The kitchen door opened and there she was, Miriam Schrock, his special someone, almost as if she were expecting him. He looked, and looked again. Why, she had changed over the summer, filled out in certain places, gone from girl
to woman. Her dress, snuggly fitting her compact form, was rose-colored with a hint of blush. Even her complexion had a new glow. Her gray eyes met his in mutual appraisal. She pushed a rather fetching raven wisp of hair off her forehead and studied him as if he was an oddity.
“Miriam,” he began with a lift of his hat, “I have returned, as promised.”
“You also promised to write to me,” she said, cool as custard. “And you never did. Not once.” The door began to shut in his face.
“Let me start again,” he amended rapidly. “I was kept extraordinarily busy by my hardworking relatives. You know there's always more than enough work to do on a farm.”
She kept the door open a crack and peeped around the doorframe to consider his words.
“There wasn't time in the day to even pick up a pen and share with you all that was in my heart.”
“You could have called.”
“Ah, yes. That, too, would have required a surfeit of spare time, of which I had none.”
“I heard you had plenty of free time on Sunday nights to drive Sicily Bender home from singings.”
Sicily Bender?
How in the world had she ever heard that he had been going out with Sicily Bender? Who would have told her? Unless . . . news had trickled to Ruthie from one of those Ohio cousins. The traitors.
He felt the collar around his neck tighten up. “It's a long story,” he said, as if that explained everything.
“Then it will have to wait until I have time to hear it.” And with that, the door shut tight.
So much for a storybook
Welcome back!
to Stoney Ridge.
Wide awake at four thirty in the morning, David Stoltzfus gave up on sleep and decided to go downstairs to work on Sunday's sermon before the household started to stir. He paused at each bedroom door in the hallway, as he did every morning, to thank God for the gift of his children. All six, each one his favorite.
He went through the motions of scooping tablespoons of coffee grounds into the filter, filling the coffeepot with water, waiting for the pleasant percolating sound to begin, but his mind was far away.
Jesse was homeâa wonderful surprise. But . . . why? And so suddenly. When he asked his son, Jesse answered with a shrug, as if . . . why not? David would have to call his sister for the real story.
Also troubling was Jesse's news about Katrina's boyfriend. Truth be told, David was relieved to hear that John was engaged to someone else, but he ached for his daughter's pain. His heart felt pierced as he watched her absorb the information: First, complete shock. Then she flinched, as if she'd been struck.
But as distracted as David felt by his children, it was the condition of the church that weighed most heavily on him. He poured a cup of coffee and sat at the kitchen table, books spread out, right under the light of the hissing kerosene lamp, and bowed his head, asking God for guidance and wisdom as he prepared for Sunday.
“Sunday,” he said again, this time aloud.
His thoughts immediately traveled to the Sunday before last, when he had told the young people in the baptism class,
“If you're going to choose to be Amish, be Amish with your whole heart. Don't be half-Amish. Don't live your life with one foot out the door.” Bishop Freeman Glick glared at him and cornered him right afterward to give him an earful of criticism.
That week, six young men dropped out of baptism class. Parents were frantic, Freeman was livid. He was first at David's door to tell him
I told you so
.
But David stood by his words. He believed them, believed them with his whole heart.
Freeman said David didn't understand young people. “That kind of talk is going to make being Amish obsolete. The youth will leave in droves. They can't think for themselves. We need to do the thinking for them. Coax them in and lead them down the path.”
If a young person didn't know what he was bending at the knee for, what was the point of being Amish? What was the point of all those who had gone before to ensure that baptism was an adult decision? And what would the church look like if it were filled with confused, lukewarm, halfhearted members?
That
, David felt, would make the church obsolete.
He rubbed his forehead, tense with the image of a scowling Freeman Glick. His private opinion of the bishop, inconstant in the best of times, varied almost hourly. Every single discussion ended up in a stalemate. Sometimes David thought Freeman exercised certain neck veins just for discussions with him.
These were the moments when David most sorely missed his wife, Anna. She was such a good sounding board. She listened at all the right times, gave him advice when he asked. She would know what to do, where to turn. Leave it in God's hands, she would say.
David looked up to the ceiling and lifted his palms.
Leave it in God's
hands.
A tapping sound on the window made him jerk in his chair. Birdy Glick, the only sister to the Glick brothers, stood at the kitchen window in the cold and murky light of dawn, waving timidly. He jumped up from the kitchen table to open the back door for her.
“David!” she exclaimed. Her face was bright, as if with happiness. “I hope you don't mind such an early visit. I'm on my way to Windmill Farm to watch the peregrine falcon hunt for breakfast and happened to notice your light was on.”
She took a step and tripped over the door's threshold, sailing straight into David. He braced himself to catch her and ended up knocking bonnets and hats and coats to the floor.
“I'm terribly sorry! I'll get them.”
But David was already picking them up, fearing the worst. A visit from Birdy was like inviting a kind and gentle bull into a china shop. David was tall but not as tall as Birdy: she was six foot two inches, taller than most men.
As her gaze settled fully on him, her eyebrows drew together in a slight frown. “What's the matter?”
“What makes you think something's wrong?”
“I stood knocking at the door for five minutes before I finally yoo-hooed at the window.”
David felt his cheeks grow warm. “Sorry, Birdy. I didn't hear the knock. My thoughts were elsewhere.” He lifted his palm in the direction of the kitchen table. Books and notes were piled helter-skelter.
“Miles away, I'd say.”
Not quite that far. More like down the road at the Glick
farm. Intentionally redirecting his thoughts, he smiled at Birdy. “Are you looking for Katrina? She's still asleep.”
“Actually, no. I stopped by to let you know that Thelma Beiler hired a farmhand. She said it was your idea.”
“What?” David's smile faded. “I told her I'd help her interview a few possibilities, to narrow it down. I even gave her some suggestions.”
“She thought you were too busy to be bothered, so she posted an ad on the bulletin board down at the Hay & Grain and hired the first fellow who called. She liked the sound of his voice on the phone. He started a few days ago.” Birdy stepped up to the window, then turned back to face David. “I also learned that Thelma has taken a fall and hurt her shoulder. Nothing broken,” she hastened to add at the look of alarm on David's face. “Her arm is in a sling while it heals. I thought, perhaps, it might be wise if someone were to stay with her for a while. After all, Thelma's alone up on that hilltop.”
Thelma Beiler, Elmo's widow, was in her late seventies but acted like she was in her twenties, insisting she didn't need anyone fussing over her.
“Though, of course, it would be best if it were presented in a different light to Thelma. Perhaps, as someone who wants to apprentice the moss business.”
David nodded. “This farmhand, he's Amish, isn't he?”
“Of course!” Then her brows gathered into a frown. “He spoke to Thelma and me in Penn Dutch. I think . . . he's one of us.”
Something didn't sound quite right. “Birdy, would you be willing to stay with her?”
Birdy frowned. “Oh, I would if I could. I really would. I'm very fond of Thelma.” She lifted her head with a deep
breath. “But apparently I'm going to be teaching school this term.”
David tried to hide his surprise. Surprise and annoyance. Yet
another
decision made by Freeman and Levi that excluded him. Big decisions, starting with allowing cell phones for business use. Then Freeman added computers.
David couldn't ignore the fact that quite a few church members welcomed Freeman's soft attitude toward modernizing. The farmers of Stoney Ridge were struggling to make ends meet; many were abandoning farming altogether to try their hand at business ventures. Computers, they believed, could help aid a small business's success. Cell phones would help a business owner be readily available to their customers.
All true.
But these decisions weren't without repercussions. They were choices about principles. Yes, a computer might make keeping accounts more efficient, but its access to the internet ushered in a host of new complexities. Discovering Jimmy Fisher had a Facebook account, for one thing.
And a cell phone might make life more convenient than an answering machine in a cold shanty in the middle of winter, but it also brought in all kinds of options. His mind trailed off to last week's wedding, when he spotted Luke Schrock slyly taking cell phone pictures of the bride and groom.
More to the point, since when was ease or convenience the goal of the Plain life? He believed the purpose of the Amish was to love God and others well.
Birdy cleared her throat and David snapped back to the present, to the news that she was now going to teach at the new school. He had nothing against Birdy. He didn't know much about her other than a few obvious facts: she lived in a
small cottage on her brothers' property, she led bird-watching tours for tourists. And she was quite tall.
“I think there's one person Thelma wouldn't object to,” Birdy said. “Your Katrina. It's a perfect solution, you see, in that it was Katrina's idea in the first place for Thelma to start selling all that moss she's got up there.”
“I suppose you're right about that.” It came from a casual comment Katrina had made at last June's school program. A few of the eighth-grade boys had doubled back for another year or two, easy to spot by the rim of fuzz on their upper lips. Katrina had said it looked as if they were starting to grow moss from all their years in the schoolroom. Thelma had laughed so hard at her remark that she had tears running down her cheeks.
A few weeks after her husband Elmo's passing, Thelma called David to her home and said one word: “Moss!” She'd been searching for some kind of business venture, but her property was a shady, steep, rocky hillside. Moss was the only thing that grew in abundance. David researched the topic and discovered that several states and national forests had banned harvesting wild moss; there was, indeed, a need for a commercial moss market.
“It seemed, well, I thought, perhaps Katrina might benefit from spending time with Thelma . . .” Birdy paused and regrouped, searching for the right words. “Sometimes, people never get over losing somebody.”
David's eyes strayed to his wife Anna's knitting basket, gathering dust in a corner of the room, but he didn't let his gaze linger there. An all-too-familiar stirring of worry started to swirl in his chest. He hated to admit it, considering the source came from a Glick, but there was a lot of sense in
that suggestion. Katrina seemed so wounded and bruised. The poor girl looked tired. Worse than tiredâexhausted. She was too slim and too pale, with dark circles under her eyes.
Birdy took David's brief silence to mean he was thinking it over. “It's a bit like hitting two birds with one stone, don't you think?”
It couldn't hurt. “I'll suggest it to Katrina this morning.”
“Excellent. Wonderful. I think it's a splendid solution,” Birdy said cheerfully.
The conversation grew suddenly silent. The distant clip-clopping sound of a buggy horse sifted through the awkward silence.
Then Birdy spun around to leave and, in doing so, swept two books off the table with her elbow. They both bent down to pick up the books at the same time and knocked heads. A sharp pain creased David's forehead and he put his hand over it.
“Oh, I'm so sorry. Terribly sorry,” she said, scrambling to collect the books.
David stepped back to avoid another collision. Katrina said Birdy's clumsiness was David's fault, that Birdy said he made her “frightfully nervous.” But what could he do about that? He didn't know any cure for just being himself.
The early morning sun started to stream into the kitchen windows. The day had begun. “I'll walk you down the driveway. I forgot to pick up yesterday's mail.” About halfway down the path, his attention was caught by the Glick buggy turning into the Inn at Eagle Hill. He saw Freeman and Levi climb out of the buggy and walk toward the house.