Together AgainLHOP inspired fan fiction by Cheryl C. Malandrinos
Disclaimer: I do not own the Little House on the Prairie television series, book series, or any of the characters. Laura strolled through the open door to the barn and found Pa pulling the harness off the wall.
“Thought you were heading over to Almanzo’s this morning, Half-pint.” Charles strolled toward her, harness in hand. He smiled at Laura and motioned for her to follow him to the wagon. “I wish I could ride you over to Almanzo’s,” he said, adjusting the harness. “But I’m heading in the opposite direction.”
She shrugged. She wasn’t in any great hurry to get there. “That’s okay. I don’t mind walking.”
Laura watched him work, staring as if she had never seen him hitch up the team before. Charles looked up at her a few times, but mostly his eyes focused on his work. When he came around to the other side of the wagon, Charles stopped and rested his hand against the front wheel.
“Something on your mind, Half-pint?”
Laura lowered her eyes and gazed at her fingers that were nervously fumbling with the string of her bag. “I saw you talking to Almanzo last night.”
“U-huh.”
“Well…uh…” She shifted her weight from one foot to the other. “You seemed happy.”
Charles nodded. “I am. The boy just recovered from a serious illness.”
Laura’s hands traveled to her hips and she shifted all her weight onto her left leg.
Doesn’t he remember what Almanzo did to me? Her mouth creased into a frown. “Aren’t you angry for what he did?”
Charles’s eyebrows rose and fell as he nodded. “Oh, that’s what this is all about.”
Laura’s eyes widened and she placed a hand over her chest. “What?” She saw the smile coming before it appeared on his face.
“You think I should hold what he did against him.”
She turned her eyes away. “No,” her voice barely louder than a whisper.
Is it so bad that I hoped Pa could understand? Charles placed a hand on her shoulder and stared the kind of stare that only a father about to impart years of wisdom and life experience could give. Beads of sweat dotted her forehead and she was certain she wasn’t going to like what he had to say.
“Half-pint, Almanzo made a mistake. He let his anger get the best of him and he allowed that anger to guide him in making a decision.” He shrugged. “He probably realized it almost as soon as he got to Sleepy Eye.”
Laura sighed.
Why are men so difficult to understand? “Then why didn’t he come right home?”
Charles’s chuckle filled the air around them and Laura’s anger bubbled up inside her. There was nothing funny in all of this. How could he be so insensitive to her feelings?
“Why didn’t you go apologize to Almanzo after he ate that cinnamon chicken like your ma told you to?”
He just had to bring that up. As if apologizing to Almanzo wasn’t enough, it reminded her of how long it took her to convince Almanzo she wasn’t a little girl and how he threw it right back in her face when she refused to run away with him.
Laura stared at the ground as if captivated by a beautiful painting hanging in a museum. Charles’s firm grip clasped both her shoulders.
“Because you were embarrassed and not ready to admit your mistake. Right?”
His words pounded through her head as she tried to block them out. Almanzo had hurt her. It was natural for her to be angry. Laura nodded, but couldn’t meet her father’s gaze.
“Half-pint, I’m not saying I like what Almanzo did.” He lifted her chin so she was forced to look him in the eye. “I’m just saying that I understand why he did it.”
She nodded half-heartedly and then gazed out over the field behind the house. “I have to get over to Manly’s.” Her voice ragged from containing her emotions, she cleared her throat before picking her books and dinner pail off the floor of the wagon.
Charles caressed her hair and smiled before Laura turned around and headed down the road to the Wilder farm.
*
Laura collapsed onto her bed in an exhausted heap as soon as she slid her nightgown over her head. She couldn’t remember the last time she worked so hard.
After cleaning out the stables and feeding the stock at Almanzo’s, she taught classes during the afternoon while Miss Wilder graded papers. Then it was back to the Wilder farm for afternoon chores followed by homework after supper. Every muscle ached and she couldn’t imagine getting up in the morning.
It seemed like only moments had passed when the sun snuck in through the cracks in the shutters and teased her eyelids open. Stretching and yawning, Laura dressed and fixed her hair. She could hear the clattering of Ma’s pans at the cook stove and raced down the ladder so she could talk to her for a few minutes before her siblings awoke.
“Good morning, Laura.” Caroline’s radiant smile already beamed on her face. “I hope I didn’t wake you.”
Laura shook her head. “I needed to get up anyway.” Laura grabbed her apron from the peg next to where her Ma’s apron hung when not in use. Tying it around her waist, she walked to the cupboard to take out the plates.
“Where’s Pa?” she asked, entering the kitchen with the stack of plates and putting them down on the table next to the stove.
Caroline cracked one egg after the other on the rim of a glass bowl before pulling apart the shells with one hand and stirring a pot of oats with the other. “In the barn.”
Laura wandered into the other room and pulled the cups out of the cupboard and placed one in front of each seat at the table. “Ma?” she called with a sense of timidity. A “yes” floated through the doorway between the kitchen and the front room. “How did you feel when Pa left the Big Woods and you didn’t know where he was?”
For a few seconds, all Laura heard was a flurry of activity in the kitchen. She strolled to the doorway and leaned against the jamb. Laura watched the precision with which her mother worked. Caroline would have everything on the table together, steaming hot, by the time Pa came back from the barn…just like every morning.
“Hurt and angry.” Caroline answered. “Sometimes more one than the other.” Caroline poured the beaten eggs into a heated pan and waited for the edge to form along the sides of the pan before scraping the eggs together.
Laura moved to stir the pot of bubbling oats. Caroline glanced at her with a raised eyebrow that seemed to tell Laura that she was in the way. Laura stepped back out to the front room and brought down the container of molasses to sweeten the oatmeal. Placing it in the middle of the table, she searched for something else to do without getting in her mother’s way. Looking into the kitchen, she saw that Caroline, as always, had everything under control. So, she decided staying out of the way was probably her best plan of action…especially if she wanted Ma’s advice.
“Did you forgive Pa right away?” Laura hoped she knew the correct answer to this question. It would be horrible if no one understood how she felt about Almanzo abandoning her.
“Yes, I forgave him.” Laura’s heart fell. “But it wasn’t easy to forget what he did.”
Finally! Laura straightened as her confidence grew. “What did you do?”
Caroline moved the frying pan full of eggs away from the heat and covered it to keep the food warm. Then she did the same with the pot of oatmeal. Wiping her hands off on her apron, she sat down at the table and motioned for Laura to join her.
“By the time your pa came back, I already knew I wanted to spend my life with him. You see, unlike you, I wasn’t so sure about getting married. I knew your pa wanted to move West and that meant no schools and no churches.”
Caroline folded her arms in front of her on the table. Laura always enjoyed hearing stories of Ma’s and Pa’s younger days before they were married. The stories helped Laura imagine Ma and Pa as children, and when Ma spoke of their courtship, it allowed Laura to see that maybe they went through some of the same things she and Almanzo did.
“It also meant more Indians and more of a risk to our safety, and I wasn’t ready for that. It’s what most of our arguments were about.”
Caroline smiled and gazed wistfully around her. “But as soon as I realized how much I loved your pa, none of that mattered. What did trouble me,” she pointed a finger on the table’s surface, “was that he had left me and I never knew if he was coming back. I wasn’t sure if I could put that aside.”
Tears formed in the corners of Laura’s eyes. She knew exactly how Ma must have felt.
Why do men do such things? “Ma, I love Almanzo.”
Caroline slid her hand across the table and laid it over Laura’s. “I know you do.”
“But it was like I didn’t even matter to him when he took off for Sleepy Eye. He tossed away the plans we had begun to make just because he didn’t get his way. I know he was hurt too, but how do I know he’ll never leave again?”
“There aren’t any guarantees in life, Laura.”
Tears slid down Laura’s cheeks and Caroline leaned over the table to embrace her. She tucked behind Laura’s ear a tendril of hair that had escaped her bun.
“Almanzo made a hasty decision and because of that you got hurt. But I think the fact that he helped Mary and Adam with the blind school shows how important you are to him.”
Laura heard rustling upstairs and knew Albert would be down soon. Caroline stood up and Laura followed her into the kitchen.
Caroline scooped eggs onto a plate and plunked a piece of the corn bread she had made yesterday next to them. “Now you’re going to have to decide which is greater—your love for Almanzo or your fear of getting hurt.”
“Oh Ma, what should I do?” Desperation clung to her words as she gazed with pleading eyes at her mother.
Caroline handed her the plate of food and cupped her chin. “That’s a decision only you can make.”
*
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