The next morning, Vivian woke up with Erki the dog, barking and Maia screaming. She looked at the clock and it showed 6:30 presumably, AM. Two things became immediately self-evident. Eino Tarvas was not in her bed. Either he didn't sleep with her throughout the night; or she had fallen asleep while he was still in her presence. Or perhaps he had remained with her but had left to tend to the normal daily dairy farming chores which she knew had to commence long before 6:30 AM. The other evident fact was that Maia had obviously not awakened during the wee hours of the morning. Her baby had slept completely through the night for the very first time. Now that was definitely something to celebrate for sure.
Vivian dutifully tended to her baby's needs. Vivian duly burped Maia after she had her fill of her mother's milk. Then with Maia in her arms, Vivian trudged to the Tarvas farmhouse for breakfast. Apparently, she had arrived at just about the right time. Eino had arrived for his breakfast and so had Helmutt, Eino's son. Maarja had started cooking for them, so that Vivian's timing was right for the entire family to have breakfast together. After breakfast, Vivian and Maarja sat down and planned menus to last a week. They soon worked a schedule for the household.
The next few days proved to be very hectic as construction material, milking machines and cows were delivered to the farm. In addition, more supplies were continuously being delivered which Vivian had ordered. Vivian also got around to obtaining a motor vehicle for herself, a four door Ε koda Fabia sedan. Vivian viewed that the purchase of this vehicle signaled the final point of no return for her, and metaphorically completed her permanent departure from the US. This vehicle is not available for purchase in the United States, but as the Ε koda car company was a total subsidiary of Volkswagen, she did not feel totally alienated.
Vivian and Eino worked remarkably well together in organizing and supervising the development of the expanded farming enterprise. It was not that they agreed in every aspect, but they each had a mutual respect for each other's skills and abilities. Thus, when there was a point of contention, they mutually took a breath, and calmly presented their case to each other. They had made a pact to each other, that once an agreement was mutually reached, there would be no articulation of second-guessing recriminations of the decision even should the choice turn out to be patently wrong in retrospect. Their working relationship succeeded because Eino Tarvas was not a male chauvinist. The experience of taking care of his ill wife brought home to him, the obvious fact how easier his life on the farm would have been had his wife not been ill, and able to contribute as she was prepared to do.
The camaraderie between Vivian and Eino in their working arrangement was very evident. They routinely exhibited uninhibited joy and satisfaction in taking on their tasks and chores. Their cheerful outlook had the hidden advantage in that it instilled high morale amongst the farm labor they employed. Those laborers were happy to be employed at the Tarvas farm, which in turn made them more productive as they took pride in their labor. Both Vivian and Eino were not afraid to praise them when justified.
Vivian and Eino divided their workloads to maximize their skills and interests. Eino was in charge of overseeing the dairy part while Vivian took care of the management of the crops. Eino was in charge of hiring the labor as he had intimate knowledge of the people available in the area augmented by knowledge acquired from his interaction with the neighboring farmers. Vivian took over the business financial operations. This proved to be for Eino the most useful skill that Vivian brought to the table. Vivian skillfully found the markets for the increased output of the agricultural production of the farm. The contractual agreements she negotiated was to the best advantage. In no time at all the combined farm was indeed well on its way to becoming the most prominent farm in all of Estonia.
The other initial major concern for Vivian was planning her wedding. Considering the brevity of the courtship, she could be forgiven to have desired an elaborate affair. A lavish wedding would possibly silence the presumably snide remarks which their wedding guests might be prone to utter in light of their brief acquaintanceship. However, the most important result she wished to achieve with respect to her wedding plans was to blot out the memory of her wedding to Sam Crawford. Since her wedding to Eino would occur on the same weekend in August, hopefully there would be less cause to recollect the image of having her first husband hauled off to jail literally minutes after the wedding ceremony.
Unfortunately, because of the territorial divide between them, it was not possible to plan a wedding where guests of the friends and relatives be equally represented. For practical purposes she could not have the wedding in Wisconsin. She asked Eino how many guests in Estonia he would like to see present, and so she could plan accordingly, with the assistance of Maarja as well. It turned out that Eino was well regarded and known by some very prominent Estonians, so that surprisingly the guest list was rather larger than Vivian would have expected. It actually consisted of around two hundred. Every possible relative by blood or by marriage were included. Also included were friends and acquaintances some of whom were very prominent in Estonian society. The acquaintances included those Eino had acquired in his business dealings.
Seeing the length of the guest list surprised Vivian, although she was secretly elated as an elaborate affair was something she truly desired in her heart. She asked, "Was your first marriage to Dagi equally as large or even larger considering she must have had more of her relatives and friends in attendance than I will have? At this point in time, it looks like I'll have only two guests, namely my co matrons of honor."
Eino replied, "Oh no! When I married Dagi there were only fifty quests in total. We were obviously both younger than you and I are now, as I had just started working the farm on my own. Since then, I've acquired membership in two agricultural organizations to advance the cause for improvement of farming in Estonia. As a result, my active participation in these farming groups, I've become more known and especially among some politicians. Hence this expanded list."
Vivian replied, "Oh I have no problem with having such an elaborate affair. However, I noticed most of the guests have Tallinn addresses, so it would seem like we ought to have the wedding in Tallinn as opposed to here at the farmhouse, as I had originally imagined. The additional advantage for having the wedding in Tallinn is that we'll be near the airport, so we can begin our honeymoon quicker."
For Vivian, her two actual and it turned out only friends and relatives, to attend the wedding were her two matrons of honor. Namely, her sister Erica Koeninger nΓ©e Laaning and her best friend Angela Peterson nΓ©e Black. Both of them had been Vivian's co matrons of honor, in the wedding a year earlier, and Vivian had been the maid of honor in each of their respective wedding ceremonies. All three of them had been pregnant a year ago and all of them had subsequently delivered baby girls. They were also still breast feeding as each of them attended meetings of La Leche League. Each of them had a goal to commit to one complete year of breast feeding before they would proceed to the stage of getting their babies totally weaned.
In this regard, Erica agreed to come four weeks prior to the wedding, and help Vivian construct her wedding dress. Erica also agreed to stay at the farm two weeks longer after the ceremony. The plan was to allow Vivian to enjoy a two weeks honeymoon vacation, without the necessity of toting her baby with her. Erica was certain, she would have enough milk available for her niece as well her own daughter, Anna. Angela could not appear until the Thursday before the Saturday wedding date. However, as she learned of the particulars of Erica's commitment, she indicated that she would be also available to assist in meeting baby Maia's nourishment requirements for a day or two, after the wedding ceremony. She was scheduled to return to the United States on the following Monday. Neither of their husbands were able to come to Estonia, and thus the remaining children of Angela and Erica would remain in the United States. Neither was the rest of her family able to or willing to come to the wedding despite Vivian's offer to pay for the air fare.
As the time came, Vivian with Maia in tow, traveled to Tallinn to pick up Erica and her baby daughter at the Tallinn Lennart Meri Airport. The flight left Chicago midafternoon and arrived in Tallinn midafternoon the next day. The flight took over fifteen hours with stopovers in Detroit and Amsterdam and plus the time difference of eight hours accounted for the almost full day passage for Erica from departure to arrival in local times. Erica was impressed by Vivian's Ε koda Fabia, and expressed a wish she could have something as exotic for herself, instead of a mundane Cadillac SUV. Vivian merely chuckled at Erica's quip.