Read The Photograph Online

Authors: Beverly Lewis

Tags: #FIC053000, #FIC042000, #FIC026000, #Amish—Fiction, #Sisters—Fiction

The Photograph (28 page)

BOOK: The Photograph
11.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Chapter Thirty-three

T
HE
NEXT
FEW
DAYS
were dreary with rain, the thunder waking Eva in the night, then the steady downpour on the roof lulling her back to sleep.

Each morning, when Menno and Emmanuel came into the utility room to fill their thermoses with cold water at the sink, they seemed thankful to be in out of the rain, even taking a few minutes to visit with Frona and Eva. Emmanuel, especially, was interested in sampling Eva's new concoctions for The Sweet Tooth, more than happy to taste test.

Once the worst of the heavy rains had passed, Eva inspected the flower beds and saw that the delicate petunias had been beaten to the ground, and there were deep ruts in the soil of the vegetable garden.

At the designated time for Alfred's phone call Tuesday afternoon, Eva was pleased when Frona left the house for Ida Mae's to help make strawberry pies for several families, including the two preachers'.
She'll be gone long enough for me to talk
to Alfred and return home,
Eva thought, calling for Max as she hurried across the backyard.

The grass was soggy, and she was glad they'd kept Mamma's old work boots so she could tromp through the meadow. Max kept running circles around her, looping forward, then back—the finest dog ever, and most companionable, too.

Glancing over her shoulder, Eva could see Menno and the other workers moving from the stable to the barn, where grain and hay were stored. She realized then how peculiar it would be to experience whatever adjustments might come once Menno and Bena moved in.
For whoever ends up staying on here as
a mother's helper.

Naomi Mast had once said that change was inevitable.
“It's one of the things
you can always count on,”
she'd said. The observation had made Eva think.

She crossed a rise covered with wet maidenhair ferns; these volunteers had taken over the place since Dat's passing. Their roots were solidly placed, and unless they were mowed down or intentionally dug up, they were there to stay.

Transplants, like Lily? Oh, I hope
not.

The old wooden telephone shed came into view, but because the preachers had deliberately placed it in the middle of a stand of fast-growing silver maples, a person had to know where it was positioned in order to find it.

Moving down the muddy path that led to the narrow shanty, Eva breathed in the thick scent of damp earth and bark. The meadow grass looked taller and deeper in hue because of recent rains.

Eva checked her wristwatch.
Six minutes before Alfred's call.

For as long as she'd known him, Alfred had been prompt and a person of his word. But what he wanted to discuss today, she couldn't be sure, and she curled her toes in her Mamma's boots, shaky as a newborn calf.

Eva remained just outside the door of the phone shed. She
disliked standing inside, too aware of the cobwebs she often batted down with her hand in an attempt to dismantle any evidence of spiders—her least favorite insect in God's collection of bugs.

The last time Eva had come here was cloaked with sadness, for it was the day she'd run headlong through the deep snow to dial 9-1-1. Mamma was near death's door, and the ambulance had arrived too late for the paramedics to revive her.

Max wagged his tail and panted as he looked up at Eva. A butterfly caught his attention, and he turned and bolted after it.
Saturday is Naomi's surprise birthday
party,
Eva thought, looking forward to making a pretty card to take to Ida Mae's when the rest of the womenfolk arrived after noon with cake and ice cream.
We'll have us a nice time.
 . . .

The phone rang loudly, and she stepped inside the shed. “Hullo?” she answered, suddenly feeling bashful.

“Eva, it's Alfred.
Wie bischt
?

“Fine
 . . . and you?” Truthfully, s
he wasn't feeling altogether fine just then. He sounded different to her, or maybe it was the long-distance connection.

“I've been looking forward to callin',” Alfred said, then went on to mention the weather, one of his favorite topics. “Heard it's been raining quite a lot there.”

“The fields are like sponges.”

He laughed a little. “Hope ya wore your boots.”

She told him she had. “Is it nice out there?”

“Not too hot, which is always helpful when you're workin' inside a woodshop.”

She let him talk about his work, noting his obvious enthusiasm.

“The more I learn, the more I believe I'm cut out for woodworking.”

She smiled at the clever quip and wondered if he was aware of what he'd said.

“I really enjoy handling different types of woods and such, Eva—each job brings something new. It's far more creative than farming, of course. Less reliant on the elements, too.”

This was a surprise. Never had she expected to hear Alfred say a word against farming.

“There's plenty to learn, of course, but it seems I've got a knack for it, or so my boss tells me.”

“I'm happy for ya,” she said.

“But that's not the only reason I called. I have a terrific idea, and I hope you'll agree.”

She listened, unsure what was on his mind.

“You might have noticed I've written about the young people here and some of the places I enjoy. The countryside is beautiful, too. It's a growing area for
gut
reason.”

Where's he going with
this?
Eva wondered.

“It's happened awful fast, but I've been offered a job as a shop assistant. I'll continue to learn the trade as I go, like an apprentice, but with decent pay.” He stopped for a second. “Enough for me to settle here.”

Alfred's
not coming back?

He went on. “So I got to thinkin', instead of waiting till we marry, I'd like for you to come here for our courtship.”

She was stunned.

“What would ya think of that, Eva? I've already found a nice place for you to stay.”

Well, she didn't think much of it at all. No, she could just envision poor Frona living all alone, bouncing around in their parents' large house until Menno and his family moved in. Or maybe he'd move in all the sooner, Eva didn't know.

“This is so sudden,” she said. “I hardly know what to say.”

“I miss seein' you, Eva. It'd be
wunnerbaar-gut
to have ya out here with me.”

How could she say she'd think about it when she just wanted to hang up the phone?


Ach
, Alfred, I didn't envision our courtship progressing quite this fast
 . . . '
specially with Lily gone an' all.” Feeling cornered, she wanted to still her racing heart.


Jah
, I wondered how you were holding up when Mamm said there'd been no news.”

Eva nodded into the phone. “It's one of the worst things to happen to my family.”

“I wish I could comfort you in person, Eva,” he said softly. Then, going on, he said, “I could easily arrange for you to be here within a few weeks.”

She considered his remarkable offer, but things were moving much too quickly. “If you're willing to wait, Alfred, I'd like to think about it. And meanwhile, we could discuss this further by mail, all right?”

“I'll wait,
jah
.” His voice brightened considerably. “I'll be glad to.”

After they said good-bye and hung up, she walked back over the waterlogged pasture toward home. “'Tis unbelievable,” she whispered.

Their spitz sprinted up behind her, then slowed to walk alongside. “I'd miss
you
, dear Max,” she said, running her hand across the length of his white back. “And everyone here in Eden Valley.” Just then Eva realized how happy she might be feeling about such an unusual proposal if it were coming from Jed.

But that door appears to be
closed,
she thought regretfully.

During a short break that afternoon, Jed slipped away to Uncle Ervin's office area to use the phone. Searching the yellow pages, he found the number for the Ohio Chamber of Commerce.

Immediately, Jed was encouraged when he spoke with a woman
who seemed eager to help. “I live here in Ohio,” he explained, “but I'd like to request a listing for tourist accommodations in Plain communities.” He told her that he'd heard there was such a list, which included Mennonite and Amish guest housing.

“I can mail it to you, sir.” The woman asked for his name and address.

Jed gave her the information, then thanked her and said good-bye, his spirits rising.

Chapter Thirty-four

F
RIDAYS
WERE
TYPICALLY
FRENZIED
at the carriage shop, and this one was no different as Jed worked on his assigned surrey. He and Perry had to have their six-day workweek wrapped up before the Lord's Day—from the earliest time of their apprenticeship, Uncle Ervin had nudged them to be as productive as possible.

Jed was meticulous while finishing the flooring of the large family carriage. All the while, he could hear Uncle Ervin making small talk with Perry, who was building a two-wheeled cart, the simplest type of buggy.

Perry was describing a recent visit to Charm, where he'd run into some old school chums, one of whom was leaving the Amish life behind. Uncle Ervin wagged his head at that, then said something that caught Jed's attention.

“Speaking of Amish going to the world, I ran into a farmer friend, Abram Kurtz, who grew up in Lancaster County but now lives in Kidron,” Uncle Ervin was saying. “Abram was in line at Lehman's Hardware behind an
Englischer
girl, who was all dolled
up in earrings and makeup, short skirt, fancy hairdo, but—get this—she had an Amish accent a mile wide and kept mixin' up her Dutch with English.”

“Not fancy a'tall, I'm thinkin',” Perry interjected. “You can take the girl out of the Amish, but you can't take the
Amish
out of the girl!”

Ervin nodded. “Abram was convinced she wasn't from anywhere in Ohio!”

“Why's that?”

“He could tell by her accent she was from his old stompin' grounds back in Pennsylvania.”

Jed turned to get a better listen, very curious.

Perry slapped his knee, fully engaged, and Ervin kept going. “So Abram decided to have some fun with her and said right out loud, ‘What part of Lancaster County are you from?'”

Ervin continued his story. “Well, I guess the young woman turned as white as a sheet in the wind. And Abram took it even further and said he had some friends who lived south of Strasburg—asked if she knew 'em.”

Perry howled with laughter.

“Her mouth dropped, and right quick, he offered a handshake and introduced himself all proper-like. She played along, it seemed, told her name, but it wasn't
Amish
, let me tell you. Then suddenly, she excused herself like she'd forgotten something, and rushed out of the store, leaving her things behind.”

Perry shook his head. “Guess it ain't funny after all.”

Ervin agreed. “If ya leave the People, son, you'll spend the rest of your life pretending to be what you're not.”

Perry nodded and glanced at Jed.

Unable to keep quiet any longer, Jed asked, “So, what was the young woman's name?”

Ervin thought for a moment. “Well now, I don't recall.” He was
frowning, apparently still trying to remember. “Wait a minute.
Jah
, I believe 'twas something like . . . Lillian.”

Perry harrumphed and stepped back to use the level on the buggy box he was constructing. “Doesn't sound very Amish, does it?”

Ervin agreed. “But the Pennsylvania Amish do use some different first names than round here.”

Lillian? An Amish girl
from Lancaster County?

“What're the chances?” Jed murmured, going over to Perry's fine-looking two-wheeler. He commented on the well-built base, hoping his uncle might say more about the conversation with his friend. Finally Jed asked, “So this was at Lehman's Hardware, ya say?”

Ervin gave him a quizzical look. “
Jah
, in Kidron.”

“Small town,” Jed added casually.

“Sure is,” Ervin said.

Too small
to hide in,
Jed thought. A sudden idea presented itself, and Jed knew right where he was going to be tomorrow—if he could work fast enough.
And if I
can hire a driver, too.

After supper that evening, while his father and the neighboring farmer were nailing together beehive frames, Jed offered to help Bettina groom the horses. The stable smelled of fresh bedding straw, and he drank in the scent—he missed some aspects of daily farm life after spending nearly all of his daylight hours at the carriage shop.

“I need to pick your brain,” he told his sister with a glance over the horse's mane.

“Sounds painful.” She smirked in the horse stall next to Jed.

“I'm serious.”

“What's on your mind?” she asked, grooming brush in hand.

“It might sound peculiar, but let's say you decided to go fancy and wanted to hide from your family in the outside world—”

“What on earth?” Bettina blinked, her eyebrows rising. “Somethin' you're not telling me, Jed?”

He shook his head. “It's not about me,
Simbel
—silly.”

“Who, then?”

“Just put your thinkin' cap on for a minute and help me out.”

“Well, I wouldn't dress Plain, that's for sure.”

Obviously,
Jed thought. “So how would I spot you if you looked like every other
Englischer
?”

“Oh, I see.” Bettina stopped her brushing and placed her hand on the chestnut mare. “You must be lookin' for a girl who's gone a little overboard. She wouldn't have a very
gut
fashion sense—for an
Englischer
, that is. She'd look fancy but a little off.”

“How do ya mean?”

“If it was me, I'd be the one trying too hard to fit in. First, I'd cut my hair real short and maybe color it, too.” Bettina touched her auburn hair where it was visible outside the white bandanna. “How would I look as a brunette?”

Jed pondered her response.

“Most of all, I wouldn't
sound
Amish, if I could help it,” she continued.

Jed nodded. According to Uncle Ervin's friend, it was the woman's accent that gave her away.

“I'd also spend nearly all my time with Amish folk, since I'd be awfully homesick,” Bettina said, clinching his plan.

Of
course!
Jed thought.
There are oodles of Amish at Lehman
's Hardware.
“I guess I just need to check with the locals . . . ask if there are any fancy folk hanging round Amish.”


Ach
, Jed.” She stared at him, frowning. “Is this a
real
girl we're talkin' about?”

“She's very real, and she's a runaway.”

“Well then, I'm sure someone will know
exactly
who you're looking for. But, Jed . . . most likely, even if ya could track down a girl like this, she might not have a thing to do with you. Runaways are fed up with bein' told what to do and how to be.”

Lillian,
he thought.
If Lily's changed her name,
what else has she changed?

“Tell me more.” His sister stepped out of the horse stall and came to the door where Jed was working. Leaning on the door, she was clearly curious. “This doesn't have anything to do with the girl you liked in Lancaster County, does it?”

“There's nothin' to tell, frankly.”

Bettina gave him a look. “I'll keep mum, I promise.”

He thought of Eva's sisterly concern for Lily, and of Uncle Ervin's comments—if they panned out. “I'll let you know when or if I find out. How's that?”

Turning back, she slipped inside the other stall again and picked up the grooming brush once more. “It'll be your fault if I don't sleep tonight, ya know, wonderin' what you're up to.”

“I'm just spinning my wheels. Prob'ly nothin' will come of it.” He fluffed the bedding straw with a pitchfork. If Lily wanted to be fancy, that was her right, since she was old enough to make her own decisions. Even so, it was Eva he was concerned about, and he couldn't help but wonder if she had heard from Lily by now.

And if not
 . . .

What if I could
bring Eva at least some measure of relief? But do
I dare interfere in her life after messing up so
badly?

Yet Jed felt he had little hope of another chance with Eva if he did nothing about Lily. It wasn't a perfect plan, but it was
something
.

Later, when he and Bettina had finished with the horses, his sister headed to the house to help their mother with some
hemming, and Jed made his way to the woodshed to split a pile of dry logs with his father.

Right away, Jed brought up the idea of an Old Order Amish person trying to go English. Typically, he and Daed didn't talk much when they worked together, but he wanted to hear what insight his father might have.

“What's this about going fancy?” His poor father looked
ferhoodled
.

“Ain't me, so don't worry.”

“'Tis
gut.
Thought I heard from the deacon you were planning to take baptismal classes this summer.”

“Right.” Jed knew he'd better come up with something to shed a bit of light on what he was planning. “Someone I met in Pennsylvania has a relative who left the Amish community back there.”

“And you'd like to locate him?”

“Well, it's a young woman, actually.”

“I see.”

Jed didn't feel obliged to tell more. “I just thought you might've heard accounts of some Amish youth tryin' to fit in with the outside world . . . and if they're ever persuaded to return to their families. What helps them want to stay put once they're back home?”

Daed leaned his axe against the woodpile and scratched his neck. “You don't hear of this a lot round here. Does the girl have a good church family to keep her from backsliding? Because none of us is immune to temptation, son.”

“I know very little about her or the church district.”

“Well, given the right—or wrong—circumstance, any of us is capable of sin.” His father quoted 1 Corinthians 10, verse 12. “‘Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.'”

Jed had heard that very verse during Sunday sermons.

“The Lord gives us the responsibility to keep track of each other.” Daed stopped to wipe his brow with the back of his shirt sleeve. “Makes me wonder where the young woman's family is in all this.”

“Sadly, her parents are deceased—her mother passed just recently.”

“So then someone else needed to come alongside the girl to encourage her in the faith, ain't so?”

Jed wondered, now that his father had said this, if Lily's brothers had been too caught up with their own families, perhaps, or if they weren't even aware of Lily's struggles. Surely the latter was true. Yet with a loving, caring sister like Eva, how could Lily have been enticed by the world?

Daed had more to say. “The Deceiver of souls looks for discouraged and disconnected believers—'specially those isolated because of grief or disappointment. Such folks are cut off from the church body as a whole by their own doin'.” Daed looked off in the distance like he was remembering someone in particular. “You've known people like this, Jed. They tend to drift away like chaff in the wind.”

Jed nodded, keenly listening. “I'd like to help this young woman, if I can find her.”

“Be careful, son. You might not like what you discover. Satan's trickery abounds.” Daed picked up his axe and began chopping again, and Jed worked, too, glad to help his wise father.

May
the Lord be with me,
Jed prayed, wanting to do this for the right reason . . . though he could almost imagine Eva's lovely face when she learned that Lily had been found.

BOOK: The Photograph
11.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Horse Tamer by Walter Farley
Maxwell's Smile by Hauf, Michele
Invasion by B.N. Crandell
The Hadrian Memorandum by Allan Folsom
The Red Dahlia by Lynda La Plante
The Bubble Reputation by Cathie Pelletier
Half Lost by Sally Green
Crí­menes by Ferdinand Von Schirach