The Wonder of Your Love (A Land of Canaan Novel) (37 page)

Read The Wonder of Your Love (A Land of Canaan Novel) Online

Authors: Beth Wiseman

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BOOK: The Wonder of Your Love (A Land of Canaan Novel)
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1 c. peanut butter

 

¼ c. milk

 

2 tsp. vanilla

 

3½ c. flour

 

2 tsp. baking soda

 

1 tsp. salt

 

2 (10 oz.) pkgs. chocolate kisses or miniature peanut butter cups

 

Cream sugars, butter, and peanut butter. Beat in eggs, milk, and vanilla. Stir in dry ingredients. Shape into balls and roll into additional sugar. Bake at 375 degrees for 10 to 12 minutes. Immediately press a chocolate candy into each cookie. Yield: about 7 dozen.

Chicken and Rice Casserole

1 c. rice, uncooked

 

¼ c. onions, minced

 

2 Tbsp. parsley flakes

 

½ tsp. salt and pepper

 

1 whole chicken, cut up

 

1 can cream of chicken soup

 

¾ c. salad dressing

 

1¼ c. water

 

Put rice in greased casserole. Add onions and seasonings; mix well. Combine soup, salad dressing, and water; beat. Pour half of soup mixture over rice, top with chicken and remaining soup mixture. Bake at 350 degrees for 1½ hours. Sprinkle with paprika, if desired.

Lazy Wife’s Dinner

1 can cream of celery soup (or cream of mushroom soup)

 

1 c. macaroni, uncooked

 

1½ c. milk

 

1½ c. frozen vegetable of your choice

 

½ lb. Velveeta (or American cheese)

 

1 c. diced potatoes

 

1 c. diced carrots

 

1 c. meat of your choice, cooked and chopped into bite-size pieces

 

3 Tbsp. chopped onion

 

Mix all the ingredients together and pour into 9” x 13” baking pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 1½ hours.

Thanks to Amish friends in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and Westcliffe Colorado.

The Daughters
of the Promise novels

 

Visit
AmishLiving.com

 

What would cause the Amish
to move to Colorado, leaving
family and friends behind?

 

The Land of Canaan Series

 

Darlene thought moving to a small town would bring their family closer together, but it just might tear them apart.

Available April 2012

 

AN EXCERPT FROM
Need You Now

 

D
ARLENE’S CHEST TIGHTENED, AND FOR A FEW
seconds she couldn’t move. If ever there was a time to move—to run—it was now. She put a hand to her chest, held her breath, and eased one socked foot at a time behind her across the wood floors in her bedroom. With each tiptoed step, she kept her eyes on the intruder, wondering why he wasn’t moving. Maybe he was dead.

She reached behind her and twisted the doorknob, and the click sent her trespasser scurrying across the floor toward her. In one swift movement, she jumped backward across the threshold and into the den, and slammed the door so hard a picture of the kids fell off the wall. She looked down at Chad, Ansley, and Gracie staring up through broken glass, then hurried through the den to the kitchen. Her hand trembled as she unplugged her cell phone and pressed the call button.
Please answer
.

It was tax time, so every CPA at her husband’s office was working long hours, and for the last few weeks before the April deadline, Brad was hard to reach—either with a client or in a meeting. She knew not to expect him until after eight o’clock tonight. Knowing she couldn’t go back in her bedroom, she wondered what she would have to live without until then. For starters, a shirt.

Darlene looked down at her semi-bare upper half. She’d managed to pull on her undergarments and a pair of shorts from her drawer before she was forced out of her bedroom. She let out a heavy sigh and rubbed her forehead. Brad answered on the sixth ring.

“Bradley…” She only called him by his full name when she needed to be sure she had his full attention.

“What is it, babe?”

She took a deep breath. “There is a
snake
in our bedroom. A big, black
snake
.” She paused and shivered. “In our
bedroom
.”

“How big?”

She’d expected a larger reaction. Maybe her husband didn’t hear her. “Big! Very big. Huge, Brad.”

He chuckled. “Honey, remember that little snake that got in your greenhouse when we lived on Charter Road in Houston? You said that snake was big too.” Another chuckle, and Darlene wanted to smack him through the phone. “It was a tiny little grass snake.”

“Brad, you’re going to have to trust me. This snake is huge, like five or six feet long.” A shiver ran down her spine. “Are you coming home or should I call 9-1-1?”

“What? You can’t call 9-1-1 about a snake. Darlene, don’t do that. Round Top is a small town, and we’ll be known as the city slickers who called in about a snake.”

“Then you need to come home and take care of this.” She lifted her chin and fought the tremble in her voice.

Deep breath on the other end of the line. “You know how crazy it is here. I can’t leave right now. It’s probably just a chicken snake, and they’re harmless.”

“Well, there are no chickens in my bedroom, so it doesn’t have any business in there. Brad, it’s a snake. Are you hearing me?”

“Chad can probably get it out when he gets home from school. Maybe with a shovel or something.”

Darlene sighed. “Our girls are going to freak if they come home to find a snake in the house.”

“Maybe—”

“I’ll call you back. There’s someone at the door, and I’m standing here in my bra. I’ll call you back. Love you.” She clicked the phone closed, then yelled toward the door. “Just a minute!”

After finding a T-shirt in Gracie’s room, she pulled it over her head as she crossed back through the den toward the front door. This was the first visitor she’d had in the two months since they’d moved from Houston. As had been habit in the city, she peeked around the curtain, relieved to see it was a woman. A very tall woman in a cowgirl hat. She pulled the door open.

“Your Longhorns are in my pasture.” The woman twisted her mouth to one side and folded her arms across her chest. “This is the second time they’ve busted the fence and wandered onto my property.”

Darlene thought this cowgirl could have walked straight off the set of any western movie. She was dressed in a long sleeved denim shirt with her blue jeans tucked into brown boots. She was older than Darlene, possibly mid forties, and stunning, with huge brown eyes and blond hair that hung in a ponytail to her waist.

“I’m so sorry.” Darlene shook her head. Brad should have never gotten the three Longhorns. Neither she nor Brad knew a thing about cows. But Brad had said a move to the country should include some Longhorns. She pushed the door wide. “I’m Darlene.”

The woman shifted her weight but didn’t make a move toward the door. Instead, she stared at Darlene’s chest. Darlene raised a brow and waited for the woman to lock eyes with her, and when she didn’t, Darlene finally looked down. Her cheeks warmed as she sighed.

“Oh, this is my daughter’s shirt.”
Don’t Bug Me!
was scrolled across the white T-shirt in red, and beneath the writing was a hideous picture of a giant roach. Darlene couldn’t stand the shirt, but fifteen-year-old Gracie loved it. “Do you want to come in?” She stepped back.

“No. I just wanted to let you know that I’m going to round up your Longhorns and head them back to your pasture. I’ll temporarily repair the fence.” The woman turned to leave, and it was then that Darlene saw a horse tethered to the fence that divided their property. She stifled a smile. This woman really was a cowgirl.

“Know anything about snakes?” Darlene stepped onto the front porch, sidestepping a loose board. The porch was next on their list of things to repair on her grandparents’ old homestead.

“What?” The woman turned around as she held a hand underneath the rim of her hat, blocking the afternoon sun.

“I have a snake in my bedroom.” Darlene shrugged. “Just wondering if you had any—any experience with something like that.” She padded down two porch steps in her socks. “I’m not sure I got your name, earlier?”

“Layla.” She gave a quick wave before she turned to leave again. Darlene sighed. Clearly the woman wasn’t interested in being friends. Or helping with the snake. Darlene watched her walk to her horse and put a foot in the stirrup. Then she twisted her body to face Darlene. “What kind of snake?”

Feeling hopeful, Darlene edged down another step. “A big, black one.”

Layla put her foot back down on the ground, then walked across the grass toward the porch. Darlene couldn’t believe how graceful the tall blonde was, how out of sync her beauty seemed to be with what she was wearing.

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