Authors: Debbie Macomber
H
assie had been looking forward to this night. The Dawsons had moved to Buffalo Valley four years earlier; at that time the only church in town had been Catholic and was closed after Father McGrath's retirement. Then Reverend John Dawson and his wife had arrived.
What a blessing the couple had turned out to be! Joyce knew instinctively what to say to make people feel welcome. John's sermons were inspiring, and his advice was both sensitive and practical.
Her first Christmas in Buffalo Valley, Joyce had organized the Cookie Exchange, which had become a yearly event.
Hassie had baked oatmeal-cranberry cookies early
that morning and set out a plate for her visit with Barbara. Both had gotten so involved in their conversation that they hadn't tasted a single one. Hassie shook her head, smiling. It was as though all those years of not seeing each other had simply vanished after their initial awkwardness had passed. The visit had gone by far too quickly; Barbara had to leave long before Hassie was ready. What amazed Hassie was that she'd found herself saying things she hadn't even realized she felt.
Her daughter's decision to live in Hawaii was one example. She'd never understood what had prompted Valerie's choice. Yes, there'd been a job offer, but Valerie had
pursued
that job. The fact was, she'd wanted to get as far away from North Dakota as she possibly could. Hassie understood this for the very first time.
When Barbara had inquired about Valerie, Hassie explained that her daughter had chosen to remove herself from the pain of losing her only brother and then her father. Never before had Hassie consciously acknowledged that. Yet the moment she said the words, she knew they were true.
Later that evening when Hassie got to the church for the Cookie Exchange, the place was blazing with light.
Although she was twenty minutes early, the parking lot was already half-f. The first person she saw once she'd set her platter of cookies on the table was Calla Stern. Sarah's once-rebellious daughter had become a lovely young woman. She was in her junior year of college now, if Hassie recalled correctly, and there was talk of her applying for admission to law school. She attended the University of Chicago and shared an apartment nearby, but at heart Calla remained a small-town girl.
As soon as Calla saw Hassie, she broke off her conversation and hurried across the room, arms outstretched.
“When did you get home?” Hassie asked, hugging her close.
“This afternoon. Oh, Hassie, I just heard about Value-X. What are we going to do?”
“I don't know, Calla, and this might shock you all, but I've decided I'm too old to fight them.”
Calla frowned.
“That's what Leta told us.”
“We can't stand in the way of progress.”
If progress it is.
Change, anyway. Perhaps if Hassie repeated that often enough, she might come to accept it. This wasn't
what she wanted, but as she'd learned long ago, the world didn't revolve around what she assumed was best.
“Let's enjoy this evening,” Hassie urged, “and put these worries behind us until the new year.”
“I'll try,” the girl promised.
“Good.” Hassie slid her arm through Calla's. “Now tell me, are you still seeing Kevin?” Calla had been dating Leta's boy off and on since her last year of high school.
“Occasionally. He's so busy, and I'm in school most of the time. Anyway, with him in Paris for six months⦔
“Calla would make a wonderful daughter-in-law,” Leta said, joining them.
“Oh, you!” Calla hugged her tightly, laughing as Hassie seconded Leta's remark.
“Stop it, you two,” the girl chided. “I'm dating someone else at the moment and so is Kevin. We're good friends, but that's all. For now, anyway.”
“Damn,” Leta muttered.
“Give them time,” Hassie told her.
“Exactly,” Calla said with a soft smile, and after
kissing them both, added, “Now excuse me while I go mingle.”
Hassie watched her leave. She thought Calla and Kevin would eventually get married, but probably not for some years. Not until educations were completed and careers launched. Still, they understood each other and shared the experience of having grown up in Buffalo Valley.
No sooner had Calla wandered off than Maddy appeared with four-year-old Julianne. She was heavily pregnant with her third child, but she'd lost none of her composure or contentment.
“Maddy,” Hassie said, pleased to see her. “Here, let me help you with all that.” Maddy was juggling her coat and purse, plus a huge box of homemade cookies.
“Mommy, can I play with Joy?” Julianne asked, tugging at Maddy's sleeve.
“Yes, sweetheart, and tell Lindsay I'll be right there.”
“Where's little Caleb?” Hassie asked.
“With his daddy. After all, this is a
girls'
night out,” Maddy said. Hassie knew this third pregnancy was as unexpected as their first. With three babies in five
years, Jeb and Maddy were sure to have their hands full for quite a while.
Jeb's mother must be looking down from heaven, mighty pleased with her son, Hassie mused. Thanks to Maddy, he'd gone from curmudgeonly recluse to good husband and proud father.
Hassie and Leta busied themselves arranging platters of cookies on the long tables. Joyce made several trips to the business office to run recipes off on the copier so they'd be available for whoever wanted them.
Margaret Eilers and her daughter, Hailey, were among the last to arrive. Hailey, at three, bore a strong resemblance to her father and to her brother, David. Looking at Margaret and the child, no one would guess she wasn't the girl's birth mother. Hassie had nothing but praise for the way Matt and Margaret had worked out the awkward situation involving their children.
In the beginning Hassie hadn't been keen on Matt Eilers. No one in town held a high opinion of the rancher. But Margaret had fallen hard for Matt; she wanted to marry him and nothing would change her mind. After Bernard died and left her the ranch, Matt
started seeing more and more of her. A few months later, there was a wedding. Then, lo and behold, Margaret turned up pregnantâat the same time as that woman in Devils Lake.
The babies were born within a few weeks of each other, Hailey first and then little David. Hailey had been living with the couple for most of her three years. She was a darling little girl, which Hassie attributed primarily to the love and attention Margaret lavished on her.
The room rang with laughter and cheer, and Hassie basked in the sounds that ebbed and flowed around her. Her day had started early and been an emotional one. When she noticed chairs arranged along the wall, she slipped quietly off and sat down. A few minutes later Leta came to sit beside her.
“Just listen,” Hassie said, closing her eyes.
“What am I supposed to be listening to?” Leta asked.
“The joy,” Hassie told her. “The friendship. These women are the very breath of this community.” Hassie was grateful she'd lived long enough to witness the town's reversal of fortunes. It was because of women like Lindsay and Rachel and Maddy and Sarah and
Joanie Wyattâ¦. And maybe she herself had played a small part.
“What I can't get over is all the babies,” Leta said. “Future generations for Buffalo Valley.”
“Rachel Quantrill is pregnant again,” Hassie said, nodding at the young woman on the other side of the room talking with Sarah. Hassie was particularly fond of Rachel. She'd watched the young widow struggle to get by after the death of her first husband. She'd driven a school bus and worked as a part-time bookkeeper for Hassie. Later she'd opened the pizza-delivery service. That was how she'd met Heath. New to the banking business, Heath had rejected her loan application. His grandmother, who'd started the bank, had been furious with him, Hassie recalled. But things had a way of working out for the best. Lily Quantrill had lived to see her grandson and Rachel marry. Rachel had brought a son into the marriage, and later she and Heath had a daughter they'd named after Lily. A third child was expected in early summer.
“I'll have to remember that,” Hassie murmured absently.
Leta gave her a puzzled look. “What?”
Hassie wasn't aware she'd spoken aloud. “About
things working out for the best.” Despite her efforts, her thoughts had returned to Value-X and the potential for disaster. All her hopes for this town and the people she loved so dearly were at stake.
“You feeling all right?” Leta asked in a concerned tone.
“I'm fine,” Hassie assured her. “Just tired. It's been a busy day.”
Joyce Dawson sat down at the piano, and soon the room was filled with sweetly raised voices. The women and children gathered around, breaking naturally into two-part harmony. To Hassie it sounded as though the very angels from heaven were singing.
“Hassieâ” Carrie Hendrickson crouched by her chair “âare you ill?”
Leta answered for her. “She's just tired.”
“No wonder,” Carrie murmured. “She was up before dawn baking cookies and then there was the visit from Barbara Kyle, plus a big order came in for the pharmacy.”
Hassie grinned, amused that they spoke as if she wasn't even there.
“Let me walk you home,” Carrie suggested, taking her hand.
“Fiddlesticks. I'm perfectly capable of walking back on my own. No need for you to leave the party.”
“I insist,” Carrie said. “It'll only take a few minutes and no one will miss me.”
Hassie was weary, wearier than she cared to admit, so she agreed. Carrie retrieved their coats and led the way outside, sliding her arm through Hassie's to lend her support. They walked slowly, in companionable silence. The night sky was bright and clear, the stars scattered against it like diamonds. Most of the snow had been swept aside and the sidewalks salted.
As they crossed the street, a truck pulled up to the curb and rolled down the window. “You two need a ride?” Chuck Hendrickson asked.
“We're fine, thanks, anyway,” Carrie told her brother.
“Say, that fellow you had dinner with phoned a few minutes ago.”
“Must be Vaughn,” Hassie said. It did seem that Carrie and Vaughn were seeing a lot of each other, and that pleased her. From now on, Hassie resolved to look only at the positive side of things. She refused to let herself fret over situations she couldn't control.
“I'll call him back once I'm finished over at the church,” Carrie told her brother, who drove off.
“You could do worse, Carrie,” Hassie said. “He's a fine man.”
“I think so, too.”
“Not every man is another Alec.”
“I know,” she said.
Hassie patted Carrie's hand. She would go home and think good thoughts for the young woman and for Buffalo Valley. Happy, positive thoughts.
Â
“It's about time you called,” Natalie snapped. There'd been no word of greeting.
Vaughn sat on the bed in his parents' guest room and pressed his cell phone to his ear. He felt guilty about not returning Natalie's repeated calls. He'd delayed it, needing to put his thoughts in order first. He felt guilty about other things, too, but he didn't want to think about Carrie, not when he had to deal with Natalie.
No one in Buffalo Valley knew he'd taken a job with Value-X. Not his parents. Not Hassie. And certainly not Carrie. His visit to North Dakota at a time when the company was considering an outlet in this area had seemed a fortuitous coincidence. Now it felt like the very opposite. He'd agreed to check out the
town, but that had been a mistake he regretted heartily. And Natalie was hounding him for information.
“You're right, I should've phoned sooner,” he admitted.
“Yes, you should have.” Her voice softened. “I've missed hearing from you.”
He didn't have an excuse to offer her, and the truth wasâ¦well, difficult to explain. Not only did he have serious doubts about working for this company, he'd met Carrie, and the attraction between them was undeniable.
Just a few days ago his future had seemed assured, but now, after meeting Hassie and Carrie, his entire sense of what was right had been challenged. And his assumptions about love and marriage, about Natalieâthey'd changed, too.
Natalie's voice was hard when she spoke again. “I was beginning to wonder if I made a mistake recommending you for this position. I put my reputation on the line.”
“I assumed I'd been hired on my own merits.”
“You were but⦔ She sighed heavily. “Let's forget all that, shall we? I didn't know what to think when you didn't phone.” She gave a stilted laugh. “I realize
you're not officially on the payroll until January, but it's so advantageous for you to be near this little town.”
“The town has a name.”
“I know that,” she said, and some of the stiffness returned to her voice. “I'm sorry, Vaughn, but I've had a trying day. Apparently Buffalo Valley is mounting opposition against Value-X.”