Read A Big Year for Lily Online

Authors: Mary Ann Kinsinger,Suzanne Woods Fisher

Tags: #JUV033010, #FIC053000, #Amish—Juvenile fiction, #1. Amish—Fiction, #Family life—Pennsylvania—Fiction, #Schools—Fiction, #Friendship—Fiction, #Pennsylvania—Fiction

A Big Year for Lily (14 page)

BOOK: A Big Year for Lily
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26
Holey Lily

R
ain, rain, rain. It had rained so much the last few weeks that Lily had almost forgotten what a sunny day felt like. Today, though, the sun had broken through the lead gray clouds. Lily looked longingly out the schoolhouse window, eager to get outside and feel warm sunshine on her face.

“Put your books away for recess,” Teacher Rhoda said.

Lily shoved her books inside her desk and stood, waiting to be dismissed. During noon recess, the children had played an exciting game of Prisoners' Base. Teacher Rhoda had rung the bell before they had time to finish and Lily couldn't wait to continue the game.

Everyone grabbed their coats from the hooks at the back of the schoolroom and got their boots on. The playground was still a little muddy from the rain they'd had earlier in the week.

Lily slipped her foot into her boot, but something felt strange. She pulled the boot off and found her shoe was
covered with mud. She turned the boot upside down and poured the mud out. She looked into her other boot. Same thing. Filled with mud.

Aaron Yoder was watching her. He nudged Sam Stoltzfus with his elbow and pointed to Lily. The two of them doubled over with laughter. Lily would have liked to throw handfuls of mud right at their goofy faces, but then she would be in trouble. She'd had enough trouble lately.

Lily took her boots into the schoolhouse and poured water into them to try to wash the mud out. She tried to dry the insides with paper towels but it didn't work. Too soggy.

Teacher Rhoda helped her clean off her muddy shoe. “I think you should find something to play indoors until your boots have a chance to dry.”

Lily was so angry! Aaron was the worst human being on earth—as bad as Effie. And now he had ruined an all-too-rare sunny day of recess.

It started as a small loose thread on the elbow of Lily's black sweater. It was just one thread, but she couldn't leave it alone. During silent reading periods in school, she would hold her elbows and twirl that thread ever so slightly, between her thumb and finger. Twist and twirl, twist and twirl. She thought about knotting it and breaking it off, but never quite got around to it. Her hands just naturally went to that tiny, out-of-place piece of loose yarn.

A few days later, during lunch recess, Effie pointed at Lily's elbow. “You have a great big hole!” Lily held out her arm to see what Effie was pointing to. She hadn't realized that the yarn had been unraveling as she twisted the thread. Her
elbow was now sticking out of a gaping hole. Her beautiful sweater, new last Christmas!

Then Aaron noticed. He started chanting, “Holey Lily!” and Sam whooped with laughter. Soon half of the boys, along with Effie, were making fun of her sweater. That nickname worried her, too. Anytime Aaron gave someone a nickname, it stuck like flypaper.

When Lily got home from school, she showed Mama the hole in her sweater. She might have mentioned how annoying Effie was. And why did Effie have to point it out in front of everybody? Lily might have made the tiniest suggestion that Aaron Yoder should be sent to the moon.

Mama reserved judgment. She examined the sweater in the light by the window. “This hole reminds me of what happens when we don't forgive someone. Choosing to think about or gossip about someone who offends us is like twisting that tiny thread around between our fingers. It won't be long before that little thread causes a festering hole.”

Effie
, she meant. And Aaron.

Mama took out her darning needle and threaded it with black yarn. “You know, Lily, friendships aren't always easy, aren't always perfect, aren't always free from hurt. But it isn't right to just ignore people or wish they would be sent off someplace far, far away. How we choose to handle those times when we're wounded by a friend will make the difference between growing love or creating a hole.”

Then she handed Lily the needle and yarn. “It's yours to fix.”

Lily stared at the needle. A hole in a sweater was much easier to fix than Aaron Yoder and Effie Kauffman.

27
Levi Up a Tree

I
t was a rainy, blustery day and the children had to play indoors at recess in the basement. Lily and her friends jumped rope but the boys couldn't decide on anything. They were tossing around ideas. “If it wasn't raining it would be good weather to fly a kite,” Levi said.

“But it is raining,” Aaron Yoder pointed out with a sneer. “Hey, I've got an idea. Why don't we build kites that we could fly once it stops raining?”

The boys rallied behind that idea. Ezra Yoder started to give out instructions. He took some of the kindling and made wooden strips. He told two boys to run upstairs to ask Teacher Rhoda for some plastic shopping bags and needle and thread.

“Hold on!” Levi said. “I don't sew. That's girl work.”

“Come on, Levi,” Ezra said. “We always sew our own kites at home.”

“Not me,” Levi said. He turned to his sister. “Hannah, we need you and the other girls to sew our kites.”

Hannah immediately dropped her end of the jump rope and it tangled up around Lily's feet. She bent down to untangle it while the other girls hurried over to start sewing kites for the boys.

How ridiculous! Just because the boys snapped their fingers, the silly girls jumped. Lily was disappointed. She hated to sew by hand, and she especially did not want to sew for any boy. Maybe she would help Joseph. But no other boys, not even Cousin Levi.

But jumping rope alone wasn't much fun. Finally, she moseyed over to where the girls were gathered. Ezra had tied kindling strips firmly together with baling twine and the girls set to work to try to sew the plastic bags over them. It was frustrating work for Lily. She tried to make the plastic bag taut around the tied kindling strips but it kept slipping out of place when she jabbed her needle into it. Even the older girls seemed to be having a hard time doing it, but they didn't seem to mind like Lily did. They talked and giggled at dumb things the boys said. Lily was disgusted. She thought the boys should make their own stupid kites. They were the ones who wanted them in the first place.

When Teacher Rhoda rang the bell, Lily dropped the kite she had been working on, happy to go to her desk and face math. Even studying percentages in arithmetic was better than hand sewing a plastic bag.

The next day was perfect kite weather. The sun shone and the wind whipped through the trees. The boys were eager to
try out their new kites. They spent the first recess putting finishing touches on them, including tails made from an old sheet. By lunchtime, they were ready to try them out.

“I have the best kite,” Levi said in his loud, look-at-me voice.

Aaron rolled his eyes. “We haven't even tried them out yet. We won't know who has the best until we see how they fly.”

The girls watched as the boys held their kites and started to run, then let them go. Most of them nosedived into the ground behind them instead of lifting in the air and flying like a kite was supposed to do. Levi's kite, though, picked up the wind and started to drift higher and higher. Levi ran along under it, carefully releasing more and more string. The kite rose up and up, only to tangle in the branches of an oak tree at the edge of the school yard.

Levi ran to the tree, grabbed a low branch and hitched himself up on it. Then he started to climb, branch by branch.

Ezra cupped his hands around his mouth and shouted up to him. “Levi, you can't get that kite down. It's too high.”

Levi looked down at Ezra and the other children who were gathering at the base of the tree, watching him. “Maybe for you, but I can easily get to it. I'm the best tree climber in the school.”

Lily just knew this was a bad idea. She held her breath as she watched Levi climb higher and higher. He loved an audience and now he had one. He would never come down until he got that kite. All the other children stood with heads craned back, watching him with bated breath, waiting to see if he might fall. No one cared about the kites anymore. They wanted to see if Levi could climb to the top of the tree.

From the steps of the schoolhouse, Teacher Rhoda called
out, “Levi! I want you to come down right away. That kite isn't worth breaking your neck!”

But did Levi listen to her? No. He kept on climbing. The higher he climbed, the smaller the branches. Finally, Levi reached the top of the tree, close to the kite. It was caught on the tip of one of the branches. He inched his way out toward it. Nobody moved, nobody spoke, nobody breathed. Lily thought she heard a creaking sound. Levi reached his hand out to grab the kite and
SNAP!
The little branch he was hanging onto broke loose.

It seemed as if Levi fell in slow motion. His arms and legs flailed and he began to scream—a sound Lily would never forget. She squeezed her eyes shut and held her hands over her ears. She couldn't bear to watch. Then there was an awful thud as he hit the ground—so awful that even her hands over her ears couldn't muffle the sound. She opened her eyes to see Levi crumpled in a heap on the ground.

“He's dead!” Effie screamed. Then Hannah started to wail and all the other girls started crying with her. Sympathy criers.

Teacher Rhoda ran over to Levi. He wasn't moving. His eyes were closed. His legs were twisted at odd angles. Maybe Effie was right. He did seem surely dead. Teacher Rhoda looked up at Ezra. “Go to Ben Stoltzfus across the road and tell him we need to take Levi to the hospital right away.”

Ezra Yoder ran to get help. Teacher Rhoda sat on the ground and spoke in a gentle voice to Levi. Lily patted Hannah's back. She didn't know what to say or to do about poor, dead Levi. Then Levi started to moan, which was a great relief. He wasn't quite as dead as everyone had thought.

Minutes that seemed like hours went by before Ezra returned with Ben Stoltzfus. “Try to hold still, Levi,” Ben said when Levi's eyes flickered open. “I called one of your neighbors to bring your parents to school. They should be here soon.”

A big station wagon drove into the school yard and Uncle Elmer jumped out of the passenger side. Uncle Elmer ran over to Levi and asked him where it hurt.

“Everywhere,” Levi said to his father. “But my legs hurt the worst.”

“I think we need to call an ambulance. I don't want to risk lifting you and hurting you even more.” Uncle Elmer
went over to speak to Mr. Beal, the neighbor who'd driven the station wagon.

Mr. Beal drove Ben Stoltzfus to the phone shanty to call an ambulance while Uncle Elmer stayed with Levi.

Teacher Rhoda let the children stay outside until the ambulance came. Then she shooed everyone out of the way. Two men in uniforms gently slipped a stretcher under Levi and lifted him into the back of the ambulance. Uncle Elmer climbed in and they headed to the hospital.

The students couldn't concentrate on their lessons for the rest of the day so Teacher Rhoda let everyone read silently at their desk. She seemed worried, too. Poor Levi.

Both of Levi's legs had been broken, badly. He was in a wheelchair and wouldn't be able to return to school for quite some time. Each evening, Teacher Rhoda packed up schoolwork and sent it home with Hannah so Levi could keep up.

Recess seemed strange without Levi and his endless bragging. Actually, it was nice! Whenever Lily thought about the difference Levi's absence made on the school yard, she felt little pinches of guilt. She should be feeling sad for his broken legs, not glad he wasn't at school. She
should
—but sometimes it was hard to tell your feelings to behave.

On Friday afternoon, Teacher Rhoda handed out blank sheets of sturdy paper. “I want each one of you to make a scrapbook sheet for Levi. You can draw pictures, write poems or riddles, stories, or anything you think he might enjoy seeing. Next week, we'll walk over to visit him and bring him the scrapbook.”

Lily set right to work. She liked to draw flowers, but Levi
was a boy. He wouldn't appreciate her flowers. She thought of riddles, but he had heard most of them. Finally, she drew a few trees. At their base, she drew a little pile of logs with flames on them. Levi liked campfires.

When the students had finished, Teacher Rhoda made a cover to hold all the pages together, like a real book. On the front, she wrote “Get Well Soon” in her beautiful cursive handwriting.

On Monday afternoon, as soon as lunch was over, Teacher Rhoda announced that it was time to visit Levi. She asked Ezra Yoder to lead the way. She had the children walk single file behind Ezra, lined up by age, and then she followed at the end of the line. Lily thought it looked like the Canada geese in Uncle Elmer's pond. They walked single file with the Papa Goose in front and the Mama Goose at the end and all the baby goslings safely in between. Lily felt like quacking loudly but with Effie right in front of her, she decided not to. She would be scolded for not acting ladylike.

Levi was happy to have company. Aunt Mary hurried to prepare cookies and milk for everyone. Teacher Rhoda lined the students up on the front yard. They were going to sing two songs, Levi's favorites.

After they sang and ate their snack, it was time to present the scrapbook to Levi. Teacher Rhoda handed it to him and said, “We all miss you in school.”

That was very nice of Teacher Rhoda to say, even though no one really did miss him. Ouch! Lily felt another prick of guilt, as real as a pin jab.

Levi looked through the book, pleased. Then Teacher Rhoda herded everyone together to walk back to school.

“Time to pretend we're baby geese again,” Lily muttered to Hannah.

Lavina Schrock, a second grader, overheard her. She told her friends and soon the younger children started quacking. “Quack, quack!” More and more children joined in. “Quack, quack, quack!” Lily helped too and soon everyone was walking and quacking all the way back to school, even the big boys. Teacher Rhoda couldn't stop grinning.

For Levi's sake, Lily did hope that his legs would mend soon so that he could return to school. But that would mean he'd be back to the school yard with his tiresome one-upmanship.

Ouch! Another prick.

Still, the quacking line had been fun. It had been the best part of the day.

BOOK: A Big Year for Lily
5.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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