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Light From Heaven




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Acknowledgements

  CHAPTER ONE - A Winter Eden

  CHAPTER TWO - The Vicar

  CHAPTER THREE - Faithful Remnant

  CHAPTER FOUR - Agnes

  CHAPTER FIVE - Loaves and Fishes

  CHAPTER SIX - Above the Cloud

  CHAPTER SEVEN - Go Tell It

  CHAPTER EIGHT - This Dark Hour

  CHAPTER NINE - Keeping the Feast

  CHAPTER TEN - So Shall Ye Reap

  CHAPTER ELEVEN - A Clean Heart

  CHAPTER TWELVE - Covered Dish

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN - Flying the Coop

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN - Hungry and Imperfect

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN - Shady Grove

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN - Cake

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN - A Full House

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN - Wisely Measures

  CHAPTER NINETEEN - Bingo

  CHAPTER TWENTY - A Living Fire

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE - Let the Stable Still Astonish

  Afterword

  PENGUIN BOOKS

  LIGHT FROM HEAVEN

  Jan Karon is the author of nine Mitford novels, At Home in Mitford; A Light in the Window; These High, Green Hills; Out to Canaan; A New Song; A Common Life; In This Mountain; Shepherds Abiding; and Light from Heaven, all available from Penguin. She is also the author of The Mitford Bedside Companion; Jan Karon’s Mitford Cookbook & Kitchen Reader; A Continual Feast; Patches of Godlight; The Mitford Snowmen: A Christmas Story; Esther’s Gift; and The Trellis and the Seed. Her children’s books include Miss Fannie’s Hat; Jeremy: The Tale of an Honest Bunny; Violet Comes to Stay; and Violet Goes to the Country.

  www.mitfordbooks.com

  Join the Mitford community online to share news, recipes, birthday greetings, and more, and to receive notes from Jan and special offers.

  PENGUIN BOOKS

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street,

  New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.

  Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4P 2Y3 (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.) • Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England • Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd) • Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd) • Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi - 110 017, India • Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd) • Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa

  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices:

  80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

  First published in in the United States of America by Viking Penguin,

  a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.2005

  Published in Penguin Books 2008

  Copyright © Jan Karon, 2005

  Illustrations copyright © Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 2005

  All rights reserved

  “Let the Stable Still Astonish” by Leslie Leyland Fields, appearing in Christmas: An Annual Treasury (Augsburg Fortress, Minneapolis, 1995).

  PUBLISHER’S NOTE

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  eISBN : 978-1-440-63296-9

  CIP data available

  Illustrations by Donna Kae Nelson

  The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  http://us.penguingroup.com

  For my sister and brothers,

  Brenda Wilson Furman, Barry Dean Setzer,

  and Phillip Randolph Setzer,

  who helped me become better

  than I might have been . . .

  And in memory of Clarence Bush,

  beloved younger brother of my grandmother

  (Miss Fannie), who perished in World War I,

  and all the brothers and sisters who have

  given their lives in mortal conflict

  and are lost to us forever.

  Acknowledgments

  James Davison Hunter; Colin Hunter; Kevin Coleman; Mac McClung; Ed Abernathy; Jessi Baker; Gloria Berberich; Brenda Hyson; Fr. Anthony Andres; Stewart Brown; Fr. Edwin Pippin; Cook’s Illustrated; Robert Mares; Betty Pitts; Tanya Faidley; Alex Heath; Bobbie Dietz; Kathy Campbell; Melissa Wait.

  Lacey Wood; Wayne Erbsen; Bill Watson; Carol Hill; The Anglican Digest; Mike Thacker; Cheryl Lewis; Rick Moore; Joel Valente; Bonnie Setzer; Johanna Farmer; Mrs. Scott Newton, deceased; Susan Cunningham; Brenda Furman; Goldie Stargell; Lillian Ballard; John (J. D.) Diven; Martha Sanusi; Tal Bonham; Royce Elliott; Jeff Pozniak; Judy Austin; Marcelle Morel; Wendell Winn Jr.; David Vander Meulen; Mary Ann Odom.

  Dr. Paul Klas; Dr. August Sanusi; Dave Archer; Charlene Norris; Dr. Chris Grover; Fr. Peter Way; Dr. Christopher Holstege; Can-dace Freeland.

  Special thanks to: Bishop Keith Ackerman; Joann Ackerman; Brad Van Lear; Richard Rankin; Polly Hawkes.

  Light from Heaven

  If thou indeed derive thy light from Heaven, Then, to the measure of that heaven-born light, Shine, Poet! In thy place, and be content . . .

  —WILLIAM WORDSWORTH

  CHAPTER ONE

  A Winter Eden

  The first flake landed on a blackberry bush in the creek bottom of Meadowgate Farm.

  In the frozen hour before dawn, others found their mark on the mossy roof of the smokehouse; in a grove of laurel by the northwest pasture; on the handle of a hoe left propped against the garden fence.

  Close by the pond in the sheep paddock, a buck, a doe, and two fawns stood motionless as an owl pushed off from the upper branches of a pine tree and sailed, silent and intent, to the ridge of the barn roof.

  The owl hooted once, then twice.

  As if summoned by its velveteen cry, the platinum moon broke suddenly from the clouds above the pond, transforming the water’s surface into a gleaming lake of molten pearl.

  Then, clouds sailed again over the face of the moon, and in the bitter darkness, snowflakes fell thick and fast, swirling as in a shaken globe.

  It was twelve minutes after six o’clock when a gray light rose above the brow of Hogback Mountain, exposing an imprint of tractor tires that linked Meadowgate’s hay barn to the cow pasture and sheep paddock. The imprints of work boots and dog paws were also traceable along the driveway to the barn, and back to the door of the farmhouse, where smoke puffed from the chimney and lamplight shone behind the kitchen windows.

  From a tulip poplar at the northeast corner to the steel stake at the southwest, all hundred and thirty acres of Meadowgate Farm lay under a powdery blanket of March snow.

  Cynthia Kavanagh stood in the warmth of the farmhouse kitchen in a chenille robe, and gazed out on the hushed landscape.

  “It makes everything innocent again,” she said. “A winter Eden.”

  At the pine table, Father Timothy Kavanagh leafed through his quote journal until he found the record he’d jotted down. “Unbelievable! We’ve had snow one, two, three, four . . . this is the fifth time since Christmas Eve.”

  “Snow, snow, and more snow
!”

  “Not to mention dogs, dogs, and more dogs! It looks like somebody backed up to the door and dumped a truckload of canines in here.”

  Following his customary daylight romp, Barnabas, a Bouvier-wolfhound mix and his boon companion of ten years, was drowned in slumber on the hearth rug; Buckwheat, an English foxhound grown long in the tooth, had draped herself over the arm of the sofa; the Welsh corgi, aptly named Bodacious, snored in a wing chair she had long ago claimed as her own; and Luther, a recent, mixed-breed addition to the Meadowgate pack, had slung himself onto his bed in the corner, belly up. There was a collective odor of steam rising from sodden dog hair.

  “Ugh!” said his wife, who was accustomed to steam rising off only one wet dog.

  Father Tim looked up from the journal in which he was transcribing notes collected hither and yon. “So what are you doing today, Kavanagh?”

  Cynthia mashed the plunger of the French coffee press. “I’m doing the sketch of Violet looking out the kitchen window to the barn, and I’m calling Puny to find out about the twins—they’re days late, you know.”

  “Good idea. Expected around March fourth or fifth, and here it is the fourteenth. They’ll be ready for kindergarten.”

  “And you must run to Mitford with the shopping list for Dooley’s homecoming dinner tomorrow.”

  “Consider it done.”

  His heart beat faster at the thought of having their boy home for spring break, but the further thought of having nothing more to accomplish than a run to The Local was definitely discouraging. Heaven knows, there was hardly anything to do on the farm but rest, read, and walk four dogs; he’d scarcely struck a lick at a snake since arriving in mid-January. Willie Mullis, a full-timer who’d replaced the part-time Bo Davis, lived on the place and did all the odd jobs, feeding up and looking after livestock; Joyce Havner did the laundry and cleaning, as she’d done at Meadowgate for years; Blake Eddistoe ran the vet clinic, only a few yards from the farmhouse door, with consummate efficiency; there was even someone to bush hog and cut hay when the season rolled around.

  In truth, it seemed his main occupation since coming to farm-sit for the Owens was waiting to hear from his bishop, Stuart Cullen, who had e-mailed him before Christmas.

 
 
 
  He had scratched his head throughout the month of January, trying to reckon what the challenge might be. In February, he’d called Stuart, attempting to gouge it out of him, but Stuart had asked for another couple of weeks to get the plan together before he spilled the beans.

  Now, here they were in the middle of March, and not a word.

  “You’re sighing, Timothy.”

  “Wondering when Stuart will get off the pot.”

  “He’s retiring in June and consecrating the cathedral—altogether, a great deal to say grace over. You’ll hear soon, dearest.”

  She handed him a mug of black coffee, which he took with gratitude.

  So here he sat, retired from nearly four decades of active ministry as a priest, toasting himself by an open fire with his good-humored and companionable wife of seven years, and situated in what he believed to be the most breathtakingly beautiful countryside in America.

  Why bother, after all, about some “challenge” that may or may not be coming. Hadn’t he had challenges enough to last him a lifetime?

  His wife, on the other hand, was ever drumming up a challenge. During their year at the farm, conveniently located twenty minutes from Mitford, she’d decided to accomplish three lifetime goals: learn needlepoint, make perfect oven fries, and read War and Peace.

  “So how’s it coming with War and Peace?”

  “I despise telling you this, but I haven’t opened it once. I’m reading a charming old book called Mrs. Miniver.”

  “And the fries?”

  “Since Dooley comes tomorrow, I’ll be conducting my next experiment—to see whether soaking the potatoes in ice water will make them crispier. And I’m definitely using peanut oil this time.”

  “I’ll peel and cut,” he said. He hadn’t seen any activity around the needlepoint plan, so he declined to mention it.

  “Pathetic,” she said, reading his mind. “I’m all thumbs. Learning from a book is not the way to do it. I’ve decided to let Olivia tutor me, if she has a free day now and then. Besides, having lunch with someone who also wears eye shadow might be fun.”

  “I’m definitely a dud in the eye shadow department.”

  She thumped into the wing chair opposite him and took a sip from her coffee mug. “And what about you, dearest? Have you accomplished all your lifetime goals?”

  Oddly, the question stung him. “I suppose I haven’t thought about it.” Maybe he hadn’t wanted to think about having any further goals.

  He closed his eyes and leaned his head against the back of the wing chair. “I believe if I were charged with having a goal, it would be to live without fretting—to live more fully in the moment, not always huffing about as I’ve done in recent years . . . to live humbly—and appreciatively—with whatever God furnishes.”

  He reflected for a moment and raised his head and looked at her. “Yes.That would be my goal.”

  “But aren’t you doing that?”

  “No. I feel obligated to get out there, to open myself to some new and worthwhile service. I’ve been a bump on a log these last weeks.”

  “It’s OK to be a bump on a log once in a while. ‘Be still,’ He tells us, ‘and know that I am God.’ We must learn to wait on Him, Timothy. All those years of preaching and celebrating, and doing the interim at Whitecap—what a lovely legacy God allowed you to have there; and ministering to Louella and Miss Sadie and Hélène Pringle and Morris Love and George Gaynor and Edith Mallory and the Leepers . . .” She took a deep breath. “On and on, an entire community, for heaven’s sake, not to mention volunteering at the Children’s Hospital and rounding up Dooley’s little sister and brothers ...”

  “One brother still missing,” he said, “and what have I done about it?”

  “There may be nothing you can do about it. There’s absolutely nothing to go on, no leads of any kind. Maybe God alone can do something about it. Perhaps Kenny is God’s job.”

  The fire crackled on the hearth; the dogs snored.

  His wife had just preached him a sermon, and it was one he needed to hear. He had a mate who knew precisely what was what, especially when he didn’t.

  “‘Let us then be up and doing,’” he quoted from Longfellow, “‘with a heart for any fate!’ Where’s the grocery list?”

  “In my head at present, but let’s get it out.” She opened the small drawer in the lamp table and removed her notebook and pen.

  “Steak!” She scribbled. “Same old cut?”

  “Same old, same old. New York strip.” This would be no Lenten fast, but a Lenten feast for a starving college boy who was seldom home.

  “Russet potatoes,” she said, continuing the litany.

  “Always best for fries.” His blood would soon get up for this cookathon, even if he couldn’t eat much on the menu.While some theologians construed St. Paul’s thorn to be any one of a variety of alarming dysfunctions, he’d been convinced for years that it was the same blasted affliction he’d ended up with—diabetes.

  “Pie crusts,” she said, scribbling on. “Oh, rats. For the life of me, I can’t remember all the ingredients for his chocolate pie, and of course, I didn’t bring my recipe box.”

  “I never liked the recipe we use,” he said, suddenly confessional.

  “You’re not supposed to even touch chocolate pie, Timothy, so what difference do
es it make? Dooley loves it; it isn’t half bad, really.”

  “It needs something.”

  “Like what?”

  “Something more . . . you know.”

  “Whipped cream!”

  His wife loved whipped cream; with the slenderest of excuses, she would slather it on anything.

  “Not whipped cream. Something more like . . .” He threw up his hands; his culinary imagination had lately flown south.

  “Meringue, then.”

  “Meringue!” he said, slapping his leg. “That’s it!”

  She bolted from her chair and trotted to the kitchen counter. “Marge’s recipe box . . . I was thumbing through it the other day and I vaguely remember ... Let’s see ... Onions in Cream Sauce, Penne Pasta with Lump Crab-meat, that sounds good. . . .”

  “Keep going.”

  “Pie!”

  “Bingo.”

  “Buttermilk Pie . . . Vinegar Pie . . . Fresh Coconut ...”

  “Mark that one!”

  “Egg Custard . . . Fresh Peach . . . Deep-Dish Apple ...”

  “Enough,” he said. “I’m only human.”

  “Here it is. Chocolate Pie with Meringue.”

  “Finish that list, Kavanagh, and I’m out of here.”

  Ha! He’d denied himself as sternly as one of the Desert Fathers these last weeks; he would have the tiniest sliver of that pie, or else . . .

  “I know what you’re thinking,” she said.

  He pulled on his jacket and foraged in the pockets for his knit cap, and kissed her warm mouth.

  “You always know what I’m thinking,” he said.

  His hand was on the doorknob when the phone rang.

  “Do try to find a haircut while you’re in town,” she said, picking up the receiver. “You’ve got that John-the-Baptist look again. Hello! Meadowgate Farm.”