Название: Noah's Sweetheart
Автор: Rebecca Kertz
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
Серия: Mills & Boon Love Inspired
isbn: 9781472013873
isbn:
“It is very nice,” she said sincerely. “The nicest schuulhaus I’ve ever seen.”
Noah looked pleased. “Let’s go inside.”
They heard hammering as they approached. “Jedidiah or Dat is finishing up,” Noah said.
The door swung in easily, and Rachel and Charlotte followed Noah inside. An older man with hammer in hand was bent low over a floorboard. “Dat,” Noah greeted.
“Noah, you have brought our new schoolteacher.”
“Ja, this is Rachel Hostetler,” Noah introduced. “Rachel, my vadder—Samuel Lapp.”
Rachel nodded. “It is nice to meet you. You have done a gut job with this school. I am happy to see it.”
Samuel’s eyes sparkled in a face that was an older version of his son Noah’s, except for the beard that edged his chin. As in Rachel’s Ohio Amish community, married men wore beards along their chins, but not on their upper lips. “Come in. Come in and look about. There is much for you to see.”
The interior of the one-room schoolhouse was white and smelled of fresh paint and newly varnished wood. Someone had been thoughtful enough to hang posters of the alphabet printed on lines like those on primary writing paper. There were also numbers from one to ten. Beside the schoolroom door, there were built-in glass-fronted cabinets. The community or school board had been kind enough to fill the shelves with books.
Noah and Charlotte talked with Samuel while Rachel wandered about, studying her surroundings.
What captured her heart the most were the rows of student desks—five rows of eight, all newly crafted, stained and varnished and ready for use. Her heart gave a little leap as Rachel saw the teacher’s desk at the front of the class. It was a beautiful piece of furniture, made with care. She approached the desk and ran her fingers over the smooth, varnished surface.
“You like the desk?” Noah asked, suddenly beside her.
Rachel had sensed him instantly. She glanced over at him and nodded. “It is a wonderful desk.” Her gaze flashed briefly to the other side of the room and Charlotte, who was grinning at something Noah’s father had said. Her attention returned to Noah standing next to her. “It is beautiful.”
“I’m glad you like it. I made it.”
“You did?” She was impressed. “You are not only a carpenter but a cabinetmaker as well?”
Noah shrugged, downplaying his enjoyment of creating something wonderful from a few blocks of wood, of running his fingers over the smooth, polished surface as he eyed the finished product. “I like making furniture. My grossdaddi makes wonderful furniture. Many come from miles around to buy his chairs and tables.”
“A fine craft he has—as do you.” She awarded him a smile. “I will enjoy the desk.”
Noah felt a rush of pleasure. He didn’t know what it was about Rachel, but he was feeling things he’d never felt before. He became aware of a sudden desire to confide in her, to tell her about his dream of opening his own furniture shop someday. “Rachel—” he began, but stopped at Charlotte’s approach.
“Do you like the new school?” Charlotte asked.
“Ja. It will be a good place to teach the children.” She eyed the number of desks. “Are there that many children who will attend school?”
Charlotte chuckled. “Not yet, but the bishop wanted to make sure that there would be room for more in the future.”
Rachel felt a sigh of relief. “There are forty desks.”
“Ja, but only thirty-one children,” Charlotte said and then laughed when she saw her cousin’s astonished expression.
“It is a good thing we have the room, then,” Rachel agreed. Thirty-one children! It was going to be an interesting school year, she thought.
“Rachel,” Noah said. “Let us show you where your house will be.”
She turned to Noah’s father. “It is a wonderful schuulhaus, Samuel. I appreciate all that you and your sons have done.”
Samuel graciously accepted Rachel’s thanks. “I will see you on Sunday, Rachel, if not before.”
“Ja,” she said with a nod. “I will see you on Sunday.”
Then she followed Noah and Charlotte outside and they headed farther down the dirt lane in the opposite direction from where they had parked the buggy.
Chapter Three
They walked in silence; the only sounds were the crunch of their shoes against dirt and gravel, the distant tapping of a hammer coming from inside the school, and the sweet chirping of a robin redbreast.
Rachel, pleased with the schoolhouse, could hardly wait to see where she would live as the teacher. She wasn’t expecting anything fancy. She needed only the basics to make a home. Whatever her family district provided, she’d be grateful for.
They’d not gone far when she’d spied the building. She gasped in wonder. It was a small cottage, slightly bigger than the schoolhouse with white siding, working dark blue window shutters and a matching blue door. She couldn’t help the silly grin that spread to her lips. “This is the teacher’s house?”
“Ja.” Noah gazed at her with a smile. “Do you like it?”
Rachel nodded, still grinning. “It is lovely.” It was unusual for the school board to build a house for the teacher. Usually the teacher was selected from among the members of the community, but Rachel was from Millersburg, Ohio, far away. Was that why she would have her own house as long as she continued to teach here? Lord, thank You for Your blessings.
“It will be the right size for you, ja?” Charlotte said. Rachel saw that her cousin looked happy for her.
“It is perfect,” Rachel agreed. She was eager to get a closer look. “Is it safe to go inside?”
“Ja, we can go in and look around,” Noah said, “but I don’t want you to be disappointed. The outside is finished, but the inside is not.”
As she stepped into the interior of the house, Rachel felt a sense of home. There were only wooden studs where the walls would be, but she could see the size of each room and the opening of each doorway. Her imagination finished the rest for her.
“I’m sorry it is not done yet,” Noah apologized.
Rachel met his gaze. “I’m not,” she said sincerely. “I will enjoy watching each stage of construction.” And she could help. She wasn’t afraid of hard work.
“Dat thought it would be best to get the schuulhaus finished first,” Noah said as he led the way to the back of the house and into a room that, Rachel decided after judging its size, must be the kitchen. “The old schuulhaus burned to the ground last summer.” He waited for Charlotte, who had stopped to gaze out a window, to catch up. Once she joined them, he СКАЧАТЬ