Read Seasons Under Heaven Online
Authors: Beverly LaHaye,Terri Blackstock
Sylvia sat at the patio table covered with papers, and looked out at the empty corral. She had expected to be sad about the loss of the horses, as she had been after Sarah’s wedding, when the house had felt so empty. But she realized now that it was a blessing and not a curse.
Harry came out drinking a glass of iced tea and sat next to her. “So whatcha doing with all these papers?” he asked.
“Counting up all the money we’ve raised,” she said. “It looks like we’ve covered all of the bills they’ve received so far. Of course, most of the bills haven’t come in yet. But I still have some pledges coming in. You know, I think we might just cover it all, if we work really hard. I think God is helping us keep the Dodds on our street. Since the couple who wanted to buy their house didn’t qualify for the mortgage, we have a little more time. If we can raise enough money, I’m sure David will take the sign down.”
“So how much of these donations came from your visits to corporate America?” he asked.
She smiled. “About half.”
He leaned on the table. “Excuse me, but aren’t you the woman who had nothing left to contribute?”
She threw her head back and laughed. “Okay, so I may still have a little life left in me.”
He picked up the letter from the Nicaraguan couple who had asked for advice and help. “You know, I feel bad. All this time we’ve been so busy with Joseph, I haven’t had time to look into much of anything for Maria and Carlos.”
“It’s not too late,” she said. “Besides, I’ve done a little thinking.”
He set the letter down and looked up at her. “Yeah?”
“Yeah.” She fixed her eyes on him for a moment. “Harry, what would you think about our offering our house to Carlos and Maria while he’s in seminary? We could also pay his way, and line up a job for him and a school for their son while they’re here.”
He frowned. “You wouldn’t mind having them live with us?”
She held his gaze for a moment. “We’re not going to be here, Harry.”
He sat up straighter, and his eyes widened. “What do you mean?”
She reached out and clutched his hand. “We’re going to Nicaragua.”
His eyes misted over. He studied her face for a moment as if waiting for her to scream out, “Gotcha!” But she didn’t. “Are you sure?” Harry asked.
“I’ve been praying a lot about this,” she said, “asking God to change my heart. A few months ago, when all this came up, I didn’t think I had much to contribute. But now I can see that I do still have talents God can use. I
can
work with the children, and I can teach the mothers. I want to go. You have so much you can take to those people, and I think I have some things I can take, too. I may not be able to cure their diseases, but I can help to cure their hearts.”
“You’re absolutely sure?”
“Absolutely,” she said. “And if Carlos and Maria stay in our house, I’ll have the peace of knowing that we’ll have it to come back to. Or, after they finish seminary, we can sell it if we want.”
Harry leaned back hard in his chair and let out a laugh that seemed to shake the trees. “I can’t believe I’m hearing this!”
“Believe it,” she said. “I asked God to change my heart if He wanted us to do this. I didn’t
want
Him to, and I didn’t expect Him to. But He did. Now I’m getting excited.”
Harry got up and hugged his wife with all his might.
That night after supper, Tory, Sylvia, and Cathy went to the hospital to sit with Brenda and Joseph. He had been moved to his own room and was doing well, so while he slept, they went into the small waiting room across the hall and talked softly about the best moments of the last few months.
“When they told us they’d found a heart,” Brenda whispered. “That was a good one.”
“Me, too, when you called to tell me,” Tory agreed.
“When my kids wanted to help raise money,” Cathy said.
Sylvia began to laugh. “When Ed Majors gave me that first check.”
Brenda grinned. “Rolling my own yard with my kids for Joseph’s party.”
“The animal fair,” Tory added, “when Spencer finally got to ride Sylvia’s horse before she sold it.”
Brenda smiled. “When they prayed over Joseph at church.”
“When I met Steve Bennett,” Cathy added. They all looked at her and smiled knowingly.
“When we discovered Brenda’s church,” Tory whispered.
“When
I
discovered Sylvia’s church,” Cathy echoed.
“When Harry came in and told us the surgery was a success.”
“When your kids made all those videos,” Sylvia said.
“When Joseph opened his eyes after the surgery.”
“When you told me what you did about investing our children wisely.”
“When I told Harry I wanted to go to the mission field.”
They all got quiet for a long time, their thoughts centered on blessings instead of trials, on joys instead of heartaches. It was so much different than the night they’d gotten together months ago, after Joseph’s first collapse—when they’d thought they had so much to complain about.
“Some of the best moments,” Tory whispered finally, “have been sitting right here with you tonight, and knowing that we’re all different people than we were when we started out.”
“Yes,” Sylvia whispered. “These are definitely some of the best moments.”
Barry was asleep on the floor with the children—in front of the television—when Tory got home that night. She stood quietly over them, filled with an overwhelming love for her family. She knelt there beside them and wept for the blessing of them.
An idea came to her, and quietly she went into the laundry room, turned on her computer, and began to write her feelings down. She wrote about the little cul-de-sac of Cedar Circle, about the child who needed a heart, and how the neighbors had banded together to raise the money. She wrote about the things she’d learned about loving her own children, about the blessings she was too busy to see, about the joy she was too rushed to experience. She wrote about God changing her heart, and
Sylvia’s and Cathy’s, and she wrote about the courageous love of Brenda, who trusted God enough to open her hand for Him to take Joseph away from her. She talked about the lessons of investing her children wisely, and how God had taught her, through Brenda, that her children, not her writing, were her life’s greatest work.
When she finished, it was five A.M., and she realized that she’d written an entire article. She would send it to her favorite magazine and see if they wanted it. If they didn’t, that was okay too. After all, it wasn’t the words, but rather the meaning behind them, that was most important: the changes in her heart, and the changes that would occur in her family as a result.
Quietly, she slipped outside. The sky was just surrendering its darkness to the beginnings of day. She walked down the driveway to the mailbox, slipped the envelope in, and put the flag up. Then she turned and saw the sun’s rays just coming up over the mountains. She watched, breathlessly, as the sky grew brighter, brighter, until the sun burst like a fireball above the mountain peaks.
For a moment, she stood and took it all in, like an epiphany in her heart as this new morning in her life dawned. Joy and incredible gratitude washed over her like the sun’s light, and suddenly she couldn’t wait to see what the day would bring.
She could have stood like that for hours, just watching the miracle of God’s new day, but instead, she went back into the den, where her family still slept on the floor. Instead of waking them and taking them all to bed, she lay down with them, curled up between her two children, her hand on Barry’s arm. There was no place she needed to be, nothing calling her away. This was her work and her greatest joy.
This was where she belonged.
As
crises went, Tory Sullivan usually put nausea at the bottom of the scale. When it was her children who were sick, she dealt with it just fine. She washed their faces and rinsed out their mouths, and lay them down on the bed with towels in case another wave assaulted them. Then she would matter-of-factly clean up the mess while she thought about the lantana plants that needed watering, or how badly she needed to paint the living room.
But she didn’t handle it as well when she was the patient. Queasiness seemed like an insult to her, as if her body were taking away her control and running rampant like a rebellious child. She wouldn’t have it. If she stopped thinking about it, it would go away.
Tory stopped rocking and tried to concentrate on the leaves whispering in the breeze. Her friend Brenda Dodd kept moving in the matching chair on her porch, but the sound and motion made Tory close her eyes. She didn’t have time to be sick, she thought. She simply didn’t have room for it on her schedule.
The sound of Brenda’s voice, as sweet as it usually sounded, droned on as she read the words of the article that Tory had written. Tory would have thought it was the terror of having her words read aloud that had turned her stomach, but the truth was that she was exceptionally proud of them. She had deliberately brought the article here so that Cathy and Brenda could be amazed. Cathy Flaherty, in her light blue veterinarian’s lab coat, responded with dutiful admiration as she chomped on the Fritos she was having for lunch.
Tory wondered if the smell of Fritos made others want to gag.
“Cool, you got a zipper on your front!”
Tory looked down at her four-year-old son, Spencer, who sat with Joseph on the steps. Joseph, Brenda’s nine-year-old, had his shirt pulled up and was showing four-year-old Spencer the scars healing on his chest. The fact that he’d gotten a heart transplant just a few weeks ago fascinated Spencer.
“It’s not a zipper, Spence,” Joseph said. “It’s where the doctor cut—”
“No, Joseph!” Tory cut in. “Don’t…please don’t…” But she couldn’t get the words out. It took too much concentration not to let her body have its way.
Brenda shot Tory a puzzled look and leaned down to her startled son. “Your surgery may be a little too graphic for Spencer,” she explained softly.
“Just give him the broad picture,” Cathy suggested with a wink.
“No.” Tory didn’t want them to think she was angry at Joseph for going too far. Spencer had seen much worse on television. Just the other day, she had caught him watching a facelift on cable. “It’s me.” She touched her stomach and tried to turn back the wave of nausea.
Brenda and Cathy gaped at her as if waiting for the rest of a sentence. After a few seconds, Spencer lost interest in Joseph’s chest and began turning cartwheels in the grass. “Look, Mommy!”
Tory couldn’t look.
“Tory, are you okay?” Cathy asked. “You look as white as a couch potato.”
Brenda laughed. “A couch potato?”
“Well, yeah. They never get any sun. Tory?”
Tory couldn’t manage a smile. She opened her eyes and got slowly to her feet. “I don’t feel so good.”
Brenda looked up at her, alarmed. “Tory, you really don’t look good. What’s wrong?”
“Just a little…sick.” She stood there for a second, then bolted for Brenda’s front door. “Bathroom…”
Brenda launched out of her chair and threw open her front door, and Tory dashed into the house and made a beeline for the bathroom.
When she came out several minutes later, Cathy, Brenda, Joseph, and Spencer were all lined up in the hall, looking at her as if she’d just performed an amazing stunt.
“Tory, did you eat breakfast this morning?” Brenda asked her.
“Of course,” she said, still feeling wobbly. “Wheaties. Breakfast of Champions, huh, Spence?”
“Maybe the milk was bad,” Spencer suggested. “Bad milk makes me hurl.”
“The milk was not bad,” she said. “I’ve been feeling a little sick off and on for a while, but it hasn’t gotten me like that before. Maybe it’s a bug. Guess I’d better get out of here so Joseph doesn’t get it.” She realized how serious it could be for Joseph to contract a virus. Because of the high-dose steroids he was taking to keep from rejecting his heart, his immune system couldn’t protect him at all. “Oh, Brenda, I’m so sorry.”
“It’s fine,” Brenda said, though Tory knew she must be concerned. “Just passing you in the hall isn’t going to make him sick. The kids are bringing home backpacks full of germs every day.”
“Do you have any Lysol? I really should sanitize the toilet so Joseph won’t be hurt by the germs.”
“Don’t worry about it. I’ll do it. You go on home.”
“No, I think she should do it,” Cathy said with that amused look on her face. “Just pull that puppy up and go boil it for a couple of hours. David must have a vat you could use.”
Joseph looked horrified, and Spencer looked fascinated. “They boil toilets?” Joseph asked.
“No.” Brenda playfully shoved Cathy. “She’s kidding, guys. Tory, you don’t have to sanitize my toilet. Just go take care of yourself.”
Tory was too distracted to laugh. She knew that Brenda was too kind to tell her that the more time she spent here apologizing, the more germs she would spread. So she took Spencer’s hand and started out the door.
“Want me to walk with you?” Cathy asked, hurrying out beside her. Thankfully, she had gotten rid of the Fritos while Tory was in the bathroom.
“That’s okay. I’ll be fine. I have to go pick up Brittany.”
“I could do that for you before I go back to the clinic.”
Tory considered that, then decided that it wouldn’t be necessary. “No, I think I’m over it now. Really. Boy, I hate being sick.”
“Unlike the rest of us who enjoy it?” Cathy asked with a smirk. Her blonde ponytail bobbed as she walked along beside them. She wore a white T-shirt under her lab coat, jeans, and Nike tennis shoes. Tory envied Cathy for being so unself-conscious. “Spencer’s probably right,” Cathy said. “You probably ate something that made you sick. What’d you guys have for supper last night, Spencer?”
“Pork chops,” Spencer said with a sour look. “They tasted like Daddy’s shoes.”