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Sarah's Garden (A Patch of Heaven Novel)
by Kelly Long
Paperback : 320 pages
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Quite by accident, Sarah King has fallen in love. But this love is forbidden, and could cost her everything she holds dear.
Tucked into the majesty of Pennsylvania's Allegheny Mountains is a garden Sarah King has been nurturing for years. She never feels more alive than when she is alone ...
Introduction
Quite by accident, Sarah King has fallen in love. But this love is forbidden, and could cost her everything she holds dear.
Tucked into the majesty of Pennsylvania's Allegheny Mountains is a garden Sarah King has been nurturing for years. She never feels more alive than when she is alone with her thoughts and her Creator among the delicate rows of plants. But then duty calls her away from her beloved garden and into a world she knows little about.
Grant Williams, a handsome young veterinarian, has left the city to open a rural practice among the Amish. Within minutes of meeting shy but feisty Sarah King, he is captivated by her.
As their feelings grow for one another, Sarah insists they can never be together. Marrying Grant would mean being uprooted from her home, her family, and her community. Throughout the cold Pennsylvania winter, with her garden tucked away until spring, Sarah begins crafting a quilt that illustrates her pain. Can anything lasting blossom from a love that's forbidden?
Excerpt
Chapter 1 The King Farm Pine Creek, Pennsylvania eighteen years later Sarah King passed the mounded dish of mashed potatoes to her older sister, Chelsea, then caught up the bowls of boiled turnips and fried apples to bring to the table. It was nice to have Chelsea visiting. It was her first long visit home since her wedding to John Kemp five months earlier, and having her there certainly helped when it came to feeding her three brothers. Twenty-yearold Sarah felt that being the youngest of five was not always easy, especially when spring planting came around and the boys were ravenous from working the fields from sunup until dark. Sarah caught her mother’s approving eye at the food-laden table and slipped into her own place on the long bench at her father’s left hand. She folded her hands into the lap of her apron and bowed her head. The general rumble of male voices ceased as her father began to pray. “Der Herr sie gedankt for this food and for those who have labored over it, from the fields to the table. Amen.” There was a chorus of amens, and the boys dove for the food. “Ach, I nearly forgot . . .” Father held up his hand, and the boys froze in their scoops with the ladles and spoons. They dropped them with a low groan when Father bowed his head once more. “And Der Herr sie gedankt for Chelsea and for the boppli she carries for John Kemp.” Sarah smiled. A baby! She should have known, since Chelsea had been closeted with Mamm and Father for a hurried conference in the pantry just before serving time. Her brothers patted John on the back and made good-natured jokes while Chelsea glowed and met Sarah’s eyes. Sarah knew that many in her Old Order Amish community did not speak of pregnancies openly, but Father and Mamm encouraged conversation of all sorts in the privacy of their home in an effort to keep the family together in spirit and prayer. Sarah was so excited at the prospect of being an aunt that she forgot to eat. Father jokingly nudged her arm and set the whole table laughing at her untouched plate. Sarah joined in the laughter, though she would not have laughed as outrightly had she been anywhere but home with her family. She gazed down the table to the tanned faces of her older brothers and the always-moving gentle hands of Mamm and thought how blessed she was. “And,” Father pronounced, startling her, “I think that Sarah might make the baby quilt for my first grandchild. What do you say, Sarah?” Sarah ducked her head at her father’s words. She knew he only made an innocent suggestion; it was her own insecurity about extending her creativity beyond her garden that shook her. She had only attempted one quilt, when she was thirteen, and her Grossmudder King had so criticized her handiwork that she ’d never picked up a needle again. But the table was waiting for a reply, and she nodded. “Jah, I will try.” Chelsea rose and came around the table to kiss and hug her sister. “Wunderbaar,” she exclaimed and returned laughing to her seat. Sarah smiled and adjusted her hair covering, tucking back the stray blonde strands that tended to escape at her temples. Her brother Luke stopped eating and opened his eyes wide in a comedic manner, which grabbed everyone’s attention. “Was in der welt, Luke?” Mamm asked in mock exasperation. “I just thought of something, Mamm!” Luke exclaimed. “Now that Chelsea is married and working on the Kemp farm, she won’t be able to run the roadside stand. And it’s supposed to open again next week! Who will take care of the stand this year?” The table rumbled in perplexity, and Sarah bit her lip in thought. The King family roadside stand was no mere plank of wood on sawhorses. Indeed, Father and the boys had built a fulllength, open-fronted shed, well shingled against the weather and able to house many tables of produce, baked goods, and canned items in the spring and summer as well as baskets of walnuts, beechnuts, scented pine cones, and bundles of firewood in the autumn. It was a source of income for the family and was the most successful of all the roadside stands in the local Amish and English communities. To spare a boy from the fields would be unthinkable, and Chelsea was busy on the Kemp farm. Mamm had all of the housework . . . “Your mother and I have thought of this, eh, Mama?” Mamm cleared her throat and folded her cloth napkin before replying. “Jah,” she announced. “Sarah will take over the running of the stand when it opens again next week.” The sudden silence around the crowded table did nothing to ease Sarah’s swimming head as she stared at her mother in confusion. Father took up the conversation and reached to pat Sarah’s cold hand in reassurance. “Jah, Sarah will do it.” Luke laughed aloud—a brief chortle cut short by a glare from his mother—and then looked apologetically at his younger sister. “Forgive me, please, Sarah. It’s just that you’re always with your plants . . . I just thought . . .” His words trailed off and Sarah felt a quick wash of pity at his floundering. “It doesn’t matter, Luke. It’s strange for me to think of it also,” Sarah admitted. Chelsea spoke up. “Sarah can do it,” she proclaimed stoutly, so that her father nodded in agreement and a murmur of ascent went around the table. “Yes, Sarah, you can.” Father went on, “It is your nature to hide among the garden plants you love, jah? But there are others to minister to, a world to understand so you can be sure that you do not conform to its ways and people. Sarah, there are people to meet and to serve.” Sarah nodded, but her heart was thumping and she felt sick to her stomach. “Jah, Sarah, perhaps you’ll meet your husband at the stand this year, unless you marry your old friend Jacob Wyse,” Luke suggested, then ducked when John Kemp gave him a cuff on the shoulder. “What?” Luke asked. “She might.” Chelsea smiled down the table at her brother. “Maybe it’s you, Luke King, who should visit the stand . . . You might find a wife!” Luke flushed as his brothers laughed. It was a common joke among the family that none of the boys had yet to marry, with James, the eldest, being nearly twenty-eight. The simple truth was that there was barely time for courting when they all worked a farm as large as the one the Lord had provided for the King family. Despite the laughter around her and her brother’s sincere apology, Sarah had no time to worry about a husband when faced with the prospect of dealing with the responsibilities of the stand and all the strangers who would stop as customers. It was one thing when the King family hosted church meeting and she could stay in the background, or at picnics or berry picking when she busied herself with the younger children. But to deal with a parade of strangers on her own . . . and Englisch strangers at that. She swallowed hard at the staggering thought and questioned her fears. She couldn’t recall any reason for her reticence; she’d only ever known kindness from those in her community. Yet she was afraid. She realized that conversation had resumed around the table and the world was spinning for the others of her family. Her brother Samuel was speaking. “There’s been more work done today at the Fisher farm, Father. I noticed when I was plowing the south end. Soon we’ll have new neighbors.” “Yes, we will, and they will be Englisch neighbors.” There was brief silence around the table, though Sarah couldn’t quite pick up the threads of conversation from her own miserable musings. “It’s a strange thing to think of Englischers working an Amish farm,” Luke commented and Father raised an admonishing hand. “It was an Amish farm, but all of the earth belongs to Der Herr. And I must say that the Englisch may care for the place much better than the Fishers ever did. As our neighbors, we must extend goodwill and, further, good expectations. You all know this.” Luke nodded in agreement as Father continued. “It is good to remind ourselves on occasion—kindness, fairness, goodwill. All as Der Herr would do Himself and as the Ordnung instructs.” “I will make some friendship bread to take to them,” Mamm murmured. “Perhaps the wife will enjoy the recipe as well.” “No wife, Mamm.” Father smiled. “Only a single man, a doctor of veterinary science, and his hired help.” Chelsea laughed. “Oh no, just what we need in the area . . . another bachelor to compete with the King brothers.” “He may well have a hard time of it, though, as a vet and an Englischer. Everybody loved old Dr. Lapp,” Samuel remarked. “Jah,” Mamm muttered. “He was a good man. Such a sad loss for his family.” Sarah sat quiet and sober. She could find no interest in either her food or Englisch neighbors with the thought of her new responsibility at the roadside stand. Her father leaned close and whispered, “The Lord will help you, Sarah. You will see.” She smiled at him, though her hazel eyes were full of unshed tears. “Jah, Father. Jah.” The red sports car made short work of the bumpy dirt driveway to the Fisher farm, and Dr. Grant Williams grinned in his rearview mirror at the shocked expression on his housekeeper’s face. “Are you still with me, Mrs. Bustle?” “You know that I am, sir. You might ask Mr. Bustle how he’s feeling, though; he tends to get a bit carsick.” Grant glanced at the older man seated next to him in the passenger seat. “Bustle?” “All is well, sir.” Grant smiled. The Bustles were the type of old-fashioned servants and family friends who were rarely, if ever, seen in the modern world. At nearly a spry sixty-years-old each, they’d been with him since childhood, since his parents had died, and he loved them. But nothing could persuade them from ceasing to call him “sir” or from giving him the formality they believed he deserved as their employer. “We ’re here.” In the half-light of the late spring evening, the three-story red brick farm estate appeared rather austere, though evidence of a cheerful renovation existed in the piles of new wood and machinery that dotted the front lawn. Large fragrant lilac bushes framed the brick walkway that led to the generous porch, and lightning bugs flashed like tiny lanterns of goodwill. Grant helped Mrs. Bustle from the car and waited for her inevitable comment. “Looks like it could do with a good cleaning.” Grant chuckled. He expected them to speak their minds, and Mrs. Bustle rarely disappointed. “I asked you both to move with me to this rural mountainous community from Philadelphia because I couldn’t do this without you. Whatever you need to get this place going so I can start practicing . . . well, you just have to let me know.” He was surprised at the emotion in his voice. At twenty-seven, he was focused on accomplishing his goals in life, and establishing a veterinary Sarah's practice in this area was one of his personal benchmarks. His father had been a medical doctor who was deeply devoted to the Amish people, and Grant felt it was his legacy to continue in serving where his father had left off. Although his father left him enough money in a trust to last two lifetimes, he felt a strange tightness in his chest as he stared up at the old farmhouse that held his name on the deed. “If I may, sir.” Mr. Bustle cleared his throat. “Your parents would have been proud.” Grant clapped the older man on the shoulder and then linked his arms around both of them. “Thank you, both of you.” Mrs. Bustle sniffed. “Could be I’m going to need a hired girl. Maybe one of them Amish girls.” She pronounced it Aim-ish, but Grant didn’t bother to correct her. Everything was new, and it was late. “Let’s go in, shall we?” He produced an old-fashioned ring of keys and helped Mrs. Bustle up the steps. The heavy door swung open once he’d fumbled with the latch, and he moved to turn on the newly installed overhead chandelier. Cobwebs and dust were in heavy residence as well as boot tracks from workers on the dusty hardwood floors. “I had to have electricity put in. You remember I told you that the house was previously owned by the Amish.” “As much of the land hereabouts is,” Mr. Bustle remarked. “Yes, we’re ‘strangers in a strange land,’ aren’t we, Bustle? But I mean to build a life here, a life that will honor my father and mother—with God’s help, of course.” “You’ll have to build your bed first, I bet,” Mrs. Bustle announced, returning from her perusal of a side room. “That’s why we have clean sheets in the car. I’ll get them now, and you . . .” Grant bent to bestow a quick kiss on Mrs. Bustle ’s aged cheek. “You will have the first bed we build . . . er, make up. I’ll be right back.” He slipped outside into the twilight and noticed the warm, far-off light from the adjoining Amish farm. There was something poignant and serene about oil lamps shining through windows that made him think of home, though his parents had long been lost to him. He leaned on the low roof of the sports car and drew a deep breath of the fragrant night air. Life was going to be different here; he just knew it. He felt a stirring of excitement in his soul. view abbreviated excerpt only...Discussion Questions
From the publisher:1. In what ways does Sarah know God is speaking to her and helping her make decisions in her life? How does God guide you in your own life?
2. John 5:16-18 says: “So, because Jesus was doing these things on the Sabbath, the Jews persecuted him. Jesus said to them, ‘My Father is always at his work to this very day, and I too, am working.’ For this reason the Jews tried all the harder to kill him;” Do you think Sarah broke the law of not working on the Sabbath when she helped Grant learn to set up his own garden? Was it perhaps in act of service?
3. What vulnerabilites does Grant experience due to the loss of his parents at a young age? How can personal loss ulitimately produce strength in an individual?
Notes From the Author to the Bookclub
*The central idea of Sarah’s Garden is the potential for renewal in life when we walk with God. I wanted to write this book so that readers might know that God can transform, redeem, reframe, and make His Light of the impossible. We need His guidance to make the right choices, even everyday choices. The idea for the book came from childhood memories, living in the mountains of North Central Pa., near the Amish, and I really recalled their abundant gardens. I hope readers will take away a feeling of expectancy, of looking for, God’s work in their daily lives to rebuild and renew.Book Club Recommendations
Recommended to book clubs by 1 of 2 members.
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