An Unlikely Suitor Read online




  Start Reading

  An Unlikely Suitor

  Copyright © 2011

  Nancy Moser

  Cover design by Jennifer Parker

  Cover photography by Kevin White Photography, Minneapolis

  E-book edition created 2011

  Unless otherwise identified, Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible.

  Scripture quotations marked NIV are from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION.® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 Biblica. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved. www.zondervan.com

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  Published by Bethany House Publishers

  11400 Hampshire Avenue South

  Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

  Bethany House Publishers is a division of

  Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan.

  www.bethanyhouse.com

  ISBN 978-1-4412-3231-1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

  To my mother, Marguerite Young.

  By teaching me to sew

  you taught me to face all challenges

  with confidence and creativity.

  Thank you, Mom.

  About the Author

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright PageDedication

  Contents

  Start Reading

  Epilogue

  Dear Reader

  Fact or Fiction in An Unlikely Suitor

  The Fashion of An Unlikely Suitor

  Discussion Questions for An Unlikely Suitor

  About the Author

  Other Books by Nancy Moser

  Back Ads

  Back Cover

  Chapter One

  New York City

  Summer 1895

  Lucy’s eyes shot open.

  Something was wrong.

  The darkness of the windowless bedroom did nothing to ease her nerves.

  What had awakened her?

  Lucy heard the soft breathing of her sister, Sofia, in the hammock slung above her cot, and listened for the snores of her uncle. Or the sounds of her aunt moaning as she tried to get comfortable upon their shared mattress on the floor.

  But the room was silent. Had the unaccustomed silence slid into her dreams, warning her that something was amiss?

  Lucy pushed herself up on her elbows and noticed the bedroom door was ajar. The faintest of lights announced someone was up.

  She left the cot as quietly as possible so as not to wake the others, and peeked into the main room of their apartment. Lucy’s uncle and aunt sat around the table with her mother, their voices low, their upper bodies leaning toward each other, forming a triad of dark hair and olive skin. A single sheet of paper was displayed on the table between them, with the occasional finger jabbing at its presence. The paper was the cause of their midnight meeting, some evil declaration that made sleep impossible.

  Her curiosity and concern propelled her to enter the main room, but she closed the door so Sofia could sleep. At the sound, the three at the table looked up, their foreheads creased in worry.

  “What’s wrong?” Lucy asked.

  Mamma looked at the others, then to Lucy. “I heard footsteps in the hall, then heard the sound of a paper being pushed under the door.” She lifted its corner and handed it to Lucy as if it were the filthiest of rags.

  Lucy took it closer to the gas lamp in order to see. One word stood out among the rest. “Evicted? We’re evicted?”

  “We have a week,” Uncle said. “One week or they’ll tear the tenement down around us.”

  The tenement on Mulberry Street where they’d lived for most of Lucy’s twenty-four years needed tearing down. It had been old when they’d moved in after immigrating to New York City from Italy. Yet in spite of its flaws, it was home—all the home they could afford. Especially since her father had died four years previous.

  Lucy still missed Papa. She’d been his dolce ragazza, his sweet girl. Even when Sofia had come along after they’d arrived in America, she hadn’t usurped the bond between Lucy and her father. Perhaps because he’d never had a son, Lucy had become that son, that heir, that confidante he primed to lead the family when he was gone.

  But who could have known he would be gone years before his time, in his prime? There was still so much to learn from him, so much to say to him. All she had now were the remembered snippets of wisdom he’d peppered throughout his talk, priceless gems she now held dear, as precious as actual jewels. The one she repeated most often was Morto un papa, se ne fa un altro: Life goes on.

  Dante Scarpelli had lost his life in an accident on the docks where he had worked. Uncle Aldo and her cousin Vittorio had been there, and had seen how the careless methods of the shipping company had been to blame. But there’d been no investigation. No compensation. The death of another I-tie meant nothing to the businesses that hired them. Not when there were a thousand others waiting for a job.

  They’d nearly had to move right then. The loss of her father’s income had been a mighty financial blow. Lucy and Sofia worked twelve- to fourteen-hour days at a sweatshop in the garment district, Mamma worked at home with Aunt Francesca making paper flowers for women’s hats, and her uncle and cousin continued their work on the docks. But without Papa’s contribution, their combined income was barely enough to get by. It didn’t help that the rent was continually raised even as the conditions of the rickety building deteriorated. Sometimes Lucy wondered if she could cause the walls to crumble just by staring at them. If she had such power, she would walk down the street and stare at building after building, causing their destruction. It was hard to imagine what their neighborhood of Five Points would look like if it were razed to the ground, if everything could be started fresh.

  Actually . . . that’s exactly what was going to happen.

  Lucy looked at the paper again. A park named after Christopher Columbus was going to be built on this spot. A park with actual trees and grass would be an obvious improvement—but at what cost?

  They would pay the price. The five Scarpellis who’d been left behind.

  Cousin Vittorio had abandoned them the year after her father’s death, lured by the wilds of Oklahoma, seeking adventure and free land. Lucy couldn’t blame him for going. If she could get away from this place . . .

  Angelo Romano.

  Lucy’s heart still hurt at the thought of this man she’d loved. Brown eyes and fascinating dimples had been instrumental in getting her to accept his proposal of marriage. But when Papa died, Lucy realized she couldn’t abandon her mother and Sofia at the height of their sorrow, and couldn’t withdraw the income she provided for her family’s survival.

  And so she’d invited Angelo to come live with them after the wedding.

  He’d laughed at her.

  A knife in the heart would have hurt less.

  Lucy was forced to choose between gaining a husband and maintaining her family. She never let herself ponder whether she’d chosen rightly. Yet added to her grief over her father’s death was the grief over the death of her future as a wife. But what choice did she have? La famiglia sempre. Family forever.

  Papa would have been sad she’d never married—whether it be to Angelo or any of the other men who’d paid her attention. He’d always commended her on her character and strength. La buona moglie fa il buon marito. “A good wife makes a good husband, Lucia.”
/>
  But now there would be no husband for Lucy. No marriage. Niente.

  Angelo became a sweet memory, and one year added to another, and another, and another, and now at age twenty-four, Lucy knew she was too old to marry. It was not an option.

  Would it ever be an option? What did Americans call her? An old maid?

  Her aunt’s words interrupted her thoughts. “Tomorrow, Aldo. Tomorrow you go and find us a new place to live.”

  Uncle’s head shook back and forth, his focus on the floor.

  “What you mean no?” Aunt said.

  He raised his head to look at them, his dark eyes sad. “I mean no. I refuse to find another hellhole in this city. We are going west, Francesca—to Oklahoma to be with Vittorio.”

  “West?”

  “Sì.” Uncle’s head nodded once with emphasis.

  Lucy couldn’t believe what she was hearing. “You can’t leave us,” she said. “We took you in when you came from Naples. For nine years we’ve opened our arms to you, our home to you.”

  There were two types of people in the world: givers and takers. Relatives or not, her aunt and uncle were takers. It made her resentful to see Aunt Francesca feign a headache, making Mamma do twice the work. It incensed her when Uncle Aldo insisted on buying himself special pickles from the Jews up on Delancey Street, even though he was the only one who liked them—and who knew kosher from not, anyway?

  The thought of her aunt and uncle moving out had crossed Lucy’s mind on a daily basis over all nine years. But now, the idea that they were going west to start an exciting new life, leaving Lucy, Mamma, and Sofia behind to fend without a by-your-leave or even a thank-you . . .

  Resentment was her problem. Mamma was always gracious, always kind, always giving. To a fault she was giving. Her aunt and uncle didn’t deserve half the kindness Mamma extend—

  Aunt looked imploringly at her husband. “Aldo, please. I don’t want to leave Lea alone with her girls.”

  His face softened, but Lucy could tell he’d made up his mind. “Vittorio has been pleading with us for months. I haven’t wanted to leave for the very reason you state. But now”—he pointed at the paper—“the decision has been taken from us. Besides, it will be much easier finding lodging for three rather than five.”

  “But where do we find such a place? How do we find such a place?”

  It was the first time Lucy’s mother had spoken. Her questions hung in the air between them, unanswerable.

  Then her gaze fell upon Lucy. In recent years her mother’s eyes had lost their vibrancy, and now, even more than before, they looked weary and defeated.

  Lucy leaned down and wrapped her arms around her mother. “I’ll find us something. I promise.”

  She felt her mother relax, but instead of finding satisfaction in her relief, Lucy felt the weight of the world fall upon her shoulders.

  If only she hadn’t promised.

  “I’ll find us something, I promise.”

  At her sister’s words, and upon hearing the scrape of chairs against the floor, Sofia rushed from her eavesdropping perch back to her hammock. As the bedroom door opened, she put a hand to the wall, stopping the hammock’s swing.

  She closed her eyes, feigning sleep, as the light from the main room cut a swath through the room.

  “Look, the girl sleeps while the rest of us worry,” Aunt Francesca whispered.

  “Oh, to be young and ignorant,” said her uncle.

  Lucy shushed them, but Sofia knew the action wasn’t in her defense. Sofia was well aware of what her sister thought of her, what everyone thought of her. She was the spoiled youngest child, the selfish one.

  Unfortunately, this assessment was accurate, and though Sofia regretted the truth behind this description, she wasn’t eager to change. Being the least of her family had its advantages. No one expected her to excel at anything, and since what they did expect was the worst, it was easy to give it to them. She counted herself lucky that her family issued few penalties for her behavior, merely accepting it as the norm.

  The main consequence of Sofia’s disposition—the one that did bother her more than she would ever admit—was that her family ignored her views, or worse, didn’t believe she had any. When she’d first sensed Lucy getting up this night, when she’d heard the door click shut, she’d immediately climbed out of her hammock to stand at the door, listening. Separate, on the fringe, unconsulted.

  Not that she would have added anything to the discussion about eviction but more fear and worry, perhaps even more than the rest of them had shown. For, unlike the rest of them, living on Mulberry Street was the only life Sofia had ever known. When her family—when all her neighbors—told stories of the old country, she was excluded from the shared memories. Actually, she had no memories to call her own. From morning to night she was with her family. As a child she’d appreciated their company and protection from the dangers of the street, but now, at fifteen, she longed for time alone, for the chance to experience a life separate from theirs.

  But with the night’s discussion of big changes coming their way . . . Sofia wasn’t sure how she felt about that.

  Unable to feign sleep any longer, she leaned over the side of the hammock and whispered to her sister, “We’re moving?”

  “Hush now,” Lucy said. “Don’t worry. I’ll handle everything.”

  Sofia lay back. She knew Lucy’s words to be true. And yet . . .

  To move, to live in a different place, on a different street, with different sights, smells, and sounds . . .

  Could Sofia be different too?

  It was a frightening, exciting thought.

  Lucy barely slept. Once the four adults of the family finished discussing the eviction, they’d all tried to get back to sleep—Mamma on the thin mattress she’d shared with Papa in the main room, Uncle Aldo and Aunt Francesca on a similar mattress on the floor of the only bedroom, with Lucy on her cot nearby. Uncle never did snore that night.

  Only Sofia slept on, oblivious to the crisis spinning around her. As usual. Oh, to be a child again, to live with the assurance that someone older and wiser would handle whatever needed to be handled.

  It was Sofia who roused the adults from their beds.

  “Up, everyone!” Sofia jumped down from her sling, sending it swinging wildly. “We’ll be late for church.”

  Amid moans and much stretching, the family rose and got dressed. The lines at the outhouses—five stories below in the alley—were long, as usual, for everyone worked six days a week and went to church on Sunday. Lucy had heard about modern buildings that had such necessary rooms inside. What she wouldn’t give for such luxury.

  “Why are you so quiet?” Sofia asked as they walked to the service at St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral.

  “It’s nothing for you to worry about,” Lucy answered.

  Yet as soon as Lucy gave the answer, her thoughts turned in its direction. There was plenty of reason to worry, because a place for them to stay wasn’t going to fall from the sky—no matter how hard they wished for it or even prayed for it. Someone had to make an effort to find an apartment. They only had a week.

  Looking at her uncle walking with her aunt and mother a few steps ahead, she knew he wouldn’t be the one to accomplish such a thing. In the nine years since his family had come to New York, he’d never once offered to find his wife and son a place of their own. Lucy knew this had been a point of contention with her mother and father, and had heard the two of them speak of it in hushed tones on many occasions. When the Scarpellis had invited the three newcomers to stay with them back in 1886, they’d always assumed it was a temporary situation. Her father had even been instrumental in getting Aldo and Vittorio jobs on the docks where he worked, and Mother had let Francesca be a part of her at-home work of making flowers for hats.

  But as one year flowed into the next, as temporary became permanent, her parents’ private complaints stopped. Family was sacred.

  And perhaps it had been for the best. For when Papa wa
s killed, the presence of Aldo and his family was a blessing—both for their company and for their income. And a year later, though they could have used Vittorio’s income too, Lucy wasn’t bitter about her cousin leaving to find a better life out west. Family was family, but . . . she also knew there could be a proper time to be a bit selfish. There was nothing evil about having your own dreams.

  What if I leave? Just go away like Vittorio and start over?

  She shook her head against the thought. If she were a man, she might consider it. But as a woman, with few ways to make a living, she needed to choose a safer route.

  Which was . . . ?

  Fulfilling her promise to find them a new home. Lucy caught up with her mother just as they turned toward the entrance of the church and tugged on her sleeve. “Mamma, I’m not going in with you. I have—”

  “Of course you’re going in. Come—”

  “No.” Lucy lowered her voice. “I have to find us a new apartment.”

  “That can wait.”

  “No, it can’t. I can’t risk time off from my job to look for one. We need a place to live. Now.”

  Mamma motioned for Francesca and Aldo to go on in, and to take Sofia with them. “And how are you going to do that?” she asked. “On the Sabbath? Today is a day of rest.”

  There was no time to rest. Surely the Almighty would forgive her for helping her family on this one and only free day. “I have to try. You pray and I’ll do what I can do.” Besides, God listened to Mamma’s prayers much more than Lucy’s.

  Mamma’s eyes skirted past the people to the endless streets beyond. “A girl alone? It’s not safe.”

  “A woman alone. I have no choice, Mamma. We have no choice.”

  Mamma cupped Lucy’s cheek with her hand. “Dio sia con voi.”

  Lucy was glad to have God’s company. If He would do His part, she would do hers. If He was busy elsewhere? That was all right too.

  Lucy’s line of vision alternated between the left side of the street and the right, searching for elusive FOR RENT signs.