Rocky Mountain Dreams & Family on the Range by Danica Favorite (list of ebook readers .txt) š
- Author: Danica Favorite
Book online Ā«Rocky Mountain Dreams & Family on the Range by Danica Favorite (list of ebook readers .txt) šĀ». Author Danica Favorite
The older woman, Gertie, stood. āI should go to her and apologize. Iām sure Annabelle could useāā
āNo.ā Joseph looked at Frank, hoping heād give some assistance. āAnnabelle is doing fine, and she...ā
Was extremely uncomfortable around Gertie and her family. A person would have to be a fool or blind not to see it. But perhaps it would be indelicate of him to expose her in front of her pa.
Frank nodded. āSheās still grieving, Gert.ā
āYou know?ā Joseph was grateful he hadnāt yet taken a bite of the mouthwatering food in front of him. Heād have choked otherwise.
āOf course I know. Iād be a bad preacher, and an even worse father, if I didnāt see how she tries to shut out everyone who loves her. I keep thinking that given enough time, and around the people she used to love, that sheād get over it, but...ā
Frank stared down at his feet, and for the first time, Joseph saw him, not as the faith-filled preacher, but as a man who was trying his best for a daughter he couldnāt reach.
āHow is it that I canāt reach my own daughter?ā
Annabelleās shameful secret was shared by her father. She feared him knowing, yet he knew. Worse, he blamed himself.
āYou canāt blame yourself, Frank.ā Gertie sat beside him and put her arm around him. āSheāll heal when the time is right. You just gotta keep praying.ā
Though Frank didnāt seem heartened by Gertieās words, Joseph realized that in all of this, he hadnāt kept his promise to pray for Annabelle. True, it had only been a few hours since heād decided that he needed to pray for healing in her relationship with God and her pa, but clearly, with Frankās pain so plainly displayed, he needed to be more diligent.
āSir? If I may...ā Joseph took a seat across from Frank. āPerhaps you should talk to her about this. When she held Nugget and let her cry, she said that sometimes a person needs to cry until itās all out. I couldnāt help but wonder if Annabelle has had that opportunity.ā
āAnnabelle never cries.ā Hard eyes stared back at him. Now he knew where Annabelle got it.
āHas anyone ever let her? Have you given her an opening to pour out her heart and share these things rather than let them fester?ā
In his own words, he finally saw the truth in Annabelleās actions and words. She was trying so hard to shove down the grief and pain that she couldnāt express that it was festering.
Joseph took a deep breath and met Frankās gaze. āMaybe if you talked to her as a father, instead of as a preacher, and just loved her for who she is, instead of her role in your ministry, maybe she could finally heal.ā
He expected an Annabelle-like outburst to tell him heād overstepped his bounds. Instead, those eyes softened as Frank said, āHer mother was always so good at that. Iām just as lost as Annabelle without her.ā
āThen tell her that. I think it would help you both.ā With that, Joseph turned his attention to his cooling breakfast, knowing that he was dangerously close to interfering more than he ought.
Because as much as he was working toward the reconciliation between Annabelle and her father, he had a feeling that his own homecoming wouldnāt be as smooth. Their paās death would be hard enough to take, but the transition to accepting Nugget as their sister was going to be hard on the rest of his family.
One more thing he needed to be diligent about praying for. As selfish as it sounded, finding his paās silver would make that acceptance a whole lot easier. But if they had to face poverty with another mouth to feed, he wasnāt sure Mary, or anyone else, would be that generous with accepting Nugget.
Chapter Eleven
Annabelle felt stronger as she returned to Gertieās cabin. It wasnāt so much that anything had changed, other than the fact that she knew if Nugget was going to be comfortable, she had to be brave. Which meant pretending that it didnāt hurt to see Gertie and her children running and laughing like the world was just fine when Annabelleās had ended.
āThere they are!ā Gertieās cheerful voice rang out, and Annabelle forced herself not to cringe.
āSorry it took so long.ā She avoided Josephās gaze. Joseph, who knew her too well for their short acquaintance, would see right through her.
āYou just sit right on down and eat.ā Gertie handed her a plate while Nugget clung to the back of Annabelleās skirts. But Gertie was wise to that trick. āAnd you, too, little one. Youāve got to come out soās I can give you a plate.ā
Annabelle relaxed slightly as Nugget peeked out. āYouāre not gonna say mean things to me?ā
āNo.ā To Gertieās credit, she squatted down to Nuggetās level. āAnd I shouldnāt have said those things about your parents, either. Iām sorry. You mustāve loved them very much, and Iām sure they mustāve loved you, too.ā
Her words brought Nugget out of hiding but didnāt remove the suspicious look from her face. āI am mighty hungry.ā
āThen I have a mighty big helping of breakfast for you.ā
As Gertie handed Nugget a plate and they all got settled, Annabelle couldnāt help but notice Gertieās kindness. Gertie had always been a kind woman. It truly wasnāt fair that Annabelle couldnāt bear to be around her motherās best friend. She didnāt know why it hurt so much, but it did.
Loath to spend any more time here than they had to, Annabelle gobbled up her food as quickly as was polite. At least the first few bites. But she could feel the weight of Josephās stare on her and she knew.
He knew exactly what she was doing and why. No matter that she hadnāt told him the full story. He knew.
Why couldnāt he be as oblivious as her father, who sat there, making a whistle out of a twig for the children? He
Comments (0)