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Excerpt
of A Treasure of the Heart
"If it is possible, as much as it depends on you,
live peaceably with all men."
Romans 12:18
ONE
There were times when days, even weeks, passed without a
thought of her past. Then, some little thing would jog
Lillie Delaney’s memory and her mind would flit back to
Gumption, Arkansas, and the idyllic life she’d once led as a
child growing up in the foothills of the Ozark Mountains.
Today, the trigger was a scrap of paper resembling a dry
leaf being carried along by the rainwater in a curbside
gutter. As Lillie watched, her make-believe leaf became a
homemade boat, the gutter a meandering creek, and Lillie a
seven-year-old seeing her tiny craft sail out of reach.
"Catch it!"
"You catch it. It’s your boat."
Squealing, Lillie had jumped feet-first into the stream,
slipped on a mossy rock and landed on her back pockets in
the icy water while a neighbor boy and his sister had
giggled over her plight. She’d been sure she’d be scolded
for coming home all wet that day. Instead, Gram had found
the incident so funny she’d hugged little Lillie and they’d
laughed together until tears had run down their cheeks.
Lillie sighed. Breathed deeply. Brought herself back to the
present and hurried across the busy city street as the
traffic light changed in her favor. There was something
refreshing about the air after a storm, even though the wind
off Lake Michigan was cutting through her heavy coat and
chilling her to the bone. Here in Chicago she welcomed
showers because they cleansed the atmosphere and left behind
a temporary respite from the pollution of the bustling city.
Back home in Gumption, the rain always gave the air a heavy
sweetness as it nourished the forested hills. This time of
year, redbud trees would be finishing their display and
dogwoods would be spreading creamy white, four-petal flowers
in the dappled shade of the soon-to-leaf-out oaks.
Yellowish-green buds would make the forest shimmer in the
rain’s aftermath, glistening with the promise of the coming
canopy; a roof of coolness beneath the arching azure of a
cloudless, Southern, summer sky.
Shivering, Lillie pushed her way through the revolving door
into the imposing stone office building where she’d worked
for years. Her heels clacked against the polished marble
floor of the crowded lobby. Concerned about the time, she
hurried to the elevator and pushed the up button again, even
though it was already lit. Slick streets had made her late,
not that anyone upstairs would believe that excuse. No one
employed there had a passion for his or her job. They simply
reported in the morning, put in their required hours behind
a desk and went home as soon as possible. That blasé
attitude had been hard for Lillie to understand until she’d
spent a few months walking in their shoes - or rather,
sitting in their desk chairs.
She huffed as she stepped onto the elevator. Months,
nothing. She’d been stuck in basically the same job for much
longer than that and she was now at the top step in her
department. Granted, somebody had to manage the clerks who
processed medical insurance records and ordered the
authorized payments but if there was a more boring job in
the world she couldn’t imagine what it could be.
Three men wearing raincoats and a middle-aged woman carrying
a folded, dripping umbrella followed her onto the already
crowded elevator. Pressed into a rear corner, Lillie felt
nearly as uncomfortable as she had the time she and her
girlfriends had crammed together into the janitor’s closet
at school, meaning to scare him, and had panicked and nearly
suffocated when they’d accidentally locked themselves in. To
this day, being in total darkness gave her the willies.
There was no accident involved with her present position,
however. She’d come to the city to seek excitement and
glamour and had found, instead, boredom and dingy sameness
masquerading as job security.
Part of her loneliness was admittedly her own fault. Though
she did attend church occasionally she had never become
fully involved in the kind of social life that would bring
her into contact with many like-minded people. A few friends
from work had invited her to go clubbing with them, years
ago, and she had given it a try. In retrospect, she realized
they’d meant well but she’d felt about as comfortable in
that situation as a newly-landed catfish flopping around in
the bottom of a fishing boat. Both were clearly out of their
element.
The mental picture made her smile. As she removed her scarf
and fluffed her shoulder-length, light-brown hair she
glanced at the woman with the umbrella, wishing she could
share her good humor with someone. She was rewarded with a
scowl.
"If I wanted to live in a city I should have gone farther
South instead of coming this direction," Lillie mumbled.
"Beg your pardon?"
Lillie’s smile waned, her blue eyes misty. "Never mind. I
was just talking to myself." The elevator stopped at
Lillie’s floor. "Excuse me, please." She edged toward the
open door, bumping shoulders with others in spite of efforts
to take care. "Excuse me? I have to get off."
Someone held the doors long enough for her to exit. They
slid closed behind her with a hiss while her last words
echoed repeatedly in her mind. I have to get off. I have to
get off.
Instead of rushing to her office, she stood in the cavernous
hallway, blinking as reality seeped in. Her heart was the
only part of her that was still racing and it was galloping
laps around her muddled brain. What was she doing here? Why
hadn’t she admitted her mistakes long ago, gotten off this
figurative treadmill and headed home where she belonged?
The answer was pride. Except for the occasional visit when
she had lauded city life as if all her dreams had come true,
pride had kept her from going back to Gumption. And pride
could keep her locked in the same dead-end job for literally
a lifetime if she let it.
She didn’t want to run home to Grandma Darla Sue and admit
defeat but she didn’t want to waste what remained of her
life, either. There had to be more to a worthwhile existence
than she’d found so far. Maybe she was expecting too much.
Then again, maybe she’d once lived in the perfect place and
had been too dense or stubborn to recognize it.
Lillie squared her shoulders and strode toward her office.
There was only one way to find out. She was going to muster
her courage, give the proper two-week’s notice and head for
the only place that had ever felt truly like home.
*****
To Lillie’s surprise her superiors had decided that two
weeks’ notice was unnecessary, had accepted her resignation
and had told her she was free to leave immediately. So much
for being indispensable!
She’d said a somber if relieved goodbye to coworkers in
nearby cubicles and had been on her way home to start
packing within the hour.
Some of her friends had wanted to throw a going-away party
but Lillie had talked them out of it by promising to return
for her stored furniture and let them have a get-together
then if they still wanted to.
Two days later she was on the road, driving south in a
mental haze and wondering what had come over her. There she
was, too close to thirty-five for comfort, unemployed, and
heading for the only place that had ever felt like a real
home. The notion of plunking herself back into Grandma Darla
Sue’s and Grandpa Max’s lives and making their house her
home again, the way she had been forced to as a lonely
child, gave her colder chills than the gales off Lake
Michigan.
If she used up her savings before she found another job,
there was always the value of her furniture to fall back on,
she reasoned. She knew her friends would sell it for her and
send her the money if she asked them to. At least she knew
they would if they still loved there. If there was one thing
Lillie had learned about life in the big city it was how
fast everything could change.
All she really wanted was to reclaim the peace she’d so
foolishly left behind when she’d moved North. If that meant
she had to bite the bullet and spend a few weeks staying
with her grandparents till she got back on her feet, then
she would. She figured, as long as she explained to
stubborn, reclusive, Grandpa Max that she didn’t intend to
stay for more than a few weeks he wouldn’t pitch too big a
fit about sharing his peace and quiet with her again. Now
that she was older and hopefully wiser, she could see that
one of the reasons she and Max had butted heads was because
they were so much alike under the surface.
Passing through Serenity and entering Gumption on Highway
62, Lillie noticed little difference since her last brief
visit, at least not on the surface. The courthouse in the
town square and its bordering stores were still the center
of activity. Tall, silvery-leafed poplars had replaced some
of the old maples on the courthouse lawn and the streets
looked narrower than they had when she was a child, but
other than that the place seemed pretty much the same. The
entire area was sort of stuck in a time-warp, which in her
case was exactly what she craved.
She sighed. It was truly good to be home. She just hoped her
favorite resident wasn’t going to be too disappointed in her
for quitting a steady job. The work ethic was strong in
Darla Sue Howell. She’d kept her little café going in spite
of Max’s lack of encouragement and had made room for Lillie
when her parents’ marriage had self-destructed and the
ensuing divorce had sent her mother into a bottomless pit of
self-pity. Lillie loved Darla Sue more than anything in the
world and there wasn’t anyone she wanted more to please.
Eager to surprise her grandmother at work, she parked her
sedate blue sedan in one of the spaces surrounding the
courthouse, grabbed her purse and a sweater and slid out,
resisting the urge to lock the car door. Folks in Gumption
trusted their neighbors. If she were to lock the door she’d
immediately demonstrate that she no longer fit into this
lifestyle. Better to chance losing whatever inconsequential
items she’d left piled on the car seats than to be
immediately ostracized as an outsider.
Smiling and feeling amazingly free she slipped the sweater
on and crossed the street to the café. The sign over the
door had once read, Darla’s Deli, but the red paint on the
smaller letters had faded until all that remained were the
two capital "D"s. For as long as Lillie could recall, the
place had simply been "DD’s" and so it still was.
During her Christmas visit she’d offered to climb up and
repaint the sign in spite of the freezing temperature but
her grandmother wouldn’t hear of it. Darla Sue had said, if
folks didn’t know who she was or what she served in the
café, they didn’t need to be coming in anyway. Since
business had always been good enough to keep her busy and
employ a small staff, Lillie had had to agree.
The aroma of fresh-brewed coffee and homemade biscuits
filled Lillie’s senses as she pushed open the restaurant
door. Original décor that had remained unchanged for so long
that it was now referred to as retro, prompted a rush of
nostalgia. Framed pictures of old film stars and even older
cars lined the walls. Paper placemats and packets of
silverware rolled inside white napkins graced the tables and
a vase with a single silk flower was carefully centered
behind each set of salt and pepper shakers. Come summer,
when Darla Sue’s garden was in full bloom, the flowers in
those milk-glass vases would be real.
Lillie sighed. Coming here was so much like stepping back
into childhood she immediately craved a warm, oatmeal-raisin
cookie and an equally warm hug from her darling grandmother.
Pausing at the entrance to scan the sparse crowd she
garnered a few amiable nods but saw no one she recognized
outright. That was the way it had been the last few times
she’d visited. Many of the old-timers who’d known her as a
child had either passed away or moved to condos in Florida,
bless their hearts. Every trip home had made her feel less
and less a part of life in Gumption. Perhaps that was one of
the reasons she’d felt such a strong pull to return for
good.
She crossed the room, heels clicking on the black-and-white,
checkerboard-tiled floor, and peeked in the kitchen door,
fully expecting to find her grandmother standing at the
grill, wearing a chef’s apron and wielding a spatula.
Instead, she saw a stranger. The middle-aged woman’s
washed-out blond hair was pulled back by a rolled blue
bandana and escaped curls were plastered to her forehead and
neck by perspiration.
The woman glowered. "What’s the matter? Didn’t like your
eggs?"
"No. I haven’t even eaten." Lillie recovered from her
astonishment and extended her hand. "I’m Lillie Delaney,
Darla Sue’s granddaughter. I’m afraid we haven’t met."
"I’m Rosie," the woman said without shaking her hand. "Do
you cook?"
"A little. Why?"
Rosie whipped off the scarf and threw it aside, then untied
her apron strings. "Because you can have this job. I quit."
Lillie instinctively backed up. When she’d wished for
gainful employment she hadn’t meant anything like this.
Cooking had never been her forte. Eating, maybe. Preparing a
meal with more than three ingredients, no way.
"Hold it," she said, trying to sound amiable in the face of
the woman’s obvious distress. "I know exactly how you feel
but I didn’t come here to take your job, Rosie. I’m just
looking for my grandmother. Please stay."
She sighed. "Okay. But I warn you, one more complaint from
some good ole boy who just assumes I’ll know how he wants
his stupid food cooked, or what he hates, and I’m out of
here."
"Gram is pretty good at remembering that kind of detail,"
Lillie said. "Is she taking the day off?"
"More like the month," the harried cook answered. "I was
supposed to be her assistant. She said she was going to
teach me the ropes. We got started fine the first day. Then
she stepped out to get a few things at the market and never
came back to work."
"She isn’t missing, is she?!"
"No, no. According to old Rayford Evans she just wandered on
home. He was havin’ coffee in here with the other retired
farmers, just like he always does, and that waitress, Helen,
sent him over to her house to check. He said Darla Sue was
bakin’ cookies when he got there and actin’ as if everything
was hunky-dory."
"How long ago was that?"
"Only about two weeks, I guess. Seems like years."
"I’m so sorry," Lillie said. "We’ll make arrangements to get
you some help, I promise." She glanced over her shoulder as
the back door slammed. "Helen! Thank goodness. I was afraid
poor Rosie was stuck here all by herself."
Helen engulfed Lillie in a smothering, motherly embrace.
Lillie couldn’t help noticing that the portly woman’s
clothing and hair smelled of vanilla, bacon and cigarettes.
Gram used to smell like that too, except without the
nicotine. The familiar aromas tugged at Lillie’s heart.
"I just went to dump the trash and grab a quick smoke,"
Helen said. "It’s been crazy here lately. Miss Darla’s gone
off the deep end, business is terrible and somebody’s been
tryin’ to run off the new preacher at the Front Porch
Christian Church. I was just talkin’ to Rayford and a few of
the other regular customers about it."
Lillie blinked, disbelieving. Storytelling had long ago
risen to the status of a fine art in Gumption and she didn’t
presume for a second that the rumors were true. Still, if
Darla Sue was having problems, as Rosie had intimated, maybe
there was a grain of truth to Helen’s statement.
"What’s wrong with Gram?" Lillie asked.
"It’s along story. You plannin’ on stayin’ a spell? Miss
Darla can use a shoulder to cry on right about now."
"Business is really bad?"
"The pits." Helen glanced at the morose cook. "It’s not
Rosie’s fault. She’s doin’ her best. So am I. It’s just that
Miss Darla did all the ordering and we’re not keeping up
very well without her."
"Why hasn’t she been coming in?"
The waitress tsk-tsked and shook her head. "That’s for her
to say. Personally, I think she had a nervous breakdown or
some such thing."
"Oh, dear." The last part of Helen’s earlier revelation was
echoing in the back of Lillie’s mind. "What does that have
to do with a new preacher at Gram’s church?"
"Nothin’. That’s a whole other story," the waitress said.
"Tell you what. Why don’t you go see about Darla Sue first.
The gossip about the preacher’ll wait."
"Are you positive there were attempts to get rid of the man?
I mean, things like that just don’t happen around here."
"Looks like they do now. The minute Brother James started
talkin’ about buildin’ a new church, strange things started
happening."
Lillie knew how the locals hated change but she couldn’t
picture them resorting to violence to stop it. "Maybe the
guy is just accident-prone."
Helen snorted. "If he is, it’s rubbed off on the church,
too."
Although Lillie was intrigued, she knew her primary duty was
to Darla Sue. "Okay. Tell you what. I’ll go say hello to
Gram like you suggested and look over the situation at home.
When I get back, I want to hear the rest of your story about
the new preacher."
"Take your time," Rosie said with a stifled yawn. "This is
Friday so we’re open for supper, too. We’ll be stuck here
till after nine, like it or not."
Lillie was almost to the door when she heard Rosie add, "And
I don’t like it. Man, I hate this job."
The echo of her own career woes gave Lillie the shivers.
Even Paradise had its share of problems, didn’t it?
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