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War and Peas

War and Peas

Titel: War and Peas Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jill Churchill
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Beauty?“ Sharlene asked. “I don’t think I’ve heard of—“
    “Oh, you wouldn’t have. You’re much too young. But old Snellen sold it back in the early thirties. My old man was a farmer then. He got a couple bags of the seed and tried it out. It was the funniest-lookin’ pea plant you ever did see. Supposed to be a bushy variety, but it just laid on the ground. Real green and pretty and had lots of peas, but you couldn’t harvest the damned things without crawlin’ around on your hands and knees. Mind you, in those days we didn’t mind too much crawlin’ for food.“
    “I’m sorry to hear that,“ Sharlene said politely.
    “Don’t be. Wasn’t a complaint. See, that’s not the end of the story I wanted to tell you folks. My old man ordered three or four bags of seed, but forgot one of them and left it in the barn. Next summer he planted potatoes instead and came across this one bag of peas left over from the year before. Too dry and old to eat, but he wasn’t one to let anything go to waste. It was dust-bowl days, you know. And those durned peas really grew like mad even in dry ground, which is odd for peas, so after he got his spuds in the ground, he threw the last bag of peas around ‘em. Just to hold the soil down, don’t you see? Well, I tell you, little lady, we had the biggest, best potatoes in the world that year.
    You could make a fine meal on just one of them. I can still remember how great they were. We didn’t have any butter—my mother would make gravy with a dab of bacon drippings. Never had as good a spud the rest of my life. Well, my old man didn’t know much about science, but he could tell a good crop when he saw one. He figured the peas had something to do with it.“
    “And did they?“ Sharlene asked.
    “I dunno. But he had all us kids out in that field that fall on our hands and knees picking every last pea. Three years in a row he used those peas for ground cover. Put ‘em around beets and turnips and carrots and they grew like crazy. Saw us through bad times, those Little Beauty peas did. Then we lost them.“
    “Lost them?“
    “Late frost. Killed every last plant before it could set flowers.“
    “Oh, no! Why didn’t he get some more?“
    “He tried. Boy, oh, boy, did he ever try. Went around to neighbors he’d shared a few seeds with, but theirs had all died, too. Even wrote to old Mr. Snellen himself, telling him about them and asking for more, but he got a letter back saying the company had quit selling them when folks had complained the first year about not being able to pick the things.“
    “What a shame,“ Sharlene said.
    “I reckon it was. Anyway, I’ve thought back on those years a lot lately. Guess it’s part of getting old. You start remembering your childhood. So when I saw an ad for a Pea Festival in the paper last week and saw the name Snellen, I recalled those peas and wanted to come tell someone here about them.“
    “I’m so glad you did. That’s a wonderful story,“ Sharlene said. “Would you have the time to come to my office and let me make a few notes about it?“
    “Oh, ma’am, it isn’t all that important. I don’t want to take up any more of your time. Just wanted to get the story off my chest.“
    “No, please. I’ve got plenty of time and I’d like to make a record of this.”
    As they left, Jane emerged from her hiding place, smiling. She’d thought of a pea museum as sort of a campy joke, but here was proof that even peas could be important to someone. Lifesaving to a whole family, even. She was glad to have eavesdropped on such a pleasant conversation. And glad, too, that the old gentleman had accidentally picked someone as kind and patient as Sharlene to tell his story to. She wondered if the board of directors realized what an asset Sharlene really was and resolved to share that view with anyone who would listen.
    Jane completed her tour of the room and was heading for Sharlene’s office when she passed the main door. Shelley was just coming in. “Remind me to tell you about a conversation I overheard,“ Jane said.
    “Something to do with Ms. Palmer’s death?“
    “Oh, no. Just a very nice, heartwarming story.“ She lowered her voice. “This must be the old man who told it.”
    Sharlene was ushering him out a door labeled STAFF ONLY. He was loaded down with pea- museum memorabilia, including a pile of T-shirts for his grandchildren, and he was still trying to pay for it, an offer Sharlene wouldn’t

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