One evening, as the sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky in bruises of purple and gold, Rilla sat by the hearth. Susan Baker was busy in the kitchen, her knitting needles clicking like a frantic heartbeat.
She remembered her mother’s stories of the "Green Gables" days, of a girl who imagined a world of white ways of delight. But Rilla’s world was now painted in the drab khaki of uniforms and the stark white of bandages. She had found her own "calling" in the most unexpected way: a soup tureen. Inside it lay a war-baby, a tiny, helpless bundle left behind by a soldier’s broken family.
Rilla looked at her hands—calloused from garden work and red from scrubbing. She wasn't the girl who had danced at the Four Winds lighthouse, dreaming only of her first party. She was a woman of the Red Cross, a mother to a child not her own, and a sister waiting for a miracle.
James Kitchener Anderson—her "little Jims"—was her anchor. Every time she felt the urge to succumb to the "vague, dark shadows" of the casualty lists, Jims would reach out a small, sticky hand, pulling her back to the present.
One evening, as the sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky in bruises of purple and gold, Rilla sat by the hearth. Susan Baker was busy in the kitchen, her knitting needles clicking like a frantic heartbeat.
She remembered her mother’s stories of the "Green Gables" days, of a girl who imagined a world of white ways of delight. But Rilla’s world was now painted in the drab khaki of uniforms and the stark white of bandages. She had found her own "calling" in the most unexpected way: a soup tureen. Inside it lay a war-baby, a tiny, helpless bundle left behind by a soldier’s broken family. Rilla of Ingleside
Rilla looked at her hands—calloused from garden work and red from scrubbing. She wasn't the girl who had danced at the Four Winds lighthouse, dreaming only of her first party. She was a woman of the Red Cross, a mother to a child not her own, and a sister waiting for a miracle. One evening, as the sun dipped below the
James Kitchener Anderson—her "little Jims"—was her anchor. Every time she felt the urge to succumb to the "vague, dark shadows" of the casualty lists, Jims would reach out a small, sticky hand, pulling her back to the present. But Rilla’s world was now painted in the