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When Tomorrow Comes
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WHEN TOMORROW COMES
Books by Janette Oke
Return to Harmony*
ACTS OF FAITH *
The Centurion’s Wife The Hidden Flame
CANADIAN WEST
When Calls the Heart When Breaks the Dawn
When Comes the Spring When Hope Springs New
Beyond the Gathering Storm
When Tomorrow Comes
LOVE COMES SOFTLY
Love Comes Softly Love’s Unending Legacy
Love’s Enduring Promise Love’s Unfolding Dream
Love’s Long Journey Love Takes Wing
Love’s Abiding Joy Love Finds a Home
A PRAIRIE LEGACY
The Tender Years A Quiet Strength
A Searching Heart Like Gold Refined
SEASONS OF THE HEART
Once Upon a Summer Winter Is Not Forever
The Winds of Autumn Spring’s Gentle Promise
SONG OF ACADIA *
The Meeting Place The Birthright
The Sacred Shore The Distant Beacon
The Beloved Land
WOMEN OF THE WEST
The Calling of Emily Evans A Bride for Donnigan
Julia’s Last Hope Heart of the Wilderness
Roses for Mama Too Long a Stranger
A Woman Named Damaris The Bluebird and the Sparrow
They Called Her Mrs. Doc A Gown of Spanish Lace
The Measure of a Heart Drums of Change
www.janetteoke.com
*with T. Davis Bunn
WHEN TOMORROW
COMES
JNETTE OKE
When Tomorrow Comes
Copyright © 2001
Janette Oke
Cover by Jennifer Parker
Cover city image: Photography Collection, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations
Cover artwork based upon photograph in the book Vintage Fashions for Women: 1920s–1930s by Kristina Harris
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations to printed reviews.
Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN 978-0-7642-0064-9
* * *
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Oke, Janette, 1935–
When tomorrow comes / by Janette Oke
p. cm. — (Canadian West ; bk. 6)
Summary: “Christine is recovering from a broken heart. Is she willing to give up her dreams of living in the North and let God help her choose a lifelong love?”— Provided by publisher.
ISBN 0-7642-0064-X (pbk.)
1. Canada—Fiction. I. Title. II. Series: Oke, Janette, 1935– . Canadian West ; bk. 6.
PR9199.3.O38W52 2005
813'.54—dc22
2005005858
* * *
With deep appreciation
to God
for His unfailing
help, guidance, and answers to prayer
in every area of my life.
He is great—
and He is good.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
JANETTE OKE was born in Champion, Alberta, to a Canadian prairie farmer and his wife, and she grew up in a large family full of laughter and love. She is a graduate of Mountain View Bible College in Alberta, where she met her husband, Edward, and they were married in May of 1957. After pastor-ing churches in Indiana and Canada, the Okes spent some years in Calgary, where Edward served in several positions on college faculties while Janette continued her writing. She has written over four dozen novels for adults and children, and her book sales total nearly thirty million copies.
The Okes have three sons and one daughter, all married, and are enjoying their dozen grandchildren. Edward and Janette are active in their local church and make their home near Didsbury, Alberta.
CHAPTER
One
The wind awakened Christine, slashing branches against the heavily iced window and flinging snow crystals with unbridled strength at the log sides of the small cabin. Down the mud-brick chimney it sounded a mournful tune, like some mythical being. Without opening her eyes, Christine knew the day would not be a pleasant one. But she smiled in strange contentment and snuggled deeper under the warm blankets of her bed.
The muffled cry of the northern wind took her back in years—more a sensation than an actual memory. It was not fear she had felt as a child as she’d listened to the howl of the wind on a winter’s morning. Nor frustration that she would now be snowbound. No, it was a sense of coziness. Of contentment. She had spread out her favorite picture books before the popping pinewood fire, her toes tickled by the soft fur of the bearskin rug on which she lay. She could almost smell those morning breakfasts of hot porridge and feel her tummy rumble.
Thinking back those many years, Christine felt almost like a child again. Safe and protected and warm and loved. It was a delicious feeling, to be wrapped tightly about one like her heavy woolen Hudson’s Bay blanket.
Putting aside her reverie, she stirred reluctantly. She couldn’t help wondering what would be more pleasant, pulling the covers up to her chin and listening to the relentless but futile cries of the furious intruder who seemed intent on inflict- ing its will on the occupants of the small home, or climbing from her bed to watch it spend its fury from the safety of her bedroom.
The raw power of the storm reminded Christine that her parents, longtime inhabitants of the North, had once again outsmarted nature’s worst. No matter how it struck and fought and fumed, they were warm and safe. The cabin walls that her father had constructed for his family were still stout and strong. The small lean-to on its east side was stacked high with pine and birch logs. The morning lamps were trimmed and flickering brightly. She knew the kitchen would already be warm and fragrant with the smell of brewing coffee and cinnamon toast.
At length Christine could not resist. She swung her legs over the edge of her bed, intending to ignore the chill of the room as she fumbled in the semidarkness for the robe she had flung over a nearby chair the night before.
Tying the robe around her as she left her room, she could see the light from the open fire in the main room and a sliver of pale yellow from the kitchen doorway. She headed directly there, knowing exactly what she’d find.
Her father would be seated at the table, a cup of steaming coffee already in his hand. Her mother would be at the big iron stove, stirring a pot of the inevitable hot porridge. A small stack of toast would be tucked in the warming oven while the porridge was being served. The dog, head on paws, would be stretched out on the rug by the door—just in case someone should decide i
t was safe to risk a venture outside.
Christine’s mother turned at the light footstep. “You’re up early,” Elizabeth noted with a smile. “Thought you might sleep in. This day’s going to be one for staying close to the fire.”
Christine nodded and crossed to the room’s lone window. With the tips of her fingers she scratched at the layer of frost. “I heard the wind. It was cozy under the covers, but I couldn’t resist getting a look at the storm.”
Wynn stirred. “You never could,” he commented with a small shake of his head. The words were spoken as a statement, but there also seemed to be the hint of a question lingering there. What was it about storms that seemed to draw Christine?
“We never had a real good one all the time I was in Edmonton,” Christine said. Her voice sounded almost wistful, even to her. “Oh, it snowed. Lots. And the wind blew. But it never was able to make much headway among all those tall buildings. I never did hear it howl and cry like it does here.” She couldn’t help but add a little chuckle at the irony of those words and the longing she still felt for that kind of storm.
Elizabeth half turned. “You like that sound?” She visibly shivered.
Christine peeked through the opening she had managed to scrape through the rime on the pane. “I guess I do.” She chuckled again.
“Well, at least I don’t have to be worried now about your father. I used to lay awake praying half the night, worried sick.”
Christine turned from the window and the swirling whiteness, the lashing tree limbs. Yes. She too remembered. She had worried many a night as well. As much as Elizabeth had tried to keep her fears to herself when Wynn was out in a storm, Henry and Christine had both known when their mother was uneasy and anxious. Christine recalled Henry’s valiant attempts to put Elizabeth’s mind at ease. “Dad’s used to storms. He knows what to do.” Their mother would smile and nod and suggest popping corn or playing tic-tac-toe, but the haunted look never really left her eyes.
Christine tied the belt of her robe more securely and crossed the room to the corner basin to wash for breakfast. She also was relieved, more than her mother knew, that her father was not out on the trail today with the temperature continually falling and the bitter wind frosting a thick white rim on the fur of his parka. Christine’s eyes sought Wynn’s.
“Do you have to go anyplace today?”
He nodded. “Yes, but not for another two hours.”
Again Christine’s eyes went to the window, which still showed little signs of morning light. “So . . . why didn’t you sleep in?” she asked, her voice teasing.
“Habit.”
“And you?” She turned to her mother.
“I have to get up to fix Habit his coffee,” Elizabeth jested in return.
Wynn chuckled. Christine knew that he made the morning coffee almost as often as her mother did, but she let it pass.
“You both waste good sleeping hours,” she scolded good-naturedly.
Wynn shook his head. “We don’t waste them. They’re perfect for quiet times. We read. We talk. We just . . . tune up for the day.”
Elizabeth was pulling another bowl from the cupboard. “Want to join us for some porridge?”
“What kind is it? I don’t like—”
“I know what you don’t like. It’s oatmeal. No rye.”
“I’ll have some.”
“Get yourself some cutlery and a cup.”
Christine moved toward the cupboard.
“And maybe you’d better make a couple more pieces of toast,” her mother instructed. “I wasn’t counting on your being up so early. The strawberry jam is in the pantry.”
A strengthened gust made the small house shudder. Even the dog lifted his head and whined.
“Oh boy—if I don’t have shingles to replace after this storm, it’ll be a wonder,” Wynn commented wryly. “It’d like to strip things down to bare boards. Haven’t heard such an angry wind since I don’t know when.”
Christine carried her cup and the coffeepot to the table. She refilled her father’s cup, poured for her mother and herself, and started back to the stove. It was true. It was an angry wind. But it felt so good to be safe and warm. In some strange way she felt favored. Special.
“My . . . I do hope they aren’t getting this storm down on the prairies. I’d hate to think that Henry—”
“Now, Mother. Henry’s quite able to look after himself. He’s well trained in survival and knows . . .”
Christine tuned her father out but could not hide a smile. The role had now been reversed. Her father was trying to assure her mother about their son, not the son maintaining that their father would be all right in the storm.
Wynn reached out a reassuring hand to grasp Elizabeth’s as she lowered herself to the chair beside him. She forced a smile and a nod, but Christine noticed that, once again, the worried look did not really leave her eyes. Her mother’s fingers curled around the hand that held her own as though clinging to the promise that had just been spoken.
“Has Henry called?” asked Christine, taking the chair on the opposite side of the small table.
“Not since last week.”
“I thought he said he’d let us know as soon as he and Amber decided on a wedding date.”
“He did. So I guess they haven’t decided yet.”
Another gust of wind rattled the windowpane.
“I hope they don’t expect us to travel in this.” Christine’s eyes went to the window.
“This will blow itself out in no time. Always does,” answered her father.
True, the storms did not last long. But when one held you in its icy grip, it seemed as though it never intended to let you go again.
“Is it actually snowing? Or just blowing around what fell last night?” Christine wondered.
Wynn chuckled. “It’s hard to tell. I took the dog out earlier, and you couldn’t see two feet in front of you. Part of it was the darkness—but even in the light from the windows, I still couldn’t see.”
“I guess I won’t be leaving today,” Christine mumbled under her breath.
Elizabeth looked up, her eyes wide. “You weren’t planning—?”
“No, not really,” Christine quickly reassured her mother.
“But I really do have to go look for a job. I can’t just sit here and—”
“I thought we’d agreed that you’d wait until after Henry’s wedding.”
Christine shrugged. “You did suggest that. But Henry doesn’t seem to be in too big a hurry to set his date. I can’t just sit here and sponge off you and Dad.”
“You aren’t sponging. We like to have you with us. Your company more than makes up for the little that you eat. It’s been wonderful to have you help take in the garden and clean out the root cellar and rake leaves and . . .”
Christine smiled as the list continued. It was nice to be wanted at home. But she was grown now. She had experienced what it meant to earn her own keep. She really needed to be out of this cozy, comfortable nest, out on her own.
In spite of the warmth of the kitchen, though, she felt a chill as she thought about heading back to the city. She really was not a city girl. She loved the openness, the freedom of the big sky. Nature—even in its fierceness—was one with her soul. The city seemed to drown her in its haste and closeness and rushing humanity.
“Will Mr. Kingsley give you a reference?”
This brought another chill to Christine’s soul. Was Mr. Kingsley, her former boss, still angry that she had refused to marry his son? If so, would he be fair? She had been a satisfactory employee. No—even more than satisfactory. He had preferred her work to the other secretaries in the office. Surely he would not jeopardize a future position merely out of spite.
But Christine was not sure. Perhaps she would be wiser not to risk asking the man for a reference.
“I don’t know,” she answered her mother, her voice sounding low and strained.
“Well, you got your first job without a reference. I’m sure
you can again.”
Her father seemed quite confident that she’d have no problem obtaining employment.
“I wish there was someplace here. . . .” Christine did not finish the thought. The wind seemed unable to disturb it, leaving it hanging there for each one around the table to mull over once again. They had discussed it before in the attempt to think of some means of employment for Christine in their little town so she would not need to leave the family once again. “Even if you moved into a place of your own nearby,” Elizabeth had said, “though you know you are welcome here for as long as you wish. . . .” But each time the exercise resulted in failure. There seemed to be nothing for Christine in the small town or surrounding area.
“Maybe you should accept Aunt Mary’s invitation to join them in Calgary,” Elizabeth said now, seemingly fully occupied with spreading marmalade on her toast.
“But it’s so far away from home.”
“At least you’d be with family. And the train—”
“The train is pokey. It stops in every little town along the way. I thought I’d never get to Calgary last time. Then I still have to—”
“I know.” Elizabeth sighed. “It’s hard. There are just too many miles to separate us.”
“I need my own car, that’s what. Then I could—”
“Mercy me.” Elizabeth flung up her hands. “Then I’d never get any sleep. With your own car—all on your own—driving all over the countryside. Why, I’d never have any peace of mind.”
“Oh, Mother.”
“It’s true,” Elizabeth defended herself. “It’s bad enough having Henry off in one of those—and him a man. But you.
What if a tire went flat or—?”
“I’d change it.”
“How could you. . . ?”
“With the jack. They all have jacks. You just—well, I watched a man change one once. It didn’t look so hard. Any woman could.”