Wandering Hearts
by Donna J. Grisanti
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About the book:
On the cusp of World War II, Raine Foster buries her beloved grandmother and
flees impending marriage. After faking her own death, she forges another life
intertwined with three strangers. Their lie-sealed odyssey encounters forbidden
love, racism, natural disaster, and murder.
Wandering Hearts is a romance for
men and women who love to work the earth and tend the home. Grisanti documents
with skill and compassion a way of life that has disappeared from the
consciousness of younger Americans, although not from their grandparent’s.
Bounteous, thoughtful, unselfish, kindhearted, it’s the story of people who
deserve these adjectives and the hard work that hides behind them.
The following is an excerpt from the book
Wandering Hearts
Published by Phoenix Publishing Corp.; August 2006;$14.95US; 978-0970886095
Copyright © 2006 Phoenix
Publishing Corp.
CHAPTER 1.
Raine Foster
knew with certainty that she'd have to leave her home that hot, wet spring
when Nanny Vi started talking to the dolls. Through tears, Raine
contemplated what to do as she watched the bright pink glow of the
day-ending washboard sky. The Fosters' farmhouse was falling down around
Raine and her grandmother's increasingly oblivious head.
Raine looked
down at her rough, chapped hands, praying that the fluffy, pink cotton candy
wisps in the sky wouldn't become gray and threatening. All too frequent
leaden skies poured our constant pinging rivulets that kept Raine running
inside the house from bucket to rusty farm pail and then to the abandoned
horse troughs she'd dragged from the rotting barn. If her prayers that the
floors would stop buckling and no more leaks would spring from the Swiss
cheese-like roof over their heads weren't answered, she feared the second
floor of the house would fall down and kill them in their beds.
People said
Raine should leave the place and get started on her own life, even in this
Depression time. Back tax vultures were circling the land in this backwater
place, they said. The assessor's rolltop desk was littered with tax notices,
and no one in this generation had the money to pay anything at all to save
long-held family properties. The landscape was riddled with broken dreams
and lost fortunes big and small, like theirs, and in most folks' estimation,
the only way out was for Raine to leave or to marry. She had no money to
leave, at least not enough to buy a nice seat on the train that stopped at
Clinforks. So "starve here or marry" was the solemn advice of the old men in
the few creaking rockers and barrel stools on the sagging front porch of
Vitman's general store, post office, and cotton-gin office.
Almost halfway
into 1941 in Bridgeville, the old men in town had nothing better to do than
come each weekday and Saturday morning in their clean but raggedy clothes to
rock on the store porch in creaking comfort. They sat their days away,
keeping the clerk, postmaster, and fix-it man company while watching people
try to stretch their pay for supplies. The hard work of seeing folks trying
to scrape a few pennies together to keep meals on the table tired them out.
Things had been bad in Bridgeville for as long as anyone could remember. The
Foster place, Raine's home, seemed next on the long list of failures that
didn't show any sign of ending, the wrinkle-faced elders would say as they
chewed on the ends of their empty pipes.
The porch
elders were in a cantankerous mood, not being able to taste, or at least
smell, the ripe fragrance of burning tobacco. It made the old gentlemen a
bit irritable to be denied the luxury of pipe or chewing tobacco because
there was no more money, either in their pockets or their family's coffers.
Their fading hearing longed for the deep-pocket snap of the round tins
holding the golden or tarry shaved leaves. Sometimes they would lift their
worn-out bodies from the porch rockers and circle the front of the cash
register, praying that the air currents would bring a few fragrant whiffs
from the glass sanctuary where Vitman kept the tobacco products lined up in
gleaming tins and pouches, so near and yet so far from their lips, mouths,
and pipe bowls.
"We might be
in luck, boys," Earll Miller said as he moved the end of his empty pipe from
one moist corner of his mouth to the other. "Hear from Vestell Wright that
Mr. Emil Vitman's going to the Fosters' place tomorrow." He held off a
second to make sure everyone was listening to his juicy piece of gossip
concerning the tall, square-jawed owner of most of the businesses in their
small town. If Earll had it right, he would be the purveyor of something to
keep people talking for weeks far beyond the buckling boards of the general
store's porch.
One thing
everybody already knew was that Emil Vitman was a mostly sour,
spoiled-by-riches man past thirty. Earll sat forward in the best of the
ancient rockers, made eye contact with each of the other four old men
sitting with him, and said in a low voice, "Looks like there's something
important going on." He knew he had them all interested, as each of his
compatriots sat up and strained to hear every word. Earll shook his head
solemnly, imitating the style of the circuit preacher who came every fourth
week to the church down the dirt path called Pine Road.
Earll had
gotten this important information from Vestell Wright, the plump widow who
had been the Vitman cook and housekeeper since her husband died of
rheumatism five years earlier. "Seems young Vitman's going to take himself a
wife."
Earll seemed
pleased with the bug-eyed reception his news engendered in his front porch
cronies. He was especially satisfied with Pete Fisher's reaction. When old
Pete reached for his knees with both hands, stretched his neck as if he'd
stopped breathing for a few seconds, and then let all the air out in his
wheezy lungs, Earll knew the news he was spreading was having its desired
effect.
"Yessir,
Vitman and Raine Foster," Earll said with authority, as if he could afford
to buy the local paper and was reading from the four-page weekly
Bridgeville Gazette. "Perhaps
we'll have a good meal and a better smoke when we attend the nuptials." The
men's mouths watered at the thought of the taste of cigars and good-grade
tobacco curling from their pipes.
Brady Fell,
the Vitmans' fix-it man, wasn't so pleased by the news. Eavesdropping might
be unmannerly, but it was necessary in this case, he thought. If his
seventeen years as a Vitman employee were any indication, being Vitman's
wife might save Raine Foster from starving, but there were other things to
consider, like the cruelties of his wealthy and powerful boss, which Brady
and everyone else in town had witnessed.
Brady shook
his head in disgust. He needed this menial job and needed to mind his own
business. It was the only thing that had kept him, his wife, and their three
children going since the accident at the Vitman cotton mill had cost him six
broken ribs, a bum leg, and the loss of the family farm during his long
convalescence. The farm deed belonged to Vitman now, and Brady and his
family were allowed to stay there on that mean man's whim. If he butted his
nose into this situation about Vitman and Raine Foster, he and his family
could be out on the dirt road without a house or a job before nightfall.
Although Brady
was anxiously waiting for his oldest, Imogene, to get herself a husband and
give him one less mouth to feed, his conscience got hold of him. Even if it
meant another ten years of watering down the gravy and eating more week-old
biscuits saved from the Vitman store trash, he'd rather risk homelessness
then have Raine Foster marry his boss. Trying to make sense of Emil Vitman's
thundering moods, which changed more frequently than the hairstyle posters
in the window of Miss Clover's Wash and Curl Hair Salon down the street,
would likely kill any woman. Not only that, but Vitman was also known for
adding physical violence to the quicksilver mix. Vitman saved himself from
the consequences of his irrational deeds by using his power and money to
tidy up every mess.
Brady thought
things over again. He was bone tired this Wednesday afternoon and hadn't
wanted to do one more thing than his work chores. This information changed
his mind. He'd have to be late for supper and warn Miss Raine that the
devil, in the form of Mr. Vitman, was coming to call.
To keep them
going, Raine worked in the vegetable and flower patch and sold the flowers
and produce at her makeshift roadside stand. To quiet Nanny Vi while she
worked, Raine set the remaining dolls from the dwindling family collection
on small wooden chairs in a tea party semicircle around her now frail,
wispy-haired grandmother.
No matter how
hard Raine tried to prevent it, when she combed her grandmother's once thick
brown hair, the now fine, downy edges of the greatly thinned mass laced with
steel gray strands would start to slip from the tight bun at Nanny Vi's
neck. Raine wondered if her own thick auburn tresses, which were curly at
the root and wavy at the long ends, would look the same if she lived as long
as Nanny Vi. She now fixed her hair in the same tight knot at the back of
her own head because there was no time to mess with it. Lots of things were
gone, like real tea parties and loose tresses catching in the sweat of her
face as she worked in the vegetable and flower garden.
Her
grandmother hadn't been out of the house in several weeks. On their last
trip to Bridgeville for flour and lard, Nanny Vi had started talking to dead
people again as if they were still alive. Raine decided she couldn't allow
her grandmother to be exposed to the sad, questioning eyes that remembered a
different Vidalia Foster, the strong horsewoman and doll maker who was now a
frail woman talking nonsense. Raine had to lock the outside doors and push
the furniture to block interior access to the dangerous, uninhabitable
second floor of the house when Nanny Vi was in a wandering mood.
There was also
a debt to pay Brady. When she saw him on the last trip, Brady had told her,
"I gave your grandmother a three-cent stamp. Paid for it myself." He'd
watched Nanny Vi place a packet of papers in the mailbox at the general
store while Raine was putting the parcels in the mule cart. Raine still
hadn't figured out how Nanny Vi had gotten to the notepaper or managed to
hide the envelope. She'd have to apologize to the postmaster if he
discovered her grandmother's gibberish in with the rest of the mail. The
last time she'd been in town, he was in bed with a mustard plaster and hot
lemonade and whiskey, fighting a cold well away from the post office. The
apology to the postmaster could wait, but when she went to general store at
the end of the week, she was going to give Brady the three pennies she'd
scraped together. Mrs. Simpson would be paying her tomorrow.
The wasted
money wasn't the only thing. Neither Raine nor Nanny Vi had worked in the
doll making business for more than a year. There was neither a market for
the expensive porcelain dolls, nor the money to buy the intricate parts for
the fragile beauties, their ornate clothes, or the expensive rocking eyes
that opened when the dolls were upright and closed when the dolls slumbered
in their bed. There was nothing else left to sell at the Foster place to buy
the doll parts. All the money they had went for food and necessities. The
old mule was the only stock left in the barns, as well as the only thing
they were still able to feed besides themselves.
Nanny Vi and
Raine had tried to keep the doll making tradition going with cloth dolls and
even corn husk dolls. They sold only a few because people could make them
from their own scraps and fields. Then Nanny Vi got sick. The only dolls
they made now were for people with no money who needed dolls for gifts and
holidays. Raine kept her hope and talent alive by collecting the best of the
scratchy corn husks and the faded cloth pieces that were too small for her
neighbors' quilts.
Raine wondered
how long they'd last this way. As if the house falling down around them
weren't enough, a few weeks earlier Nanny Vi had started chatting with two
invisible people. The old woman called to them restively day and night.
"Where are you, Ben?" she'd call. "Are you going to come in here soon,
Charlotte?" Raine didn't want to do it, thinking that giving in to her
grandmother's demands weakened the woman's faltering grasp on reality, but
finally she fashioned two more dolls to represent these unknown people. No
matter how many times Raine tried to ask her grandmother about them, Nanny
Vi wouldn't say that Raine had never known a Charlotte and Ben.
The young
woman had learned a hard lesson in keeping the peace. The last time Raine
had tried to tell her grandmother that Raine's parents, as well as Nanny
Vi's husband and parents, were all buried on the small sloped hill at the
edge of their property, Nanny Vi had left the house. While Raine was working
in the vegetable garden, Nanny Vi wandered two farms over calling for her
husband, who she thought had gone over to the Nelson farm to sharpen his
garden tools on the sharpening stone that Raine and everyone else in the
neighborhood knew had been sold two years ago in the property sale after
Ella Nelson died. Mr. Nelson had died five years earlier, and nothing was
going to get sharpened that day except the gossips' tongues as they passed
along this sad tale about Nanny Vi and her out-of-her-head wanderings.
Raine never
again wanted to feel that pressure in her chest or cry out in terror as she
had after her grandmother's irrational flight from the house. So she kept
her peace and her information to herself while hushing her grandmother and
working on creating Charlotte and Ben dolls from wood and cloth. Then after
they'd had their late lunch and a trip to the outhouse, she dutifully placed
them in the doll circle around her grandmother's rickety upholstered chair.
Raine lifted her eyebrows in frustration, but said nothing.
Suddenly Raine
heard a noise. There was someone at the vegetable stand. Bridey Taylor had
told her she would come by to get cabbages after she'd dropped off the
laundry at Judge Marshall's house.
After she paid
the nickel for several large heads, Bridey rubbed her chafed hands. "I wish
the Judge didn't want so much starch in his shirts," she said. "I can't
understand how the stiffness can give me such a rash and the Judge's neck
still stay as smooth as baby's bottom."
Raine gave her
a dollop of udder cream on a piece of brown paper tied in a rag.
"Thank you,"
Bridey said. "I need to get home to my laundry, but you know I wish I'd had
the time to listen to the old men at the general store. Might've had some
news to share." She looked in her bag. "They seemed mighty interested in
some tale or another." She recalled the men sitting around the general store
when she went to get more starch powder. "Earll Miller and his boys all
seemed like cats that had swallowed canaries, sure enough. If I wasn't so
tired, I'd have asked them what was up. Even looked at my skirt hem to see
if my slip was showing, they looked so beady-eyed."
Concentrating
on her next chore, Raine began to empty and carry the last of the ragtag
collection of buckets, pails, and cans to her garden of water collected from
the holes in the roof, which sat under the partial protection of a stately
oak. The tree took the brunt of the hot sun and showers, protecting the
fragile garden stems. Raine had taken a chance planting a few rows of corn
earlier than usual, and the stalks had withstood the early heat and all the
rain. She hoped these would bring her some extra money as well.
As Raine was
considering which spring flowers would make a nice bouquet for Mrs.
Simpson's dinner table, she heard a familiar voice whisper from the bushes,
"Miss Raine, I got to talk to you."
"Brady? What
you doing in the bushes?" Raine asked in an amused tone.
"Don't say my
name again, and keep doing what you're doing. This is important!" Brady
replied in a harsh whisper. Raine was confused, but she tried not to be
stiff and unnatural as she concentrated on the flowers.
"I'm taking
some flowers to the Simpsons' tomorrow," was all she could think to say.
"I can't stay
long, but there's some bad news." Brady gulped. He didn't know how to say
it, but knowing that Miss Raine was his friend and that she needed to know,
he kept going anyway. "Earll Miller said his lady friend, Vestell Wright,
told him Mr. Vitman is coming over to ask you to be his bride."
Raine stood up
straight like someone had struck her full force in the back. The flowers she
looked at became hazy and then came back into focus. She grabbed her waist
with her hands as if she were protecting herself from a sudden icy cold.
"You sure?"
"Miss Raine,
you know me better. I wouldn't tell you no lie or risk being fired from my
job for no foolishness," Brady replied, still fidgeting in his bent-leg
position, making sure he had his one good foot on the ground in case anyone
had followed him from the general store. Mr. Vitman had plenty of spies down
at the cotton gin, paid to do anything. A running start was all he asked if
he'd been followed.
Raine
swallowed and, not having enough breath as her heart pounded in her throat,
whispered, "You go home now, Brady, and be careful. I thank you, and I'll
take it from here." Her hands reached for the flower stems she was looking
at and caressed the thin, green shafts. It was as if she'd seen her own
death certificate signed. After a few short words, she now knew she'd have
to leave and never return. She couldn't turn Emil Vitman down and live
anywhere near Bridgeville. Vitman would poison everything if he thought she
had crossed him. She'd need to exile herself from everything she knew and
loved in order to save her own life because she knew he'd either have her or
see her dead.
What am I going to do and
how am I going to do it?
she wondered as iciness crept through her. Emil Vitman had been drinking,
carousing, and fighting his way around the area for years now. Why should
she be the target of his matrimonial plans? Ever since his daddy had died in
the same flu epidemic that killed her parents, there was no one to bridle
that erratic man or his goons, who acted first and then used Vitman's money
to get themselves out of trouble later. He was as mean as a snake and twice
as dangerous, because in addition to money, he had the added currency of
family connections of many generations' standing. Several people had died in
the last few years because they had come too close to Vitman's temper. Who
could say anything when the evildoer owned most of the town and paid off the
people who knew things? Raine needed to plan -- and fast. Thank goodness
Brady's warning had bought her some time, she thought as she closed her eyes
and took a deep breath.
When Raine
tried not to think about Brady's news, her mind would snatch it back to
conscious thought at the sheer enormity and horror of the prospect. Emil
Vitman was not a patient man, so she'd have to play for time. There was
Nanny Vi to think of; she was gone from her right mind more often now.
Perhaps this would give Raine some leeway.
For all his
hell-raising, Emil was a stickler for propriety in other people. A raving
grandmother-in-law in the Vitman mansion wasn't something Emil would want,
and Raine wasn't going to send her grandmother to the state sanitarium. She
could play on people's sentiments about a granddaughter wanting to keep her
only living relative near her, even if people did think Nanny Vi was crazy
now. Raine wasn't sure. In her estimation, there seemed to be room for only
one crazy person in the Vitman place, and that was Emil himself.
Emil Vitman
was the product of the lovely, too-pampered daughter of a rum merchant who
died a few days after his child's birth and the watered-down bloodline of
formerly hardworking, respectable stock on his father's side. Fortunately
for him, respect died hard, and connections could be bought in these lean
times. So Emil successfully greased palms and mended fences after his binge
blackouts and rages. As his neighbors, staff, and store patrons attested, he
became progressively more moody as his sober hours shrank.
As word spread
about the possible wedding, some observers were sarcastic enough to wonder
in private if his increasingly surly moods might match the less frequent
lucid moments of his future fiancée's grandmother. Although all the gossips
in town observed that Emil's good looks were fading under the constant
barrage of liquor, they made their comments outside of his earshot to avoid
becoming the focus of his erratic, vengeful temper. They never knew when
they might need a favor from the puffy-eyed, preening Vitman.
When Vitman
made up his mind, he could not be dissuaded. He was convinced that Raine
Foster was the answer to his problems. Raine, his soon to be
ever-so-grateful wife, would take care of the store and his petty problems.
Acting on his orders, his muscled assistants from the cotton gin could
concentrate on handling more important things. He'd be free to consider
weightier matters and give orders to all of them from the comfort of the
leather chair in his library, with the cut-glass decanter of bourbon at his
side.
Although
nearly penniless, Raine had a fine pedigree, which certainly counted in his
community. She could smooth things over on the church and social fronts.
He'd keep the books of his businesses, set the credit rules, and let her run
the rest -- just as long as she didn't ask to fix up that wreck of a
homestead she and her grandmother were living in. Their ramshackle home had
to be filled with all kinds of must and contagion, proof that Raine came
from hardy stock and would make an excellent broodmare for his many
forthcoming children. They would be her responsibility, too, he thought as
he considered the delights of home, hearth, and business. Perhaps he could
even manage some discreet dalliances on the side.
He had to plan
carefully. Just to be safe from the decaying pile of lumber Raine called
home, he would call her out on the lawn to talk about his plans and their
upcoming marriage. With her hand-to-mouth existence, she couldn't last much
longer. If his spies had it right, there were only a few dolls left from her
great-great-grand-mother's collection of French dolls. If Raine stretched
the money, it would last a year at most. Then there would be nothing else
except her vegetables and flowers to sustain her and her grandmother.
Emil thought a
minute. He could send Sweeney from the cotton gin over to steal the dolls
and hasten the process. He tucked the possibility away as a last resort in
order to get his way. Though he relished winning by any means necessary, he
still considered matrimony a fine, honorable thing. He wouldn't use any more
force than necessary, unless Miss Raine gave him a reason to reconsider his
tactics.
Emil looked in
the mirror at his relatively handsome face, missing the signals of his
increasing liquor consumption -- reddening facial skin and the beginning of
tiny broken blood vessels around his nose. He turned his head and admired
the legendary Vitman cocoa brown hair, which kept its color well for all the
men in the family until near the time they entered the hereafter.
There had been
a few other changes in Emil. At thirty-seven, he had taken to wearing vests
even in the warmest weather because the material hid his burgeoning waist.
His blue eyes were a bit bloodshot, but there was always some ragweed
around, wasn't there? He turned a bit to consider his profile. With his long
legs, he still rode a horse well when he thought to take to horseback. But
he preferred the sedan Brady Fell washed and waxed every Wednesday morning,
or whenever Emil wanted to remove any grime from Bridgeville's puddles and
ruts. Brady could restock shelves or take inventory later. Emil enjoyed
seeing his reflection in the clean coal-black finish of his Packard.
Should that be
the way he greeted his ladylove? Emil wondered. No, he thought, as he
considered the classics his tutor had read to him those long ago years when
he couldn't be bothered to pick them up himself. Even then, he had been
misunderstood at the community school. His father had hired a tutor for him,
but the thin, spindly-legged man -- named Harris, if Emil remembered
correctly -- ran away one night with some farmer's daughter from the other
side of town. In the grand style of romantic literature, Emil thought, he
should ride over to the Foster house on his horse, Renegade, to impress Miss
Raine. Women liked that kind of romantic drivel.
When Raine
Foster said yes, his ride over on horseback was all the romance she was
going to get besides her wedding day. So he'd go to the trouble of having
his stable hands wash and curry Renegade and then make sure Mrs. Wright got
the horse smell out of his clothes after he got back from the Foster place.
Emil fished
into the breast pocket of his gold satin vest, feeling for the ring taken
from his Aunt Clara's body after she had died seven years ago. If memory
served Emil correctly, her hand and Miss Raine's were similar, so there was
no use in wasting good money. After all, there was still the cost of the
wedding bands. Besides, didn't women like sentiment? He could tell Raine
some cock-and-bull story and save himself the cost of a new engagement ring.
She wouldn't be wearing it long anyway after she started working in the
store and taking care of their children. It would just come back to him and
sit in his jewelry box. She'd get a plain gold band to mark her as his wife.
After a
heaping breakfast of country ham and eggs with Mrs. Wright's biscuits,
followed by a light bourbon and water to brace himself, Emil Vitman set out
for the Foster farm on Renegade at a light trot. Although he loved the
thought of flying through the air on a galloping horse, he saw no reason
today to jump fences and get the horse or himself sweaty. Emil patted his
Aunt Clara's ring in his vest pocket. As he reined in his fine black horse
about fifty yards from Raine's front door, a light breeze rippled through
the tall shading oak trees at the front of the once-proud Foster home.
Wandering Hearts - a Novel
Published by Phoenix Publishing Corp.; August 2006;$14.95US; 978-0970886095
Copyright © 2006 Phoenix
Publishing Corp.
Copyright © 2006 Phoenix
Publishing Corp.
About the author:
Donna J. Gristanti is a Tucson, Arizona based fiction writer.
Wandering Hearts,
her first published novel, was written over a five year period. A former senior
nursing administrator, she now divides her time between writing, family, and
church.