Read Isle of Hope Online

Authors: Julie Lessman

Isle of Hope (18 page)

 

Chapter Eighteen

 

Lacey sniffed the air as she entered Mamaw’s kitchen, salivary glands going crazy. “Oh, wow, Nick, our favorite—peach crumble pie!” She made a mad dash across Mamaw’s kitchen to pick a sugar-dough crumb off one of five pies cooling on trivets at the end of the whitewashed kitchen table. She popped it in her mouth and moaned. “Oh, Mamaw, I love you!”

“Not after I slap your fingers with a wooden spoon, you won’t.” Her grandmother arched a silver brow, the stern purse of her lips betrayed by the twinkle in her blue eyes. She paused at her cutting board on the cream granite island, knife poised over a stalk of celery. “And
please
tell me those fingers are clean, young lady,” she said with a kink in her smile.

Nicki ducked around from behind to pinch some sugar crumbs of her own, her deep chuckle reverberating in Lacey’s ear. “Oh, yes, ma’am, clean as a whistle—I watched her lick ’em myself after the dip cones we ate.”

“You had dip cones?” Spence looked up from his Minecraft Lego village, which occupied the other half of the table. His long lashes blinked several times behind thick lenses.

“Uh-oh, now you’ve done it,” Lacey said with a nudge of her elbow into Nicki’s side. She scuttled over to where Spence knelt on the floral seat cushion and hugged him from behind, sidestepping Sherlock Holmes, who snored loudly beneath the rungs of Spence’s spindle-back chair. “Hey, buddy, I promise I’ll buy you ice cream the very next time we’re out, okay?”

“I guess …” His little voice was so draggy, Lacey could have sworn she saw a scowl on the Power Ranger’s face who stood guard over his village.


Which,
young lady,” Mamaw said while she scrubbed at the sink, her obsession with cleanliness second to none, “will be very shortly.” She glanced at the clock before she sent Lacey an impish smile, drying her hands with a perfectly bleached-white dishtowel. “I need you to deliver pies.”

Nicki froze, her finger stuck in the pie like Little Jack Horner. “Wait—you’re not giving them
all
away, are you?”

The alarm in Nicki’s tone echoed in Lacey’s mind as well. Panic ping-ponged in her chest as she gaped at her grandmother. “You
did
bake one for us, right?”

Mamaw’s chuckle sounded devious, an ideal match for the bit of dickens that usually gleamed in her eyes. Her face scrunched in thought as she counted on her fingers. “Now let’s see … five pies. Two for my card club luncheon, two for shut-ins, and one to give away …”

The girls’ groans rose in perfect sync, causing Mamaw to giggle all the more as she plopped a cooked chicken on her cutting board. “I suggest you girls start praying right now that Lulu got a babysitter for her hooligan grandsons or I’m thinking one pie for card club may not be enough ...”

“Mamaw, you are nothing but a scamp,” Lacey said with a pinch of her waist, stealing a piece of chopped chicken in the process. “
Now
I know where Nicki gets it.”

Nicki tossed a sugar crumb in the air and chomped it before following Lacey over to Mamaw’s cutting board for chicken larceny. “You betcha, and it happens to be one of my finest qualities, right, Mamaw?”

“Mmm …” Mamaw absently patted Nicki’s arm while her focus remained on Lacey, obviously more intent on issuing errands than tease. “If you say so, dear,” she said in her distracted grandmother tone, eyes on Lacey like a mother eagle scoping its prey. “I’ll need you to deliver a pie to Mrs. Hedgewood right away, Lacey, because her favorite soaps start soon, and she won’t answer the door or the phone once they do.”

Lacey froze, mid-chew. “No, Mamaw, please—not Mrs. Hedgehog! She chewed on me for over an hour the last time you sent me over there, dressing me down for leaving both you and Isle of Hope high and dry.” She cast a frantic look at Nicki. “Can’t Nick do it this time?”

“Ohhhhh, no you don’t,” Nicki said with a nervous glance at the gleaming white clock on the wall. “Matt and I have appointments across town with the tuxedo place and the florist, remember? And I’m already late.” Snatching a final piece of cooked chicken, she bussed both Mamaw’s and Lacey’s cheek before hefting a large, flat box with two of the pies. “I’ll be happy to carry these two pies out to your car though, Lace,” she said with a wink, tossing a smirk over her shoulder. “But let me know how Mrs. H’s surgery went, okay? Oh, and be sure to have her show you her scar.” Nicki scrunched her nose at the door. “It’s epic.”

A guttural groan grated from Lacey’s throat, her desire for tender pieces of chicken suddenly as flat as Mrs. Hedgehog’s incision. “You really know how to make somebody pay through the nose for peach pie, Mamaw, you know that?”

“Oh, you have no idea, sweet girl,” her grandmother said with a sympathetic pat of her cheek, before quickly returning to her chicken with a few more whacks. After the final chop, she tossed it into a huge bowl along with her chopped celery and onion, then bustled to the sink. She proceeded to wash and sanitize her hands with a gargantuan bottle of Purell, a close second in size to her ceramic iced tea dispenser.

Expelling a weary sigh, Lacey sagged onto the cream leather cushion of a white-limed wooden stool, elbow slanted to prop her chin in hand. “So who are the other pies for?” she said in a glum tone that failed miserably at a half-hearted attempt to be perky.

“Well, Davey invited Spence for dinner tonight, and when Tess heard I had a luncheon tomorrow, she offered to keep Spence overnight as well. So, naturally I have to send one with Spence too.”

Lacey sighed. “Naturally.”

“Is it time, Mamaw?” Spence glanced up, owl eyes blinking wide as Minecraft village pieces dropped from his fingers, plunking onto the table. Apparently his village now ranked as a garbage dump of plastic compared to Davey’s house.

Mamaw’s gaze darted to the clock. “Yes, dear, so go get—” Spence was halfway up the stairs before his grandmother could even finish her sentence. She chuckled and shook her head while brewing a K-cup. “The poor thing has hounded me no less than four times an hour since lunch about when he could leave,” she said, dousing the coffee with cream. She set it—in a to-go mug, no less—before Lacey with a smile. “This is the highlight of his week, you know—an overnight with Davey, complete with basketball and fishing with Jack and Matt.”

“Jack and Matt?” Lacey’s mouth crooked while the smell of macadamia nut taunted her senses. Breathing in an appreciative sniff, she took a slow sip, savoring the nutty flavor of her favorite coffee. “Sure one pie is enough?”

Chuckling, Mamaw joined her at the bar with her own cup, apparently settling in for a break. “No, but it’ll have to do because the last pie is for a lonely shut-in who lives on the way to Davey’s house, so it should be a slam dunk, as Spence likes to say.”

“Anybody I know?” Lacey asked. She took another drink.

“No, or not well, anyway.” Mamaw blew on her coffee, eyes somber despite the bare curve of a smile. “Just a widower who’s pretty much alone in the world.” She paused, eyes closed while translucent hands held the cup to her mouth. “The poor man is such a grouch, I understand the children in the neighborhood call him Dr. Doom, if you can imagine that.”

Hot coffee pooled in Lacey’s mouth. She gulped it down, eyes burning more than the liquid scalding her tongue.
Dr. Doom?
There was only one man who fit that description as far as Lacey knew. Her cup sank along with her jaw as she shook her head in slow motion. “Oh, no, Mamaw … you wouldn’t.”

“Wouldn’t what, dear?” Her grandmother asked with an innocent lift of brows, the tender look in her eyes confirmation that Mamaw would, indeed, do anything to nudge her grandchildren along the path she believed they should take.

Lacey pushed the to-go cup away, her tongue suddenly parched. “I have no problem dropping Spence off or even checking out Mrs. Hedgehog’s scar—”

“Hedgewood,” Mamaw corrected.

“Hedgewood, Hedgehog, whatever, but you cannot expect me to deliver anything to my father.” She hopped off the stool and went to the sink to pour a glass of water, gulping half of it before she clunked the glass down with attitude. She turned, butting against the sink with a tight fold of her arms. “Sorry, Mamaw, but I’m just not ready.”

Her grandmother tilted her head, gaze far more tender than the set of her jaw. “And when might that be, dear?” she said, the intensity in her eyes searing straight through to Lacey’s soul. “When your heart turns back to stone?”

“No, of course not.” Lacey upended the water, hands shaking when she set the empty glass back down. “I’ll do it, Mamaw, I promise, but at the right time.” Hands clenched on the counter in desperation, Lacey appealed to her grandmother in terms of faith. “Honestly, Mamaw, you better than anyone should understand the importance of God’s timing, the need to follow His leading instead of our own.”

Mamaw’s eyes softened. “Of course, darling girl,” she said quietly. Her tender smile was gilded with patience. “As long as it’s Him doing the leading … and not fear.”

“Laaaaacey … I’m readdddy ...” Spence ran into the kitchen, skidding to a stop with cheeks flush and eyes bright. He reminded Lacey of a pack mule with a stuffed gym bag in one hand and ball glove in the other while a Power Ranger backpack bulged on his back.

Mamaw held out her arm. “Spence sweetheart, why don’t you wait for Lacey on the front swing for just a few moments, but first come here and give Mamaw a smooch.”

Gym bag and glove clunking to the floor, Spence flew into Mamaw’s arms, eyes pinched closed as he squeezed with all his might. “I love you, Mamaw, thanks for letting me go.”

“You’re welcome, darling boy, but make sure you mind your manners,” she said with a tap of his nose, “and don’t stay up all night, you hear?”

“Yes, ma’am. See you outside, Lace.” And with that he streaked out of the kitchen and down the hall, the slam of the front door deafening against the silence of the kitchen.

Mamaw turned back to the sink to face Lacey, sympathy warming her eyes as she patted the stool beside her. “Come sit, Alycia Anne, just for a moment, sweetheart.”

Feeling way younger than her twenty-six years, Lacey huffed out a noisy sigh and plodded over to sit on the stool next to Mamaw, shoulders in a slump. “I need more time, Mamaw,” she whispered, “I just know it.”

Without a word, Mamaw slid the to-go cup toward her before skimming Lacey’s hair over her shoulder, gnarled fingers lingering to gently massage. “That may be, darling, but it’s been this old woman’s experience that when God changes our heart of stone to a heart of flesh, it’s a wee bit like laying a new foundation.” Issuing a delicate sigh, her grandmother shifted to face her on the stool. “Remember when your grandpa laid that foundation for my gardening shed at the side of the house? The one you and Nicki embedded your handprints in and hearts with the initials of the boys you liked? And on the entrance ramp, no less, for all the world to see?”

Lacey nodded, a sliver of a smile forming at the memory of the summer Nicki came to stay with Mamaw when they were thirteen. Lacey had been so starry-eyed over Jack even then, when she was nothing more than his little sisters’ best friend. “J.O. loves L.C. forever,” she’d written, and oh! How Grandpa had chewed them both out for ruining his perfect concrete.

Mamaw’s soft chuckle broke Lacey’s reverie. “I thought Grandpa was going to skin you two alive, he was so upset, bemoaning the fact that the concrete had set by the time he’d seen it.” She absently tipped her cup to her lips and for several moments, her gaze wandered faraway while melancholy stole over her features.

Sensing her grandmother’s malaise, Lacey gently massaged her arm. “He refused to give us jawbreakers the rest of the summer, as I recall, and I don’t think he ever did forgive us.”

“Oh, he forgave you all right,” she said quietly, the memory tugging a sad smile to her lips. “He told me later, when you girls weren’t around so much anymore, just how he cherished those finger scribblings—lasting reminders of two little girls we both loved so much.”

Expelling a gentle sigh, she placed her cup back on the table and angled to regard Lacey with the same doting look she’d reserved for every skinned knee and heartbreak in their past. Then as now, the love in her eyes was better than any balm she’d always applied. “You know, darling, in the beginning of our faith, our hearts are a wee bit like that fresh concrete that you and Nicki so enjoyed. A clean slate that’s soft and pliable, ready for God to impress His will and His ways. His Word speaks of a covenant He’s made with us—‘I will put my laws in their hearts and write them on their minds’ so that they may ‘walk in My statutes and observe My ordinances.’” A fragile sigh drifted from Mamaw’s lips as she absently caressed the hand Lacey had laid on her arm. “Unfortunately, the longer we wait to heed His call, darling, the more we run the risk of our new heart calcifying just like that concrete. Seasoned yes, but with our will instead of His.” With a final pat of Lacey’s arm, she returned to her coffee, palming the cup with both hands as she took a sip. “And you can’t risk that, Lacey, because if we want the blessings of God in our lives, we have to make sure we have a clean heart.”

Who may stand in His holy place? The one who has clean hands and a pure heart.

Lacey’s eyelids shuttered closed with a silent groan, Mamaw’s words piercing her with the painful truth. And if there was anybody who knew about clean, it was Mamaw. In fact, Lacey was pretty sure she was a distant relative of Mr. Clean, neatly pinpointing the growing grime in Lacey’s attitude.

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