least, thanks to God
 
—every book is a treat and I appreciate the opportunities He gives me and the gift that allows me to do each one.

John Ward:

Thanks to my grandmothers and the incredible people of Columbus County, North Carolina, for teaching me the gift of story and the value of people and character. To my parents, David and Gayle; my wife, Christy; Chris Ferebee; and Karen Watson.

1

CATHERINE

I
T WAS A STRANGE THING
to know that I was to become a memory to them. I kept searching for pain because pain means life. Instead, I smelled Lip Smackers on Olivia’s pale-pink lips. I heard Faith’s high-pitched giggles that still sounded childish even though she was growing into a young woman. I couldn’t move my arms, but against my fingertips, I felt their hair, their shoelaces, their sticky cheeks.

I knew this would break their hearts into thousands of tiny pieces that one lifetime couldn’t mend.

“Ma’am? Ma’am?”

I wished that he knew my name. I wanted somebody to know my name. The sirens wailed and screamed and I
wondered if I was coming and going out of consciousness or if that’s just how sirens sounded from the inside.

Above me, out of a light misty-gray that seemed like steam from a shower, I saw a man’s face come into view. His eyes were frantic but gorgeous and blue. Above him I caught my reflection against a long metal strip that ran the length of the ambulance. There was a familiarity to him, but that was true of everyone in Columbus County. If I didn’t know you, I knew your mom or your grandpa or your second cousin.

“Blood pressure . . .”

The words faded, just like the sirens, and his beautiful eyes retreated to a far place that I longed to reach for. I only saw the girls now, their faces passing by me like living, breathing photographs. And Calvin standing by his horse.

I wanted to be more than a memory. I hated that for the rest of their days they would only be able to touch me in their minds or set their gazes on a tiny glimpse captured by a camera.

A mother’s heart cannot let go. Not even to a father who had all the love in the world to offer them. I could never be replaced.

I looked again to that long metal reflection above me. I was covered in blankets. The EMT was covered in blood, and I thought that was strange. Warm and cold sensations drifted through my body, and I searched again for any sign of pain. My face looked distorted against the metal, like in a fun house mirror, except nothing else seemed out of proportion.

“Fourteen minutes out!”

Yes, it was a long way to the hospital when you lived in the country. Only one winding road led through our neck of the woods. Columbus County did not have a well-designed road system. The state was involved in a plan to pave “farm to market” roads, the idea being to improve transportation of tobacco, corn, sweet potatoes, cotton, soybeans, and livestock to places like Whiteville and Tabor City, where the train tracks ran. But instead of designing a modern road system, they paved the old dirt roads that had generally followed horse and carriage paths. They once connected neighboring farms, working around and over the swampy areas, resulting in a system of meandering roads. I could feel the ambulance hugging the curves of the concrete. It was often on these roads where I heard the music play.

I closed my eyes, or maybe they were already closed. I told myself to live, no matter what, to live. And then I felt it, a tiny prick of pain in my heel.

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