Nell faced her sister as they stood on the front porch. “Ja, in a way I’ll be sad to see it end.”
“But ’tis for the better that it will.” Leah watched her carefully.
“Ja.” She leaned against the porch rail. “But until then, I’m learning so much. Things I’ll be able to use in helping our friends and neighbors. I know I can’t take the place of a veterinarian but I’ll be able to handle more than I could before.”
Leah regarded her silently. “What’s he like?”
“James?”
Her sister nodded. Her golden-blond hair, blue eyes and a warm smile made her the prettiest one of all of the sisters, at least in Nell’s eyes. Today, she wore a light blue dress which emphasized her eyes. On her head she wore a matching blue kerchief and she was barefoot. She had come from working in their vegetable garden.
“You saw him at the Masts’,” Nell reminded her.
“But seeing him isn’t working with him.”
For a moment, Nell got lost in her thoughts. “He’s a caring man who’s compassionate with animals. He’s a gut vet. You should have seen him with Buddy. He—” She bit her lip.
“He was injured today,” Leah said. “Nate stopped while you were gone. He said Buddy kicked him while he was trying to sedate her.”
“Ja, but you wouldn’t have known it by looking at him afterward. He worked as if nothing was bothering him when his leg must have hurt terribly.” Nell had been amazed—not only by his skill but by his attention to Abram’s mare.
“You like him.”
“I wouldn’t work for him if I didn’t like and respect him.”
“I know that, but I think you feel more for him.”
“Nay,” she denied quickly. “He’s gut at what he does, and I respect that.”
Leah nodded. As they entered the house, Nell wondered if her sister believed her.
She’d felt awful when she saw the extent of James’s injury. She’d been startlingly aware of him as she’d pressed the ice pack against his shin. The sudden rush of feeling as she’d held the pack against his masculine leg for those brief moments had frightened her. Caring for him in that way had felt too intimate. She’d risen quickly and searched for a chair or stool to prop up his leg. When James had declared that it was time to go home, she’d been relieved.
“Nell,” her mother greeted as she and Leah entered the kitchen. “I heard you had an eventful day.”
Nell nodded. “It was more eventful for Abram’s mare.”
“She’s all right?”
“Buddy’s fine. James stitched her up as gut as new. She’ll be in pain for a while, but he left Abram medication for her.”
“Gut. Gut,” Mam said. “Ellie, would you get the potato salad out of the refrigerator? Meg, you carry in the sweet and sour beans. Leah, would you mind getting your father? Supper is almost ready.”
“What about me?” Charlie said.
Her mother smiled. “You can set the table with Nell.”
Nell went to help her sister. She was home and felt less conflicted in this world she knew so well.
She might have imagined the strange tension between her and James. Tomorrow she’d put things in perspective and realize that the tenseness between them was just a figment of her imagination.
Wednesday morning, Nell got up extra early to make her favorite contribution of potato salad for Aunt Katie’s quilting bee. By the time her mother and siblings had entered the kitchen, she had finished cleaning the dishes she’d used. She automatically started to pull out the ingredients for the cake and pie that she knew that her mother wanted to bring.
“You’re up early,” Leah said.
“Ja, I thought I’d take a look at Buddy this morning before I head to the clinic.”
“That’s a fine idea,” Mam said as she came into the room. “I’m sure Abram will appreciate it.”
Nell ate breakfast with her family, then stayed long enough to clean up before she got ready to leave. She ran upstairs to get her black shoes. When she was done, she hurried downstairs to the barnyard. She chose to take the family pony cart and hitched up Daisy before she headed toward Abram Peachy’s place.
She wondered what time James would arrive at the office this morning. Would she be able to reach him if Buddy suddenly needed additional medical care?
It was six thirty. She knew that Abram and his family most likely would be up and doing morning chores. No doubt Charlotte was already in the kitchen preparing food for this afternoon’s quilting gathering.
The weather was lovely. Nell appreciated the colors and scents of summer. A bird chirped as it flew across the road and landed in a tree. The trees and lawns were a lush verdant green, moist with the morning’s dew. There was no traffic on the roadway.
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