Beside Still Waters (30 page)

Read Beside Still Waters Online

Authors: Tricia Goyer

Tags: #Family Life, #General, #Montana, #Amish, #Amish Children, #Families, #Christian Fiction, #Christian, #Spiritual life, #Religious, #Fiction, #Man-Woman Relationships

BOOK: Beside Still Waters
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"Oh the cookies!" Marianna set the broom against the porch railing and hurried inside.

As she approached the kitchen, the smell of burnt cookies told her that the timer had been going off for a while.

"Oh no." She hurried to the oven and opened the door. A puff of dark smoke exited, and she grabbed an oven mitt and pulled them out.

"Looks like an afternoon sacrifice to me." Annie chuckled. "Burnt to a crisp."

"I am so sorry. I can't believe I put them in and just forgot. I'll buy more ingredients to replace—"

"Marianna, whoa." Annie held up her hands. "It's just one batch of cookies. It's not the end of the world." Annie approached and placed a hand on Marianna's shoulders, giving it a squeeze. "I'll either have to get a louder timer or tell that Ben Stone to come inside if he wants to talk, so you won't get distracted." Annie winked.

Marianna placed the cookie sheet on the cooling rack. Heat rose to her cheeks. "I'm so sorry. I don't know what's gotten over me. I can stay later to make up time we spent visiting too."

"Marianna—" Annie's tone was sharp—"look at me."

Marianna lifted her head and focused on Annie's green eyes.

"I'm going to give you an order and I want you to follow it, you hear?"

Marianna tucked a wayward stray of hair back under her kapp and nodded.

"Stop trying so hard." Annie's tone softened. "This job is yours until you choose to leave. And if you choose to stay, it's still yours. Enjoy yourself. Relax. Take time to listen to the music. Play around in the kitchen with some recipes. If you spend fifteen minutes chatting with a friend, it's not the end of the world. I bought this store so I can service the people in the community. Sure they come for cookies and for groceries, but they'll come around just as often to visit for a spell. To tell us about their garden, and to just see how you're adjusting to life in the West Kootenai."

Marianna nodded, and even though she could hear what Annie was saying, it didn't make sense. From the time she was small, she'd been trained how to work and how to do it efficiently and quickly. She learned not to be slothful or wasteful. She also knew that anywhere at any time others watched. From as long as she could remember, her mother rose at 4 a.m. every morning to get started on laundry. What a shame it would be to have neighbors passing by on their way to town to shop or to work and not have the laundry hung.

"Yes, ma'am. I mean Annie," she said, wondering if God was sort of like that—wanting her to enjoy life instead of just trying to do everything right. It was a nice thought, but one she'd have to adjust her thinking to believe.

With a forced grin, Marianna pulled the cookie sheet off the rack and moved to the trash can.

It was just then that Edgar entered. He sniffed the air and then scowled as he looked at the burnt cookies on the tray.

"If that's the new recipe, I'd go back to the old one," he huffed. "I like my chicken barbecued, but definitely not my sweets."

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

Marianna watched her mother move around the kitchen with both eagerness and efficiency. Her stomach stuck straight out, full and round. Mem smiled as she cooked dinner—Haystacks, which was one of Dat's favorites. Marianna was working on another of Dat's favorites, Betty's Salad. She didn't know which Betty came up with the recipe, or how long ago, but it was one of the first things she'd learned to make. The broccoli and cauliflower were already chopped up and next she worked on the bacon.

"The kids enjoyed the day out. Tomorrow we're thinking about going down to Lake Koocanusa, just to skip rocks." Her mother hummed while she worked, which made Marianna feel better about her plans of leaving. Mem enjoyed it here. The kids did too. They were settling into their days without her since she worked.

"Mem, it seems like you're settling in. Are you happy here?" Marianna asked, chopping the bacon into small bits.

"I didn't think I would like it, but I have to admit I feel freer. There aren't so many eyes on me. And . . ." Mem's voice quieted. "The future doesn't seem so bound to the past here."

Marianna nodded, wondering what Mem was going to say when she told her that past—that whole life—was what was driving her back. Back to Indiana.

Just this morning she'd used the phone in the shed to make two calls. One to the train station to check on the price of a ticket in one month's time, and the other to Annie at the store. Annie was out for the day, but Marianna knew she could talk to her tomorrow.

Yesterday at church she'd also talked to Hope and Eve Peachy, who agreed that between them they could cover every day of the week until Christmas to help Mem. They'd also stated a good price for their work. Now, if she could just get Annie to agree on buying her quilt, to pay for the help, everything would be worked out. Then, three weeks after the baby was born, and Mem was back on her feet, she'd be free to return to Indiana.

Trapper scratched at the door, wanting to go out for a walk, and Marianna sighed. "After dinner, I promise."

"Mari, why don't you go ahead now. The kids are occupied, and I'm almost finished over here. Jest leave that and I'll finish it up. Dinner will be ready in an hour. You should get out and enjoy yourself. You've been working awfully hard lately."

Marianna looked to her, unsure if she'd just heard her mother correctly. Still, she wasn't about to argue. She set out behind the house with Trapper by her side. He enjoyed long walks up and down the road, and sometimes in the forest, but he wouldn't go unless she was with him. It was if he were afraid to turn around and find her gone.

An uneasiness settled over her chest . . . How would Trapper take it when she returned back to Indiana? She glanced at him, noticing the way he pranced beside her, blissfully unaware of the change to come. Her lip quivered, and she pushed those thoughts out of her mind. She didn't need to think about that now. This day held enough worries of its own.

The air was cool in the forest. The wind whispered through the pines, and Marianna moved on, farther into the woods than she usually went.

The dog trotted beside her, prancing as if they were on a grand adventure. Up ahead she spotted a small tree that had been gnawed off six inches above the ground. And then ten feet beyond that, another tree.

For the briefest moment she considered turning around and getting the young ones to join her, but the quiet of the afternoon did something to her soul. It soothed her. And even though she was alone, she felt a strange feeling someone was with her. Not in a scary way, but perhaps that God was looking down from above, happy that she was enjoying His creation. She smiled, thinking Ben would like that thought.

The ground was damp. Layers of dead pine needles and aspen leaves covered the earth, making a soft carpet. The air smelled damp, too, and alive. Birds sang, happily enjoying the sun's rays that arched over the mountains, falling upon the trees, and drenching them like golden rain.

"Look, more chewed-off trees. There has to be a beaver dam near."

Trapper wagged his tail in agreement. In her mind's eye she pictured the busy beaver gnawing on the tree, watching it fall, and then clamping down his teeth and carrying it through the woods over and around varied obstacles. The enormity of that task both overwhelmed her and also caused her to marvel at how nature had been created to care for and nurture its own in such unique ways. The ground rose in front of her, cresting to a small hill. Marianna hurried up it, and Trapper barked in excitement as if also anticipating what was on the other side.

Marianna neared the top but then paused. Her heart was pounding and she didn't understand why. It wasn't because of the exercise. This place was less than a quarter mile behind her house. There was a hint of excitement, but there was something more. A deep knowing. A feeling that she'd been here before. A returning to a special place, but that made no sense. She'd never traveled back this far in these woods. She'd never seen . . .

Then, like a fuzzy memory filtering into her mind, Marianna remembered the recurring dream. The special place had come to her many times. The dream of still water. The man's voice calling her. Drawing her.

Marianna placed a hand over her heart. She could feel its wild beating and wondered if she was going crazy. Maybe there would be just a forest on the other side of the hill. More trees?

"I suppose there is one way to find out." She patted her leg as a signal to Trapper and continued on.

It was the scent of water that greeted her as she crested the hill. And then the glimmer of light on the forest floor. Laughter bounced from her lips as she spotted a worn trail just to the left of her. The trail was one the beavers used when they dragged the trees to their pond.

And there, on the south end of the pond was their lodge.

"Look, Trapper!" A joy filled her that she couldn't explain. It wasn't just the lodge that made her so happy, but she had a feeling this place had been created in part for her—that she'd been drawn here.

She walked closer and saw the lodge was much larger than she anticipated. A squirrel raced up a nearby tree, causing her to laugh again and as she did, tears rimmed her eyes.

Her hands pressed to her face, and she didn't attempt to hold the tears in. It was a beautiful place. Not the same beauty as a pasture dotted with colorful wildflowers. Not the same designed loveliness as rows of cornstalks waving in the wind. Instead, it was an untamed place that reflected a peace she didn't realize she'd been missing until now.

Her heart grew warm. Her throat tightened up and thickened with emotion. She swallowed it down, while at the same time lifting her head to the sky and wondering how she could have dreamt of a place she'd never been to?

It was foolishness she knew—or was it? She thought about Ben's words.

"I thought I'd come for a summer job, but then when I got here, I knew I couldn't leave. How can I not believe there is a God who is caring, artistic, and a bit on the wild side when I look at mountains like that."

She bit her lip, remembering how she'd hardly heeded Ben's words. Now she felt the same sense of awe with a bit of perplexity.

Why her? Out of all the people in the world to get to experience a place like this, why them? Why her family? Ike had been instrumental at telling them about Montana, but they were the ones who set out. Just as she grew up feeling special that she'd been blessed to be born into an Amish home—to be told and warned of the outside world—she also felt that she'd been given this gift.

Marianna neared a fallen log and sat upon it, feeling the dampness seeping through her skirt. Movement from the water caught her attention, and she looked to see that two ducks had landed on the surface, and gliding across the water, appreciating the fact they had the whole pond to themselves. Even though she couldn't see their legs, she knew their feet paddled with intensity. And even though she couldn't see the beavers inside the lodge, she knew they were there. Safe, warm, protected. A smile touched her lips.

Trapper rose from where he sat beside her and trotted down to the water, lapping it up and then looking back at her with curiosity as if wondering why she hadn't joined him.

"You go ahead. I'll just sit here a while." He too was another gift that had been forced upon her. One she couldn't imagine not having.

The ducks continued to swim in circles. Ripples flowed out from their bodies. Marianna yawned and told herself the next time she returned she'd have to bring a blanket to spread on the forest floor. It wasn't that she was tired. Instead, the feeling was one of fullness. The same type of feeling as if she finished a delicious meal or had just read the last page of a satisfying book.

After what seemed like an hour passed, she rose and decided to return before Mem sent out a search party of her younger siblings for her. She didn't want to worry them, but more than that. She didn't want to share her special place, at least not for a while.

She carried the peace home with her.

Marianna arrived just in time for dinner and through the meal she couldn't help but laugh and joke with her siblings. She couldn't help but smile.

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