A Stranger's Wish (28 page)

Read A Stranger's Wish Online

Authors: Gayle Roper

Tags: #Love Stories, #Lancaster County (Pa.), #General, #Adventure stories, #Amish, #Romance, #Art Teachers - Pennsylvania - Lancaster County, #Fiction, #Religious, #Pennsylvania, #Action & Adventure, #Christian, #Art Teachers, #Christian Fiction, #Lancaster County

BOOK: A Stranger's Wish
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“Truth.”

He looked at me with pity. “I thought you were too intelligent to get taken in by religion.”

“Are you bored in here?” I asked.

“What?” He seemed thrown off balance by my change of topic.

“Bored as in you don’t have enough to do.”

He frowned, unable to see where I was going. “Of course I’m bored.”

“Then I’ve got a good project to fill some of your time. Read the Bible and check out God’s claims and promises.”

He looked less than excited with my idea. Boredom was obviously preferable. “I haven’t got a Bible.”

“Sure you do.” I reached into his bedside table and pulled out a Gideon Bible. “I challenge you to read the Gospel of John. I’m going to get your papers for you. You read John for me.”

He looked at me as though I had suddenly developed a bad odor.

“It’s better for you than your daily diet of soaps,” I said.

If possible, his lip curled further in disgust. “No wonder that guy dumped you,” he said nastily. “You’re too dictatorial.”

I decided that maybe Doris wasn’t so lucky after all.

18

 

 

T
here were pockets of time when I thought I’d die from the sharp pain that pierced my heart whenever I thought of Clarke. My breath would catch in my throat and my eyes would fill.

Maybe I’m overreacting, I’d tell myself as I struggled for control. Maybe I’m jumping to conclusions. Maybe there’s nothing for me to be upset about. Maybe being kissed by a beautiful girl in the church parking lot doesn’t mean a thing. After all, it could be a most trivial matter.

Then again, maybe it did mean something. Maybe it meant a lot. Clarke wasn’t the type to go around kissing girls lightly. After all, he was a responsible Christian leader, a counselor and teacher. Maybe the problem was my conclusion-jumping, but not in reference to him and her. In reference to him and me. I saw romance where there was none, affection where there was mere consideration and appreciation. After all, when Nelson blasted him with that question, what could he say?

“May you be so lucky when you grow up.”

All that statement proved was that Clarke was too polite to embarrass me in public. If he really cared, he’d call or come see me.

And he did neither.

I sighed. Was this the pain and distress Todd was feeling? If so, it served me right to reap what I had sown.

Surprisingly, the arrival of Isaiah at the farm was a great help to me. He turned out to be one of the most pleasant people I’d ever been around. He had an indefatigably positive outlook on life, and he shared his good spirits through an unending stream of admittedly adolescent practical jokes.

John had the dubious pleasure of having the saltshaker lid and all the salt fall into his morning oatmeal as Ruth giggled in delight at the cleverness of her betrothed.

Mary lifted the lid on one of her pots and screamed when she found four severed chicken heads where there should have been gently stewing bodies.

I bit into an egg salad sandwich only to notice a strange taste. When I lifted the top slice of bread to see what was wrong, I found one of Hawk’s Milk Bones sitting soggily amid the eggs.

All this had happened within twenty-four hours of Isaiah’s arrival.

On another front, Mary told me, “I think John will say yes to selling my paintings.” As she spoke, she looked over her shoulder to see where Isaiah was. “But we won’t do anything until after the wedding.”

That made sense to me. “I’ll do some scouting for places willing to carry your paintings while you wait.” I knew that most of the area stores and galleries would jump at the chance to be part of the rare phenomenon of an Amish artist. We just had to find the situation best for Mary.

Ruth was giddy and Mary glowed with a quiet satisfaction. I tried not to be the little black cloud that dripped on everyone else’s happy parade.

Living with the gentle paranoia Ruth’s intended induced not only held up John’s decision; it also helped me keep thoughts of Clarke at bay. Still, I thought it was a bit much the Monday evening before the wedding when I pulled out a chair and sat down at the kitchen table to talk to Mary and sat on Hawk’s metal brush, bristles up.

“Ruth thinks he’s wonderful,” said a sympathetic Mary, trying not to laugh as I rubbed my punctured anatomy. “They’ve driven me wild with worry on many occasions, but I’m hard pressed not to like him.”

“Ruth will never be bored,” I said, placing the offending brush in plain view lest someone else get similarly perforated.

Mary sat across from me. “At least they’re staying Plain. You probably don’t understand how important that is to us, and I don’t think I can begin to explain how thankful we are.”

“I know how my parents would react if I turned my back on the Lord,” I said, honored by Mary’s openness.

She nodded. “Lately I’ve been so pleased to watch Elam develop a real faith. I hope that in time Ruth and Isaiah will learn not just the
Ordnung
but the living faith beneath it.”

I rested my elbows on the table after checking carefully for any other booby traps. “How do you define faith, Mary?”

She frowned in thought. “Well, there’s Jesus and there’s the church. You believe in Jesus and keep the rules of the church, and you hope for the best. Of course, it’s very important to be separate from the world so you don’t become worldly and proud.”

“You believe not being worldly is important to salvation?”

“Oh, yes. Don’t you? ‘Be not conformed to this world.’ You have to be obedient to the
Ordnung
to be redeemed.”

“Then living your life properly is as important as believing in Jesus?”

“Living in harmony with the church is necessary,” she said, not really answering my question.

“Which is why I can’t become a Christian,” Jake said as he rolled into the room. “As you both have undoubtedly noticed, the church and I aren’t exactly in tune.”

Pain shot across Mary’s face at her son’s remark.

He smiled amiably, either oblivious to his mother’s distress or ignoring it. “Do we have root beer, Mom?”

“There’s some in the refrigerator. Let me get it for you.” She pushed herself up from the table and went to the refrigerator. She pulled out a bottle and brought it to him. Then, with tears in her eyes, she went upstairs.

I turned on Jake. “How long were you eavesdropping?”

“Long enough. And don’t scowl at me like that. I don’t make a habit of skulking around with my ear to the wall. I happened to be coming in and hesitated a minute to hear what you two had to say.” He shrugged. “Discussions about religion interest me. I keep hoping I’ll learn something that allows a little bit of leeway for a black sheep like me.”

“Don’t do that, Jake,” I said softly.

“Don’t do what?”

“Don’t hide behind the traditions of your family.”

He watched me warily. “What do you mean?”

“You keep using your family’s Amish-ness as an excuse for not becoming a Christian.”

“What do you know about Amish-ness?” His voice was hard. “Do you think a couple of months on an Amish farm makes you an expert? You don’t know anything about the pressure, the sermons, the rules.”

“You’re right; I don’t. But you’re missing my point. Being a Christian has nothing to do with traditions of any kind, no matter how much you love them or hate them. It has to do with a personal faith in Jesus as the Christ. Either you choose to believe in Him or you don’t.”

“That’s not what they say.”

“See what I mean?”

“What?”

“You’re hiding behind them.”

“I am not,” he defended himself angrily. “I’m just stating what they say.”

“The issue is what
you
say, Jake, not what they say,” I said. “You can’t spend your whole life saying it’s everyone else’s fault that you don’t believe.”

“Do you have any idea how tired I am of everybody telling me what I should do, what I should believe? Like I’m not smart enough to reach any conclusions of my own! ‘Jake, do this.’ ‘Jake, do that.’ ‘Jake, go to school.’ ‘Jake, believe in Jesus.’ You’d think I lost my mind, not my legs! Even you get on me, and not just about religion!”

“Me?”

“You want me to meet this Rose person. I have enough trouble just getting through every day without meeting the person who saw me at my worst!”

I refused to sympathize. “See? You’re doing it again. Everybody’s picking on you, so it’s everybody’s fault, not yours. It’s even Rose’s fault that you won’t meet her because she happened to be indiscreet enough to be at the accident scene. I think you’re hiding behind ‘everybody’ to avoid making choices of your own.”

“No wonder you and Jon Clarke make such a good couple,” said Jake stiffly. “I’m surprised he’s not here by your side to help you reel me into the kingdom.”

The phone in his apartment rang, and we both looked in its direction, distracted. I forced myself back to the subject at hand.

“Clarke has nothing to do with this conversation. And another thing! You sure are quick to change subjects when you don’t want to talk!”

“It sure beats leaving the room,” he called after me as I ran upstairs. “Lecture, lecture, lecture, run. Shouldn’t you be getting me on my knees? After you heal my legs, of course?”

What an awful person he can be!
I threw myself across my bed.
Terrible. Nasty. Ugly. Why should I waste my time worrying about him when I could worry about me instead?

How proud the Lord must be of that mature, Christian attitude.

 

Tuesday was a bad day at school. I don’t know whether the kids picked up on my distress and reacted to it, or whether they would have been terrible even if I’d been singing “I’m a Happy, Happy Christian” all day.

One of the first grade boys lost his lunch all over my desk, ruining my plan book and perfuming the room.

Two girls got in a hair-pulling, clothes-tearing fight over whose artwork was the best, and I was kicked and elbowed when I broke them up.

A troubled student took umbrage at an uncomplimentary comment from his neighbor about his most unique, all-black painting, and I got there just in time to prevent his braining the neighbor with a chair.

The mother of one of the girls in the fight came after school and harangued me for allowing her daughter to be attacked. I refrained, but barely, from giving her my opinion of her “darling girl.”

When I finally arrived at Ripley’s Storage Garages, I was in as snarly a state of mind as I’d ever been. It was already four forty-five and getting dark fast. Eastern Standard Time had returned with the first weekend in November, and the earlier dusk was evident between the rows of garages that made up the Ripley complex. As I drove through the gateway in the chain-link fence, I was glad for the lights at regular intervals along the rows.

An older gentleman in the office gave me directions to Mr. Geohagan’s unit, and I found it at the end of a long row of beige garages. I decided Mr. G must have a thing for corner properties.

I parked my car in front of the unit, and in the illumination from a light on the wall three garages down I fitted the key into the lock and lifted the lightweight fiberglass door.

By feeling along the wall inside the door, I found a switch. As light flooded the little room, a jumble of furniture, boxes, and miscellany sprang into view. I was looking at the putting away of a life, the ending of what had once been vibrant and alive and was now only a collection of dust-covered memories.

Lord, I don’t know what You have in mind for me, but if it’s possible, please don’t let it be a hospital bed and a storage garage and nothing else. Please.

Along the left wall was a small work area containing a gray metal desk with a gooseneck desk lamp, a padded, ergonomically sound chair, two dinged and dreary gray file cabinets, and a very handsome, very out-of-place navy leather easy chair.

The desk was awash with papers left by a man obviously planning to return. But he hadn’t, and probably he never would.

Why did he work here in the discomfort of this garage instead of in the relative comfort of his apartment? Certainly the apartment wasn’t cheery, but it was better than this. And that leather chair—why keep it here instead of at home where he could kick back and read Louis L’Amour?

I glanced over my shoulder at the gaping door as I began gathering up the papers. How dark it now looked out there. I felt uncomfortable, vulnerable, alone, sort of itchy all over. Maybe I should close the door. But then I’d have to open it, and my imagination would conjure up all kinds of things just waiting for me on the other side.

“If I’m ever widowed,” I once told my mother, “the first two things I’m going to buy are an electric garage door opener and an electric blanket.”

Mom had only laughed. “Let’s get you married before we worry about your being widowed.”

But my comment was heartfelt, especially about the garage door opener. I had hated going out at night at my old apartment when I had to lift my garage door on unseen darkness. Who knew what would be lurking there, waiting to pounce on me? I hated just as much coming home, getting out to lift the door, pulling into the garage, and getting out again to lower the door. At least at the farm I parked out in the open, where it felt safer somehow.

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