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LIGHT BLUE FLAMES LICKED THE DENTED BOTTOM OF THE OLD COPPER TEAKETTLE, making it rock like an unsteady sailor. A moment later, the soft whistle emanating from its spout escalated into an urgent scream. To some, the soundālike the cry of a hungry babyāmight be unnerving, but to Libby Tennyson it was welcome. She hurried into the kitchen, carrying the small denim overalls sheād been mending and clicked off the burner. The ancient kettle squeaked and sputtered indignantly, and thenālike a baby that has just latched onāsettled contentedly. Libby poured steaming water into the pot and dunked a single bag several times before putting the top on to let it steep. The delicate Wedgewood chinaāmiraculously unchippedātwo-cup pot and vintage kettle had both been handed down to her from her grandmother, and Libby had never been able to make a āpot of comfortā without thinking of the indomitable force of nature that Gram had been.
Elisabeth McCormack Jansen, or āBet,ā as sheād been called by her husbandāand after whom Libby had been namedāwas a new wife and expectant mother when the Great Sadnessāas she called itāstruck the nation, and one of the many lessons the young woman learned during those lean years was that twoāeven threeācups of tea, strong enough to provide a measure of comfort, could be made from a single bag. Bet Jansenās thrift was legendary. Her family loved to recount her resourcefulnessāfrom canning and pickling every kind of fruit and vegetable (including watermelon rind!) to being able to āmake doā with whatever she had on hand, even concocting a delectable, hearty version of Stone Soup (minus the stone) with the last of the root vegetables in her cellar. She also had the eccentric habit of mixing breakfast cereals, and whenever her grandchildren declined to give her favorite combinationāCorn Flakes and Honey Grahamsāa try, sheād tease: You donāt know what youāre missing! She washed and reused aluminum foil, served boiled hot dogs on toasted white bread, smothered with spicy mustard and sweet homemade pickle relish, had the mildly obsessive habit (before OCD was a diagnosis) of wrapping her bread in two plastic bags to keep it fresh, and she religiously touted the health benefits of prune juice, insisting that one small glass kept her āregularā while dutifully squeezing a small daily glass of fresh OJ for her husband. To say that Henrik Jansen was not a fan of the thick brown substance of which his wife sang praises would be an understatement. In fact, whenever she offered him some, he made a silly scrunched-up face that made his grandchildren fall apart in giggles . . . and made Gram roll her eyes. Gram had been a tiny wisp of a woman with a heart the size of Tennessee, and although her spitfire spirit and stalwart faith had the power to move mountains, she maintained her frugal ways all her life, even after her cup once again overflowed with blessings. And her youngest granddaughterāand namesakeāwas cut from the same cloth.
Libby set her hen-shaped egg timer for seven minutesājust like her grandmother hadāand waited for her tea to steep. It was trueāshe and Gram had a great many things in commonāso many, in fact, that her grandfather had teasingly called her Mini-Bet. Not only had they shared the same name, but Libby had also inherited her grandmotherās cornflower blue eyes and kind smile, her silky brunette-turned-prematurely-silver hair, and her never-idle hands; and both women, try as they might to have daughters, had only given birth to sonsāBet, five strapping boys, the youngest of whom was Libbyās dad, Dutch; and Libby, six of her ownāand now, Libby mused wistfully, they had one more thing in commonāthe aching sadness of becoming widows at much too young an age.
Libby watched the sun slip out from behind the slate-gray clouds and make its first appearance of the day before sinking below the dark horizon. It had been raining since dawn. The weatherman said there was even a chance of snow!āa rare occurrence in eastern Tennessee, especially in late April, but at that moment, the fiery orb was sending coral streaks across the sliver of cobalt sky, and casting an ethereal golden light on the ancient oak tree that stood like a sentinel in the middle of their windswept fields. The Tennyson Tree, the boys called itāthe tree under which Caleāand now Jackāwere buried.
Melancholy hour, Libby thoughtāthe time of day that had once kept her so busy making dinner, helping her boys with homework, and prodding them to finish their chores that she hadnāt had time to notice the setting sun. But now, as it streamed through the windows, washing the walls with a golden light, all she could hear was the tumbling teasing voices of her sons echoing through the rooms, along with her husbandās stern commands. A lifetime of memories. Sweet memories.
It had been eight months since Jack died and Libby still couldnāt believe he was gone. She kept expecting him to come through the door and pull her into a playful hug. Tall, handsome, and strong as a bear, Jackās six-foot-four frame and larger-than-life personality had filled a room, but after a valiantāalbeit briefābattle with cancer, heād become a shadow of the man sheād married. And then, on a sun-kissed summer dayāthe kind of day that should have found him out baling hay or harvesting cornāheād succumbed to the dreadful disease, and his fighting spirit had slipped away, a whisper on the wind. Four months after that, Dutch died, too. Her two anchors in life taken from her, and it had been more than she could bear.
She turned from the window, poured a cup of tea, and held it in her hands, letting the heat seep into her aching joints. āOh, Jack,ā she whispered, feeling tears sting her eyes, but when she heard the knob of the mudroom door turn, she quickly brushed them away.
āGrandma?ā a small voice called.
āIn here,ā Libby called back.
āOh, no! Hold on . . .ā the flustered voice called, and then, āDang it, Gran! Is it okay if Goodness and Mercy come in? Because theyāre in!ā
āItās okay, hon,ā Libby assured her granddaughter as the two tiger catsāone orange, one grayāscampered across the worn linoleum. She smiled, remembering how Chaseāwho had an affinity for rescuing and befriending orphaned animalsāfound two kittens behind the shed when he was around seven years old, and it had been at around the same time heād been tasked with memorizing the Twenty-Third Psalm, so when the kittens imprinted on him and started following him everywhere he went, he christened them with their biblical names.
āSorry,ā Ellie said as she kicked her barn boots onto the mat. āCats are so sneakyāthey just slink around, spying on you. I think they were waiting in the shadows for me to open the door.ā
āProbably,ā Libby said, chuckling as she watched the cats curl up together on the soft fleecy dog bed near the woodstove. āAre you and Dad done milking?ā
āAlmost. Uncle Eli and Uncle Grayson are helping him. He said I could come in for a minute. Boy, itās really gettinā to be mud season out there!ā
Libby nodded, remembering all too well the mud and manure her six sons and husband tromped through when they were feeding and milking their five hundred cows. The washing, hanging, ironing, and folding of laundry (not to mention the pairing of socks!) had been endless. She certainly didnāt miss it . . . or did she? Now, the thankless chore fell to her sonsā wives. Matt, Eli, and Grayson continued to run the farm, but theyād all married country girls whoād known the mud they were getting into.
āWould you like a cup of tea?ā she asked, eyeing her granddaughter.
āEarl Gray?ā the little girl asked hopefully, shaking off the chill and holding her hands out to the woodstove.
āIs there any other kind for a day like today?ā
Ellie swept her blond hair out of her cornflower blue eyesāa combination of genetic traits that ran as strong as thistle in the stubborn Tennyson line. āLemon, too, please.ā
Libby poured a second cup, squeezed in a slice of lemon, picked up the overalls, and brought both to the table. āThese are little Jackās.ā
Ellie eyed the knees. āWere you able to patch āem?ā
āDoes a cow give milk?ā
The little girl smiled. āHow come you always do that, Grandma?ā
āDo what?ā
āAnswer a question with a question.ā
āHow come you ask so many questions?ā
āYou just did it again!ā Ellie exclaimed. She held her hands over the cup and breathed in the fragrant citrusy steam. āGrampa used to do it, too,ā she added, smiling. āI miss him . . . and Dutch.ā
āMe too,ā Libby said, āand I think it comes from having so many children asking so many questions all the time.ā
Ellie blew softly on the surface of her tea. āWhy did you have so many kids?ā
āSo we could put them to work, of course,ā her grandmother teased, as if the answer should be obvious. āAs you well know, there are plenty of chores around here.ā
āTrue,ā the little girl agreed. From the moment sheād been able to walk, Ellie had accompanied her dad to her grandparentsā farm to āhelpā with all those choresāfrom feeding the chickens to leaning her cheek against the warm belly of a big bovine and skillfully tug on its smooth teats, squirting fresh milk into a bucket or into the open mouth of one of the many barn cats that patrolled the premises. Ellie had beenāas her dad loved to teaseāborn an old farmhand. Now she eyed her grandmother. āGran, did you ever want a girl?ā
Libby nodded. āOh, yes. I have so many recipes and kitchen secrets to pass along . . .ā
āGood thing you have me,ā the spunky ten-year-old chirped.
āGood thing!ā Libby agreed.
āMom says I broke the all-boy streak.ā
āYou did indeed . . . and now we have Maddie on our team, too.ā
Ellie nodded, thinking about her younger brother and all her cousins. Out of ten Tennyson grandchildren, only two were girlsāEllie and her newest cousin, Madison . . . and although there were two more buns in the ovenāas her mom, Jodi, liked to say, the gender reveal confetti for both expectees had been blue. āMaybe Uncle Gage and Uncle Chase will have girls.ā
āMaybe,ā Libby replied, trying to tuck away her worry by taking a sip of tea. Gage, her second oldest, at thirty-seven, had recently gotten engaged, and he and his fiancĆ©e, Maeve Lindstrom, were planning to get married on the farm in June, but Libby didnāt know what the future held for her youngest son. At twenty-eight, Chaseās life was unfolding in ways she hadnāt expectedāor maybe sheād just been in denial, and with a motherās heart, she worriedādespite Gageās reassuranceāthat Chase might never experience the wonder of being a dad.
āWhatās wrong, Grandma?ā Ellie asked softly.
Libby looked up, instantly pulled back to the present, and mustered a smile. āNothing, hon,ā she lied, and then eyed her granddaughterās cup. āWould you like some more tea?ā
āMaybe a spot,ā Ellie replied, mimicking her favorite British TV character, Hyacinth Bucket. āJust to warm it up,ā she added with a grin.
Libby brought the teapot over and warmed up both of their cups.
āWe have to remember to watch The Great British Baking Show and Keeping Up Appearances this Saturday,ā Ellie said, thinking ahead to her weekly sleepover night, a routine that had begun shortly after her grandfather died.
āDonāt we always?ā
āWe didnāt last week.ā
āWhy is that?ā Libby asked, frowning.
āBecause we played cribbage and lost track of time.ā
āOh, right,ā Libby said, nodding.
Just then, the mudroom doorknob turned again, and a second later, Libbyās third-oldest son, Matt, peered in, his cheeks ruddy from working outside. āYou ready, kiddo?ā
āHello to you, too,ā Libby said.
āHi, Mom,ā he said, smiling. āIād come in, but I donāt think it would make you happy,ā he said, gesturing to his muddy boots.
āThatās quite all right,ā Libby said, nodding as Ellie wrapped her arms around her.
āSee you tomorrow, Gran. The sunās supposed to come out.ā
āDo you think weāll recognize it?ā Libby teased, squeezing her.
āIām told itās a big fiery ball,ā Ellie said, laughing.
āWell, weāll jus...