Hopeful (26 page)

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Authors: Shelley Shepard Gray

BOOK: Hopeful
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And the Lord must have heard him, because He gave Aden the strength to push Christina out of the water and lay her on the ice. Then the Lord gave Aden the strength to pull himself up, using an overhanging branch for support. A branch that he hadn’t noticed before.

Seconds later, they were on the bank and he was throwing his blessedly dry coat over her body and breathing life into her mouth.

Wonder of wonders, she gasped, inhaled, coughed, and then brought up what had to be a quart of pond water. And her eyes opened. “A—”

“Don’t talk.” He pressed his lips to her forehead. “Shh,” he added as he yanked off both their skates, picked her up, and ran to her house, the whole time praying like he never had before, not even when he was alone and scared and his parents had left him alone for the very first time.

“Please, please, please,” he murmured. Over and over as he ran with bare feet across the frozen fields, across her home’s front yard, yelling for their help the whole time. Almost right away, her parents ran out to meet him, taking her from his arms and rushing her upstairs to a hot bath.

The moment she was out of sight, he knelt on their spotless kitchen floor and prayed. He prayed until his voice was hoarse and his throat was sore. Until Mrs. Kempf came downstairs and announced that Christina was going to be just fine, but that he needed to change clothes, too, or he was going to get sick. Her warnings hardly mattered to him, however.

After all, his prayers had already been answered.

CHAPTER 1

It was, without a doubt, his least favorite day of the year.

For the last ten years, Aden Reese braced himself before he walked downstairs. Sometimes, he had to stop halfway down, take a few deep breaths, remind himself that the family meant well. Then he would finally school his features into a twisted combination of pleasure and surprise when he approached the family gathered around the table.

This year, unfortunately, was no different.

“Aden, at last you are here!” Martha Kempf exclaimed as she rushed to his side and promptly threw her arms around him. “We were beginning to wonder if you ever going to come downstairs.”

After the slightest hesitation, he hugged his adoptive mother back. Forced himself to smile. “I’m sorry, I guess I’m a lazybones today.”

Martha patted his cheek. “Today is your day, Aden. You can be anything you want,” she added as she pulled out his chair. “Now, sit.”

As he sat, he smiled at the family surrounding him. Joe, his adoptive father, looked right back, his eyes as damp as they always were on this day.

Beside Joe, twelve-year-old Leanna looked at him in that bashful way she always did. Treva gazed with her usual somber expression. The boys, Nate and Henry, eyed him with a combination of respect and awe.

And Christina? Only Christina looked a bit amused. As if she was the only one who had the slightest inkling that he hated being the reason for so much fuss.

In the middle of the table lay all his favorites: sausage and bacon, scrambled eggs and waffles. A pecan coffee cake. Orange slush and canned peaches. It went without saying that Martha and the girls had been up for hours preparing the feast.

The lump that was lodged in his throat now threatened to choke him.

Because they were all waiting, he said the same thing he always did every January third. “
Danke
for this fine meal. But, truly, there was no need to go to such fuss.”

“Of course there is,” Martha said. “Today marks the day you saved Christina’s life. We will always, always be thankful for your bravery, Aden.”

Joe nodded. “Always. Now, let’s give our thanks and eat.”

Aden closed his eyes and tried to simply concentrate on giving his thanks to God. And thanking the hands that had created the bounty. But all he could think about was how thankful he was that everyone had stopped staring at him.

Next, serving dishes were passed around, each one to him first. Each time, he took his portion, then passed the serving dishes along to Christina. More than once, their fingertips brushed against each other. More than once, she blushed. Looked away.

Little by little, conversation began. Joe talked with Nate and Henry about jobs he wanted them to do at the farm. Martha cautioned Leanna not to be late for school.

Christina asked Treva about her new job at the fabric store in the Alpine Village shops.

At last the meal was over. After thanking everyone again, Aden was more than ready to escape the house and drive his buggy to the livery in Sugarcreek. From there, he would take a van to his new job at the hospital.

“Aden, I know you’re short on time, but could ya still take Christina in to work?”

“Of course.”

Christina met his gaze for the briefest of seconds before speaking. “I’ll be ready in five minutes, Aden. All I have to do is put my lunch together.”

“There’s no hurry.”

“We made you a special lunch today,” Treva told him with a wide grin.

He bowed slightly. “I will look forward to it
verra
much.” Gazing over Treva’s head, he said, “Christina, just come out whenever you are ready. I’m going to go hitch the buggy.”

Two minutes later, with his lunch in one hand and his wool coat thrown over his shoulder, he escaped to the barn.

When he realized that he was completely alone, his footsteps slowed. And he forced himself to remember the day of her skating accident. It was truly one of the worst days of his life.

He still acutely remembered his panic. The fear that had overcome him for days and had interrupted his sleep for months—he’d been so afraid he would lose her forever. But overriding it all was his extreme sense of guilt. A better friend would have looked out for her more closely. A better man wouldn’t have hesitated for even a second when she’d fallen through the ice.

A better man would have admitted that he should never be praised for that day. A better man would have never accepted a room in their loving household.

Unfortunately, he’d always found it easier to keep silent instead of refuting their belief in him. And he definitely never allowed them to guess his deepest, darkest secret. After ten years living as her sibling, he still was in love with Christina Kempf.

He was standing beside the buggy, lost in thought. Looking as handsome as he ever did. Since he still hadn’t noticed her, Christina took a moment to stare, let herself have a little moment to hope and dream. To imagine that he was her beau. To pretend that he was waiting for her because he couldn’t stay away.

Instead of waiting for her because her mother had asked him to.

Then, as he blinked and focused on her, she rushed forward, taking care to keep her voice easy and breezy. Carefree. “I’m so sorry to keep you waiting. It took me a little longer than I expected to get my things together.”

“There’s no reason to apologize. See, I’m only now hitching up the buggy.”

“My, you really are moving slowly today,” she teased. “Perhaps Mamm is right. Maybe we do need to make January third your own special holiday.”

His mouth tightened. “If we could take this day off the calendar forever, I’d be grateful.”

She knew how he felt. What her parents seemed to forget was that the skating accident was all her fault. She’d had a terrible crush on Aden when she was twelve and was constantly doing everything she could to try to impress him. That day, it had included skating as fast as she could across the pond. If she had been looking at the ice instead of imagining him gazing at her in admiration, she would have realized that the ice had begun to crack.

If she’d been smarter, she would have saved them both a lot of trouble and he never would have almost died from a terrible case of pneumonia.

Looking back on those days, she ached to rewrite history. Without a doubt, she had embarrassed them both multiple times a week with her puppy love. After all, who would ever take a young girl’s infatuation seriously?

“So, are you ready to go?”

“But of course.” Without waiting for his help, she climbed into the buggy and scooted right next to him, positioning her tote bag as she did.

When the skirts of her dress brushed against his leg, he stiffened before exhaling. “So, what are your plans for the day?” he asked as he jiggled the reins and encouraged Maisey to begin her trot down the driveway.

“The usual things, I suppose. I’ll work in the kitchen of the Sugarcreek Inn.”

His lips thinned. “Are those ladies letting you do more than wash dishes yet?”

“Sometimes,” she said as he directed his horse to turn left and they began the fifteen-minute journey to her job at the restaurant.

“It’s not right, the way they have you standing at the sink from the time you get there until the moment you leave.”

“I’m the youngest and the newest employee. You know how it goes, Aden. Besides, Marla let me help her make rolls the other day.”

“Do you want me to talk to them? You know, remind them that you were hired to cook, not just be a dishwasher.”

“Definitely not!”

“Sure? I don’t mind.”

“Positive. Besides, Mrs. Kent said that she’s going to hire a new girl to wash dishes now that Miriam’s left. I think that was her way of telling me that I’m getting a promotion of sorts.”


Gut.”

As they got closer to the Sugarcreek Inn, the traffic around them got a bit heavier. Christina kept silent, knowing Aden needed to keep his attention on the vehicles trying to pass them. Maisey was a calm horse, to be sure. But that didn’t mean she didn’t have moments of skittishness.

At long last he pulled into the Sugarcreek Inn’s parking lot, guided the horse to one of the hitching posts at the back of the lot, then hopped out.

Christina knew by now that he would take it as a personal offense if she merely climbed down from the buggy and went on her way. For some reason known only to him, Aden always liked to help her down from the buggy.

“Who is going to take you home?” he asked when he appeared at her side.

“I’m not sure. Probably Mrs. Kent or Ruth,” she answered as she slipped her right hand in his and let him guide her to the ground.

“I’ll call the restaurant around two o’clock to make sure you have a ride.”

She didn’t dare tease him about this. He took her safety very seriously. “All right. I’ll know who will be picking me up by then.”


Gut.

He had just turned around when she knew she couldn’t let another moment go by without saying something. “Aden, even though you don’t like celebrating today, I’m grateful for it. I will always be grateful for you jumping in the pond and pulling me out. For saving my life.”

A myriad of expressions crossed his features—pain, remembered fear, embarrassment. She knew each one by heart because she’d felt much of the same things.

But then he took her hand in his, curved both of his around it, and pressed. “I, too, will always be thankful for that day, Christy. Always.”

Then, with his cheeks a brilliant red, he turned around and she slowly walked into the restaurant.

She had a new tingle on her skin. After ten years, she’d never given up on the thought that Aden might someday be hers. Every time she was confident that there was no chance of them having a future, something like this would happen, making her heart soar all over again.

But of course, she knew better than to do anything to encourage him. The last thing in the world she wanted was to embarrass them both.

She’d done enough of that for two lifetimes.

Also by Shelley Shepard Gray

Sisters of the Heart series

H
IDDEN

W
ANTED

F
ORGIVEN

G
RACE

Seasons of Sugarcreek series

W
INTER’S
A
WAKENING

S
PRING’S
R
ENEWAL

A
UTUMN’S
P
ROMISE

C
HRISTMAS IN
S
UGARCREEK

Families of Honor

T
HE
C
AREGIVER

T
HE
P
ROTECTOR

T
HE
S
URVIVOR

A C
HRISTMAS FOR
K
ATIE
(
NOVELLA
)

The Secrets of Crittenden County

M
ISSING

T
HE
S
EARCH

F
OUND

P
EACE

The Days of Redemption Series

D
AYBREAK

R
AY OF
L
IGHT

E
VENTIDE

Cover design by Mary McAdam Keane

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