Annie Spencer was
just a little nervous as the train pulled into the station at Camden
Corners . She still clung to the newspaper carrying the ad she had
answered two weeks ago.
Wanted: A wife
to our dad and a mother to us. Hope you can cook. The Parker Family,
P.O. Box 72, Camden Corners .
Annie was still
recovering from a broken heart after Peter Stanford ran off with
Eileen Becker last month. She couldn't believe she had actually
gotten on that train yesterday morning and was here in Camden Corners
today. What had she done? She had no money to get back home if Mr.
Parker turned out to be an old reprobate and his children were
monsters.
Annie had worked in
the Stanford Emporium for two years before Peter left her at the
alter and she needed to get away from the town where everyone knew of
her humiliation.
Annie re-read the
letter she had received back from the Parker Family.
Please be here
by Thanksgiving so you can cook our turkey dinner.
She knew she had
lost her mind because nobody in their right one would have been on
the next train to Camden Corners after reading that letter. What was
she going to do now?
Andy Parker, who
had just turned 9 and was much too clever for his own good, had just
left the post office after closing the box he had opened two weeks
before.
He had watched his
Dad do many things as the Postmaster for Camden Corners and knew just
how to fill out the paperwork so that he would be able to receive
answers to his ad.
It didn't take much
to place an ad in the classified section. Mrs. Willard was too busy
at the newspaper office to notice what each ad said and he had broken
into his piggy bank to pay for everything fair and square.
Andy ran toward the
train station just as the passengers were leaving the train. Miss
Annie Spencer, his new mother, was on that train and he would see her
in just a few minutes. He was filled with excitement. She wrote
that she would be wearing a yellow flower on the lapel of her navy
blue winter coat. He waited what seemed to be an eternity and then
he saw her. She was very pretty with dark brown hair tied back with
a yellow ribbon. Her smile made him feel good all over. He was
finding it harder and harder to remember his mama and what she looked
like but he thought she looked a little like the lady who was
standing by the door of the train looking right at him.
Jackson Parker and
his beloved wife, Adele had been married for 10 years and had 3
children when she was stricken with influenza and died in his arms in
the spring of the previous year. Jackson was beside himself with
grief but he put up a brave front for his children. They were well
cared for with the help of their housekeeper, Mrs. Bridges. The kind
folks of Camden Corners were always on hand to offer their support.
Mrs. Bridges was a
wonderful housekeeper and loved the children but she couldn't cook
worth a darn. Jackson hadn't noticed during the first year she was
there because he wasn't paying attention to much of anything then.
Even though she couldn't cook, she was a big help to him and he was
sorry when she told him she would be moving to Bloomfield to be with
her daughter and her new baby. He would have to find someone to take
her place but he didn't want to think about that right now.
He was worried
about Andy. He knew something was going on with him, he had become
very secretive the last couple of weeks. He was going to sit him
down this evening and find out exactly what it was. Jackson worried
about all of his children but Andy had been effected the most by his
mother's death because he was 7 years old at the time and remembered
her more than the other children. Carrie was only 3 and Allison was
just a few months old.
Andy ran up to the
kind lady and asked if she was Miss Annie Spencer.
“Yes, I am young
man. I was to meet the Parker Family here today. Do you know where I
might find them”.
Andy smiled and
introduced himself as Mr. Andrew Parker. He retrieved Annie's bag
and started walking toward his home with his new mother. Annie
thought it was odd that the elder Mr. Parker would send his young son
to meet a stranger who would soon be his wife. They arrived at the
Parker house just as Jackson was wending his way home from the The
Post Office.
Mary Nell Blanchard
was looking after the children for him this afternoon. He would have
to find a permanent arrangement for them. Mary Nell said Andrew
never arrived after school today. She didn't know where he was but
she knew the boys often played ball after school. Jackson had
specifically told Andrew to meet him at the Post Office. It was
definitely the night for a talk.
As Andrew turned at
the corner, Jackson saw him walking with a lovely looking young
woman. He knew he hadn't seen her around town before. If he had, he
would have remembered her.
Andrew excitedly
said “Dad, this is Miss Annie Spencer, your new wife and our new
mother.”
Jackson was
flabbergasted and apologized profusely to Miss Spencer for his son's
rude outburst. He didn't know what had gotten into that boy lately.
Annie was embarrassed. It was obvious Mr. Parker was not aware of
the arrangement she thought had been made between them.
Andrew looked
sheepishly at both of them. “Dad, you need a wife and we need a
mother and Miss Annie is going to cook our Thanksgiving dinner.”
Jackson didn't know
what to do. He invited Miss Spencer to step into their parlor and
out of the frigid air. Andrew confessed to his father what he had
done. Andrew told him to go to his room and take his sisters with
him, he and Miss Spencer were going to have a talk. Jackson was
having a difficult time controlling his temper. Miss Spencer was
obviously up to no good because who in their right mind would answer
an ad like this?
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