sure.â
âIâll send Edrina over with a basket right after she gets home from school,â Dara Rose said.
âYou understand that I canât pay you nothinâ,â Peg warned, stiffening her backbone.
âI understand,â Dara Rose confirmed lightly, though every egg her hens laid was precious, since it could be sold for cash money or traded for things she couldnât raise, like flour. âIâve got too many, and I donât want them to go to waste.â
âMama,â Harriet interjected, âwe donâtââ
This time, Dara Rose didnât hush her daughter out loud, but simply squeezed the childâs hand a little more tightly than she might otherwise have done.
âObliged, then,â Peg said, and went back to her stirring.
Dara Rose nodded and started off toward home again, poor Harriet scrambling to keep up.
âMama,â the child insisted, half-breathless, âyou already traded away all the eggs, remember? Over at the mercantile? And the hens probably havenât laid any new ones yet.â
âThere are nearly two dozen in the crock on the pantry shelf,â Dara Rose reminded her daughter. Like the potatoes, carrots, turnips and onions sheâd squirreled away down in the root cellar, along with a few bushels of apples from the tree in her yard, the eggs suspended in water glass were part of her skimpy reserves, something she and the girls could eat if the hens stopped laying or the hawks got them.
âYes,â Harriet reasoned, intrepidly logical, âbut what if thereâs a hard winter and we need to eat them?â
âHarriet,â Dara Rose replied, walking a little faster because it was almost time for Edrina to come home for the midday meal, âthere are times when a person simply has to help somebody who needs a hand and hope the good Lord pays heed and makes recompense.â Parting with a few eggs didnât trouble her nearly as much as the realization that her five-year-old daughter had obviously been worrying about whether or not there would be enough food to get them through.
âWhatâs ârecompenseâ?â Harriet asked.
âNever mind,â Dara Rose answered.
They reached the house, removed their bonnets and their wrapsâDara Roseâs cloak and Harrietâs coatâandDara Rose ladled warm water out of the stove reservoir for the washing of hands.
In her mind, she heard Peg OâReillyâs words of brave despair. The last of the oatmeal is used up, and weâre almost out of pinto beansâ¦.
Peg earned a pittance taking in laundry as it was, and what little money she earned probably went to pay for starvation rations and to meet the rent on that converted chicken coop of a house they all lived in.
As she reheated the canned venison leftover from last nightâs supper, then sliced and thinly buttered the last of the bread sheâd made a few days before, Dara Rose silently reminded herself of something Parnell had often told her. âNo matter how tough things get,â he used to say, âyou wonât have to look far to find somebody else whoâd be glad to trade places with you.â
Her children were healthy, unlike Pegâs eldest, and the three of them had a roof over their heads. And Parnell, at least, hadnât left them willingly, the way Jack OâReilly had done.
Harriet, her motherâs busy little helper, set three places at the table and then dragged a chair over to the side window so she could stand on the seat and keep a lookout for her sister. Although they had their scuffles and tiffs, like all children, Harrietâs admiration for Edrina knew no bounds.
âThere she is!â Harriet shouted gleefully, after a few moments of peering through the glass. âThereâs Edrina!â
Dara Rose smiled and began ladling warm venison and broth into enamel-coated bowls. Sheâd just set the bread plate in