
#InspirationalFriday History and courage mix in this suspense
Suzanne Randolph’s journalism career is all but over… So when she learns that President Roosevelt has invited
nearly a thousand European refugees to come to America
while WWII still rages across the Atlantic, she’s confident
she’s found her story. She heads for the shores of Lake
Ontario to Oswego, New York, determined to make her
journalistic mark, but is there more to life than restoring
her career? Theo Bridgewater knows God has plans for him… Throughout the war, Theo has suffered the taunts and
insults of others—first because of his family’s German
heritage and then because of his pacifist Quaker beliefs.
Now his parents have sent him to Oswego to find his uncle,
aunt, and cousin, and bring them back to the family farm in
Wisconsin. Little does Theo realize the journey will last
for eighteen long months and test the faith and resolve of
this humble farmer. And when there’s an undeniable spark between Suzanne and
Theo, could it be God’s plan for these two determined
individuals to achieve even greater things if they work
together?
Excerpt CHAPTER 1 The first thing Theo noticed when he arrived in Oswego and
walked
through residential neighborhoods until he reached the fort
was the
fence. Chain link seemed to run on for miles—certainly it
surrounded
an area of several acres. Six feet tall. Capped with three
rows of
barbed wire stretched tight. Behind the fence, rows of
whitewashed
barracks sat along the cliff that overlooked the lake. Some
brick
houses positioned on a hill, a small cemetery, and in the
background
the remnants of the actual fort remained as reminders of a
site that
had been so important to the security of a young America—
through the
Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, and even the Civil War.
Theo
guessed that other buildings might house offices and dining
halls, a
laundry and a chapel, as well as an infirmary and maybe a
recreation
center. But overall with the fence surrounding it, the place
looked
less like a military fort than it did a prison. Theo had arrived after an overnight bus ride. In their
family meeting
with Matthew and Jenny back in Wisconsin, they had sat in
silence,
waiting for guidance as they decided the best way to bring
Franz,
Ilse, and Liesl home to the farm. After making several
telephone
calls and scanning the national newspapers in the local
library, his
father had learned that the refugees would need to remain at
the
shelter until the war was over. And although with the
landing at
Normandy in June the tide of war seemed to have turned in
favor of
the Allies, no one thought for a minute that it would end
quickly. “Well, we can’t just leave them there among strangers,” his
mother
had said, her lips set in a tight line that meant she
intended to do
something for her brother and his family immediately. She
had already
made plans to reassign the bedrooms of the farmhouse to make
room for
them. In the end it was decided that Theo would go to
Oswego, find a
room in a boardinghouse, and do everything he could to
persuade the
authorities that Franz, Ilse, and Liesl did not need to stay
in the
so-called shelter—they had a home and family right here in
the United
States. The boardinghouse part had worked out fine. Once the owner—
Selma Velo
—learned that he was Quaker, in spite of the fact that her
regular
rooms were all filled, she had offered Theo a cot and
dresser in the
attic in exchange for him mowing the yard and weeding her
garden and
taking care of other household repairs that her son usually
handled.
Her son was serving in the Pacific. After supper—shared with
the
other boarders less one woman from Washington, DC, who had
not yet
arrived—he had followed his landlady to the basement and
unearthed an
old fan in need of a new electrical cord. “My late husband’s workshop is out in that shed behind the
house. Can
you fix this?” “If I can find the right parts, I can,” Theo assured her. He
was
grateful for the possibility of a fan, because in spite of
the fact
that he’d propped open the three small attic windows and
there was
nearly always a breeze off Lake Ontario a couple of blocks
away, it
was oven-hot up there. “There’s a hardware store down on Ninth Street on the way
into town,”
Mrs. Velo explained as she led him to the workshop. “I run
an account
there. It’s closed up for tonight, but tomorrow if you need
something. . .” “Let me see what I can do tonight,” Theo replied. The one
thing that
he had noticed about Oswego was that everything was close
enough that
he could walk—even to the fort. That was one of the best
things about
small towns. On their way to the workshop he saw an old
bicycle also
in need of repair. Mrs. Velo saw him looking at the bike. “Use it if you can
fix it.”
Inside the cluttered shed she pulled a chain that turned on
the
single light bulb overhead. “I’ll leave you to it,” she said
and
headed back across the yard to the house, where a taxi was
just
pulling into the driveway. He watched through the square, four-paned window curtained
with dust
and cobwebs and saw a woman get out of the cab. She was tall
and thin
with long dark hair. She wore a light-colored skirt and a
printed,
short-sleeved blouse and sandals with that wedge heel that
made Theo
wonder how women kept their balance. Over one shoulder, she
carried a
large purse, and when the cab driver removed the luggage
from the
trunk there was one large suitcase and another smaller case
that Theo
realized was a typewriter. At supper the regular boarders had quizzed Mrs. Velo about
the new
arrival. “A reporter?” one man guessed. “Sort of,” Mrs. Velo hedged. “She’s a friend of a friend.” “A stranger then,” the woman seated next to Theo huffed. “We are all strangers,” Mrs. Velo said softly, “until we
become
friends. She is here to write about the refugees.” “I hear the government has spent a lot of money fixing
things up for
them,” the woman—Hilda Cutter—said in a tone that sounded as
if she
were sharing some huge secret. “New refrigerators and ovens
in every
apartment and. . .” Theo had barely paid attention to the rest. Hilda Cutter
struck him
as a gossip and someone who was always looking for the
negative
aspects of any situation.
But watching the new arrival as he gathered the tools he
would need
to repair the fan, Theo recalled Mrs. Velo’s vague
description of
this woman from Washington and he wondered what sort of
meant. Was
this woman a reporter or not? Maybe she was with the
government and
needed to keep her identity secret. Someone from the
government might
arrive with a typewriter. She might have connections. Maybe
he could
talk to her about how best to get his uncle and aunt and
cousin out.
He turned his attention to the repair of the fan as he
planned his
approach. Suzanne followed Mrs. Velo up the steps to the wide porch
furnished
with several wooden rocking chairs, a porch swing, and
window boxes
filled with bright red geraniums that lined the railing. The
front
entrance had a leaded-glass window set into a solid-looking
wooden
door behind a screen door that Mrs. Velo held open for the
cab
driver. “Just set them down inside there,” Mrs. Velo instructed,
reminding
Suzanne that the cabbie needed to be paid and sent on his
way. She fumbled through the contents of her purse, pushing aside
her
comb, compact, lipstick, several wadded handkerchiefs, a
fist full of
pencils held together with a rubber band, a small notebook,
and
finally her billfold. She paid the driver adding a less-
than-generous
tip because she noticed that she had very little cash and it
would be
Monday before she could get to a bank. “You have a lovely home, Mrs. Velo,” she said following the
woman
inside. She was standing in a large foyer with a carpeted
stairway on
one side leading up to a landing that featured a window seat
under
another leaded-glass window and then turned to continue the
rest of
the way to the second floor. “My late husband was quite handy. When we bought the place,
it was a
disaster,” Mrs. Velo replied as she picked up Suzanne’s
large
suitcase as if it were empty and headed past the stairway
toward the
back of the house. “Your room is back here,” she said. On the way Suzanne caught a glimpse of a large, dark dining
room, its
long table covered in a lace cloth, and a far-more inviting
kitchen
with the window over the sink crowded with clay pots that
appeared to
be filled with herbs. She tried to pay attention as Mrs.
Velo ran
through the house rules. “Breakfast is at seven, supper at six. You’re on your own
for lunch.
No food in your room. No hotplates or candles, either.
Here’s a key
to the room.” “Does this also fit the front door?” Mrs. Velo blinked at her as if she had suddenly spoken in a
foreign
language. “Nobody in Oswego locks their houses,” she said.
She
crossed the room and raised the blinds before opening the
window that
overlooked the backyard and a shed. “You’ll get a nice
breeze off the
lake most nights, but in this weather you might want to run
the fan.”
She pointed toward a small table and wooden chair. “I know
you asked
for a desk, but this is the best I can offer. You’re welcome
to use
the desk in the living room, but be aware that that’s for
the use of
all the boarders.” “This is fine,” Suzanne assured her as she set her
typewriter case on
top of the table and unhooked her bag from her shoulder. “I
have the
money here for the deposit and first month’s rent, although
I might
not be here an entire month and. . .” Mrs. Velo looked directly at her for the first time. “You
said you
were doing a story on the refugees.” “I am.” “Honey, they are here for the duration of the war, and if
you ask me
there is no possibility in heaven or on earth that the war
will be
over before the end of the month.” She stood in the doorway,
her hand
on the knob. “Of course, depending on the story—the depth of
it I
mean—I guess you could get the gist of things in a week or
so, but I
rent by the month.” Suzanne flinched at her landlady’s lecture. “I understand,”
she said
handing the woman the envelope with the cash. “Thank you.” The door was half closed before Mrs. Velo opened it again.
“You
missed supper. I’ll bring you a sandwich and some iced tea.
At
breakfast you can meet the others. You might be especially
interested
in that young man there,” she added nodding toward the
window. Suzanne saw a tall man leave the shed and walk toward the
house. He
was carrying a small electric fan. “Your son?” Mrs. Velo frowned. “My son is in the navy, stationed in the
Pacific
somewhere. That young man is Theo Bridgewater. His uncle,
aunt, and
cousin are among the refugees. Like I said, you might want
to talk to
him.” Suzanne studied the man with interest. “I’ll be sure to meet
him,”
she said as she heard the door click closed. Theo Bridgewater was at least six feet tall, lanky with long
arms and
legs and a way of moving that made him appear confident and
at the
same time approachable. He was wearing jeans that looked as
if he
might have owned them for a decade or more, a short-sleeved
cotton
shirt with a white T-shirt underneath, and a baseball cap
that hid
his facial features from her. She could not guess his age,
but given
his ease of movement, he was not that old. Then she recalled the conversation she’d had with her
landlady about
the length of her stay. “I rent by the month,” Mrs. Velo had
stated
emphatically as if Suzanne had suggested that she would
expect money
back if she left early. Great, Randolph. You really are
getting off
on the right foot here. Edwin had always told her that she had a habit of getting so
wrapped
up in her story that she forgot she was dealing with human
beings
with feelings and opinions of their own. “You come on like a
dog with
a bone, Suzie. Sometimes it takes a gentler touch.” No one had ever accused Suzanne of being gentle or
approachable. Even
as a child and teenager she had stated her opinions in such
a way
that other kids avoided her. Oh, they would elect her to run
the
student government or manage the school’s newspaper, but
when it came
to friendships—not to mention romantic relationships—most
people
eventually gave up. More recently Gordon Langford had given up. “Face facts,
Randolph.
The man used you and then cast you to the curb,” she
muttered. As
soon as the story he’d urged her to write was published and
exposed
for the fabricated mess that it was, he had disappeared.
Well, not
entirely. He had defended himself by saying that “the
reporter”—he
had referred to her as if they had never met—had twisted his
words.
He had denied everything, and he had not returned her calls.
And why
should he? He had achieved his purpose, for in spite of the
fact that
his accusations could not be proven, he had raised questions
about
his opponent’s integrity. A light knock at her door proved a welcome interruption as
Mrs. Velo
presented her with a tray loaded with a tall glass of iced
tea, a
plate with a multi-layered sandwich of ham, cheese, tomato,
lettuce,
and who could tell what else between slices of thick crusted
bread.
There was a small dish of sliced lemon, a sugar bowl, a
cloth napkin,
and a side dish with the most mouth-watering slice of
chocolate cake
Suzanne thought she had ever seen. “This is so kind,” Suzanne said as she accepted the tray. “I
can’t
thank you enough. I really didn’t have a chance to eat and—” “It’s a one-time deal,” Mrs. Velo said, retreating into the
hallway.
But then she winked and added, “Have to be sure you paint me
in a
good light when you write that story.” Suzanne laughed and realized that it was the first time she
had found
her sense of humor in days—weeks. “Thank you,” she repeated
even as
she felt tears well.
“Oh, honey, it’s just chocolate cake,” Mrs. Velo said,
coming back
into the room and taking the tray from her. She set it on
the writing
table and then took a seat on the end of the bed and patted
the space
beside her. “Is this your first big assignment?” “No.” Tears were coming in waves now along with hiccups and
sniffles. Mrs. Velo leaned back to retrieve a tissue from the box on
the
nightstand. She handed it to Suzanne and then waited for her
to
compose herself. “I’m so sorry. I must be overtired. I get emotional when
I’ve not had
enough sleep, and you’ve been so very kind, and. . .” Apparently satisfied that Suzanne was not going to have
another
breakdown, Mrs. Velo stood up. “Edwin told me that you’re
good at
reporting. He did say you can be a little over enthusiastic,
but it
was clear to me that he wouldn’t have sent you here if he
didn’t
think you could handle this. You do know that the town is
fairly
crawling with reporters and photographers?” “How do you and Edwin—Mr. Bonner—know each other?” “Eddie grew up here. We went all through school together.”
Suzanne
did not miss the way Mrs. Velo’s voice softened, and her
eyes got
that faraway look people got when they were lost in a
memory. “But
that’s all ancient history,” she added, seeming to snap out
of her
reverie. “Now let me offer one piece of advice, Suzanne. We
are like
a family, so do not hide away here in your room. Get out and
get to
know the others and the folks in town. You’ll find most
people in
Oswego can be mighty friendly once they get to know you.” “I will,” Suzanne assured her. “Starting with breakfast. I
promise.
But for now I’d just like to unpack while I enjoy this
wonderful meal
and then take a hot shower and get to bed. It’s been a long
day.” “Oh, I nearly forgot,” Mrs. Velo exclaimed. “The bathroom.
It’s at
the top of the stairs. There’s a hook and latch for
privacy.” She
pulled out the bottom drawer of the dresser and removed a
stack of
towels. “I’ll collect and replenish these every week—Monday
is wash
day. You’re welcome to wash out personal items, but no
hanging them
in the bathroom to dry.” She took a drying rack out of the
narrow
closet and set it up on a mat in the corner of the room. “If
you need
to iron something, there’s a board built into the wall next
to the
ice box in the kitchen—the iron is kept on the top shelf of
the
pantry.” She glanced around as if searching for anything else she
might have
forgotten. The melting ice settled in the untouched glass of
iced tea
on the tray. “Well, I’ll leave you to it,” she said, then
patted
Suzanne’s cheek. “It’s all going to work out, honey. You’ll
see.” The door closed for a second time, and Suzanne sat down at
the
writing table and ate her supper as she gazed out the window
and the
sunlight faded to dusk.
Would it all work out? And what was it? The war? Her story?
Her life? The train slowed, waking Ilse with the break in its
seemingly endless
rhythm. Sunlight streamed through the open windows, and in
spite of
the early hour, it was obvious that this would be another
hot, humid
day. She sat up and leaned closer to Franz as they stared
out the
window, eager for their first glimpse of the place they
would stay. A
murmur rolled back toward them from the front of the car. “What are they saying?” Ilse asked her husband, whose
command of
languages far exceeded her own ability to speak only German
and basic
English. “There’s a fence,” he replied. “With the barbed wire on top.
Like the
camps,” he added. His voice became a whisper as he stared
out the
window at the fence, the low white wooden buildings that
stood in
rows like soldiers near a small cemetery. The men—some in
uniform—
hurried around inside the fence. And she knew that Franz was
back in
the prison camp where he had been taken for questioning and
then held
for months. The place where he had been beaten and starved.
The place
where he had suffered much more that he would not tell her.
He had
escaped from that camp and found her and Liesl in a nearby
village,
and together they had made their way over the Alps and into
Italy
just as the Allies were liberating that country. “It is not the same, Franz,” she whispered as she wrapped
her arms
around his thin shoulders. “This is America. They might have
the
fence for all sorts of reasons. It is not the same.” But she was less certain as they climbed down from the train
and were
ushered inside the fence. As they waited in line to be registered, she fingered the
tag they
were all wearing—the one with a number and the words “U.S.
Army
Casual Baggage” imprinted on it as if they were no different
from the
cardboard suitcases and paper bags that held their
belongings. Of
course some travelers clutched fine leather suitcases and
satchels as
well. The finer luggage pieces bore travel labels from
exotic place
like Paris and Rome and Monte Carlo. But those were the
exception,
and she knew that those refugees also wore the Casual
Baggage tags.
When one is an outcast, she thought, one has no other
identity. Ilse looked around. Townspeople lined the outside of the
fence,
pointing and whispering and watching them as if they were
animals in
a zoo. Some men held large cameras. News photographers, she
guessed.
Children, women, and a few men—most of them older—made up
the rest of
the crowd. Well, why shouldn’t they stare? She and the
others must
seem so very foreign and exotic to these Americans dressed
in clean
and well-fitting clothes and wearing proper shoes and socks.
Some of
the women wore straw hats that blocked the sun and shaded
their
features. Ilse touched her hair and knew that it hung in
limp waves.
She tugged at her dress, trying without success to lengthen
the
skirt. They had wanted to look their best for their arrival,
but the
disinfection process had squelched those hopes, and after
riding all
night on the train, the clothes they wore were stained with
sweat and
wrinkled. They must look like exactly what they were—people
without a
country or home to call their own. “Mama?” Liesl clung to her arm. “Why are those people
staring at us,
and why are they behind that fence? Have they been naughty?” Ilse realized that her daughter’s perception of things was
that they
were free and the townspeople were the ones being held
behind the
wire fence. The idea made her smile. “They are curious,”
Ilse replied
as they inched closer to the table where men were seated,
checking
the numbers on their tags against names on lists. She was
reminded of
all the times that she and Franz had had to show their
identity
papers while living in Munich. Just going to the market, a
person
could be stopped and harassed and questioned. Ahead of them,
a Jewish
family stepped up to the table, and she wondered if they
would again
be required to wear the ugly yellow felt stars that had
labeled them
in Europe. “Welcome to Fort Ontario,” the smiling man at the table
greeted them
when it was their turn. Another man standing next to him
translated
the words into German and handed Ilse a paper bag stuffed
with towels
and a bar of soap. He was also smiling. Ilse had noticed
that about
the Americans. They always appeared so open to new people.
Their
niece Beth had been like that. After their names had been checked off, they followed others
up a
hill to another line and more tables labeled “Customs” where
they
were separated from their few belongings. They had all heard
the
stories—and some of these people had actually had the
experience—of
such procedures in the concentration camps. People had been
told that
the baggage they had checked as they boarded a train would
be
delivered to them later, but instead, they had been led off
to their
deaths. For this reason, most of their fellow travelers on
this
journey had kept what hand luggage they could with them, and
they
refused the help of boys from town who met their train and
offered to
carry their baggage for them. The boys reminded her of the
youth
corps in Germany—the “brown shirts”—but someone explained
that they
belonged to a group called Boy Scouts that had nothing to do
with war
or politics. “I will tag your belongings,” the young man explained and
went on to
assure them that their things would be delivered to their
quarters as
soon as possible—probably while they were at breakfast. Did
they
really have a choice? Franz set down their two suitcases, bound by twine because
the edges
were coming apart, and stood watching while a man tagged
them and
then handed him half the tag as a receipt. “This way,” their
guide
and interpreter said as he led them and others toward one of
the
barracks. Inside Ilse expected to see a barren dormitory
packed with
rows of bunks perhaps stacked three high like the barracks
Franz had
described to her after his escape from the prison camp.
Instead a
hallway led past doors, each with a name on it. She began to
recognize some of the names as families they had met on the
ship
coming across the Atlantic. Franz stopped before the last
door. He
ran his finger over the small placard that read Franz, Ilse,
and
Liesl Schneider. Their guide—yet another smiling young man wearing pressed
trousers
and a crisp white shirt—handed Franz a key. “Wilkommen,” he said as he continued the tour in German.
“Bathrooms
are shared—men’s on the second floor and ladies on this
level.” He
opened the door with their name on it and stood back to give
them a
chance to enter the small apartment. Ilse could not believe her eyes—three rooms just for them.
“Kitchen?”
she asked. The smiling young man explained that all meals would for now
be
served in the mess hall. “Mess hall?” Liesl repeated and giggled. “We will eat in a
messy
hall?” During the years that Beth had lived with them, Liesl
had
learned basic English, but—like Franz whose English was
fluent—
sometimes certain phrases made no sense. “Dining hall,” the man explained. “We’ll go there next.” The apartment was furnished with a wooden table and four
chairs, a
wall shelf that held a few cups and glasses, and a single
cot in the
room where they stood. Beyond that Ilse could see another
room with
two more cots and a foot locker at the end of each cot for
their
clothes. With her imagination, she began decorating the
place. She
had seen wildflowers on the hillside near the lake as the
train
pulled in. Perhaps later she and Liesl could go pick some
for the
table. There were no curtains on the window in the bedroom.
They
would have to do something to cover that, she thought. “Ilse?” Franz put his arm around her shoulder and turned her
back
toward the hallway. “He says it is time to eat.” “In the mess hall,” Liesl announced in English, and once
again she
giggled. It occurred to Ilse that their daughter had
immediately
responded to the kindness of the American. She was sure that
this was
Beth’s influence. The scent of cooking food would have guided them to the
dining hall
even if their interpreter had not been with them. When they
entered
the long brick building, they were taken aback first by the
noise—
people talking in several languages, people laughing and
exclaiming
over the bounty before them. And indeed it was a feast—even
more
impressive than the meals they had been served on the voyage
from
Italy. The long wooden tables were filled with large glass
bottles of
milk, bowls the size of Ilse’s mixing bowls at home filled
with hard
boiled eggs, plates stacked high with sliced bread, dishes
of jam and
marmalade, and trays that held small boxes labeled “Corn
Flakes.”
Ilse watched in fascination as one of the Americans
demonstrated how
to open the box and then add milk so that the box became the
bowl. She and Franz glanced at each other and burst out laughing.
It felt
so wonderful to share a moment like that. For months they
had had to
settle for scraps or wait in long lines while someone dished
up half
a cup of watery soup. The bread here was white and soft.
While Ilse
was not sure she liked it as well as she had the heavier rye
bread
they had enjoyed from the bakery that occupied the ground
floor of
their apartment building back in Munich, it was ever so much
better
than the gooey gray concoction that passed for bread in
Europe these
days. Their interpreter explained butter was still rationed. Franz
pumped
the hand of their guide, thanking him in German and English.
Then he
led the way to a crowded bench at one of the tables. The
people
already there squeezed closer together to make room for
them.
Smiling, they shoved the food into their mouths as if they
might
never again see such a meal. Ilse saw some people hiding
slices of
bread and hard-boiled eggs in their pockets as they had at
meals on
the ship—just in case. “America,” one man kept murmuring to himself as he ate.
“America.” Ilse understood his disbelief. But as she looked out the
window
behind where Franz was filling Liesl’s glass with milk for a
second
time, she could see a large American flag snapping in the
breeze off
the lake. The only barrier between them and that flag was
the fence,
its thorny wire making Ilse all too aware that they might be
on
American soil but they were not yet free.
Our Past Week of Fresh Picks
|