Janette Oke - Loves Enduring Promise
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- Year:2003
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Love's Enduring Promise (Love Comes Softly #2)
Janette Oke
Dedicated with love to
Edward Terry, Lavon, Lorne and Laurel --my wonderful family
JANETTE OKE was born in Champion, Alberta, during the depression years, to a Canadian prairie farmer and his wife. She is a graduate of Mountain View Bible College in Didsbury, Alberta, where she met her husband, Edward. They were married in May of 1957, and went on to pastor churches in Indiana as well as Calgary and Edmonton, Canada.
The Okes have three sons and one daughter and are enjoying the addition to the family of grandchildren. Edward and Janette have both been active in their local church, serving in various capacities as Sunday-school teachers and board members. They make their home in Didsbury, Alberta.
Table of Contents
1. New Beginnings 9
2. Ponderin' 16
3. The New School 19
4. Little Arnie 21
5. A Visit from Wanda 26
6. Marty Calls on Mrs. Larson 30
7. Exciting News 35
8. Wanda's New Baby 39
9. Mrs. Larson 45
10. Plottin' and Plannin' 47
11. A Strange Answer 53
12. Nandry an' Clae 60
13. The Trip to Town 65
14. The Family 73
15. The New Teacher 76
16. School Begins 81
17. School Days 86
18. Somethin' New 88
19. Tommie's Friend 94
20. Search for a Preacher 100
21. Marty Talks to Ma 104
22. A Call on Wanda 108
23. The New Preacher 112
24. Tommie 115
25. School News 118
26. Owahteeka 121
27. Bits 'n Pieces 124
28. Owahteeka and Ma 126
29. The New Preacher Arrives 129
30. Leavin' 132
31. Time Moves On 134
32. Rett 136
33. Plans for a Church 139
34. Family 144
35. Nandry 148
36. The Excitement of Christmas 151
37. Christmas Dinner 155
38. Tryin' Agin 159
39. Josh and Nandry 163
40. Parson Joe 170
41. The New House 172
42. Life Moves On 174
43. Learnin' the Cost 177
44. Thet Willie 180
45. Missie's Callers 184
46. Disturbin' Thoughts 188
47. Another Christmas 192
48. Promises of Spring 195
49. Willie's Return 198
50. Ellen's Machine 201
51. Thet Special Day 204
Chapter 1
New Beginnings
Marty stirred restlessly in an effort to shake off sleep. The dream possessed her, causing an uncontrollable shiver to run through her body.
Gradually wakefulness came and with it an intense relief. She was here, safe and belonging, in her own bed.
Still, an uneasiness clung to her. It had been a horrid dream, so real and frightening; and why, she asked herself, did she even have the dream after all of these months--and so real--so very real.
She could feel it close in about her even as she thought about it. The broken wagon--the howling blizzard pulling and tearing at the flapping canvas, and she, Marty, huddled alone in a corner, vainly clasping a thin, torn blanket about her shivering body in an effort to keep warm. Her despair at being alone was more painful than the cold that sought to claim her.
"I'm gonna die," she thought, "all alone. I'm gonna die"--and then thankfully, she had awakened and had felt the warmth of her own four-poster and looked through the cabin window at a sky blessed with neon stars.
Still, she could not suppress another shiver, and as it passed through her body, a strong arm went about her, drawing her close.
She hadn't meant to waken Clark. His days had been such
busy ones, and she knew that he needed his sleep. As she studied his face in the pale light from the window, she realized that he really wasn't awake--not yet.
A flood of love washed over her. Whenever she needed assurance of his love, it was given her, even from the world of sleep; for this was not the first time that, even before he awakened, he had sensed her need and drawn her close.
Wakefulness was coming to him now. He brushed a kiss against her loose hair and whispered, "Somethin' wrong?"
"No, I'm fine," she answered. "I jest had me a frightenin' dream, thet's all. I was all alone an'--"
His arm tightened. "But yer not alone."
"No, an' Clark, I'm so glad--so glad."
As he held her close, her shivering ceased and the reality of the dream began to recede.
She reached a hand to his cheek.
"I'm fine now--really. Go back to sleep."
His fingers smoothed her hair, then gently rested on her shoulder. Marty lay quietly and in a few moments Clark's breathing assured her that he was asleep again.
Marty had control of her thoughts now. The terror of the dream had been pushed aside, so now she used the quiet moments to think through and plan for the duties of the day.
Over the winter months the community menfolk had been busy felling and skidding logs every moment they had been spared from their own work. They and their wives felt strongly the need for an area school. They knew that the only way a school would be provided for the educating of their children was to build it themselves.
It would be a simple, one-room structure, built by the creek on a piece of property donated by the Davises.
Gradually the piles of logs had grown. The men had been anxious to log-in the required number before the spring thaw, and then before the land would be beckoning to the plow, there would be time for a work bee or two.
The count had been taken--the requirement filled. Tomorrow was the day set aside for the "school raisin'." The men hoped to complete the walls and perhaps even add the rafters.
The building would then be finished through the summer as time allowed. By fall the children would have a school of their own.
Marty's thinking jumped ahead--the teacher. They still needed to find a teacher, and teachers were so difficult to find. Would they build their school only to discover that they were unable to obtain a qualified teacher? No, they must all pray--pray that the committee would be fruitful in their search; that their efforts of building would not be in vain; that a suitable teacher would be found.
Missie would not attend the school for its first term. She would be five come November and too young to join the others starting in the new school. Marty felt torn--she wanted Missie at home for another year. Still, in all the excitement over the new school, it was hard to refrain from getting involved by having a child attend. She reminded herself again that Clark and she had decided that Missie should wait--a hard decision, for Missie talked about the new school continually.
At first it had seemed so far into the future, but now here they were on the threshold of its "birthin'." The thought of it stirred Marty, and she knew that she would be unable to go back to sleep even though she should. It was too early to begin her day's work. Her moving about might waken the other members of the family.
She lay quietly sorting out in her mind what she would prepare to take for the meals on the morrow, and what would need to be done in preparation today. She mentally dressed each one of her children, and even checked off which of the neighbor women she wished to have a chat with when the work of the day would allow it.
The minutes ticked by slowly and finally her restlessness drove her quietly from her bed. She lifted herself carefully and slowly, for the child she carried made movement cumbersome.
"Jest another month," she reminded herself, "an' we will see who this be."
Missie was hoping for a baby sister but Clare didn't care. A baby was a baby to his little-boy mind; besides, a baby stayed in the house, and he, at every opportunity, went with his pa.
So Clare couldn't see a baby adding much to his world.
Marty slipped into her house-socks and wrapped a warm robe about her. The house was cold in the morning.
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