Christmas at Harmony Hill (5 page)

Read Christmas at Harmony Hill Online

Authors: Ann H. Gabhart

Tags: #FIC042000, #Pregnant women—Fiction, #Pregnant women—Family relationships—Fiction, #Abandoned children—Fiction, #Shakers—Fiction

BOOK: Christmas at Harmony Hill
7.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She thanked him and watched him climb back up on the wagon to start his horses moving. What choice did she have but to turn and climb the stone steps? The door opened and a somber-faced woman in a gray dress with a large white collar lapped over her bosom waited for her. Heather slipped her hand in her pocket to touch her mother’s letter.

“Are you sure about this, Mother?” she muttered under her breath.

The door is open, isn’t it?
Her mother’s voice whispered through her mind.

God’s plan. That was what her mother had written in her letter. Heather looked back up at the Shaker woman who didn’t smile but did speak a word of greeting. She opened the door wider and Heather passed into the warmth inside.

9

T
he Ministry is deeply concerned about you, Sister Sophrena.” Eldress Lilith folded her hands together on the table between them and studied Sophrena’s face.

Sophrena wasn’t sure if it was concern or pity she saw on the woman’s face. The new eldress was so very young. Nothing like dear Eldress Freda who had stepped over into heaven last year, taking her wisdom and gentle spirit with her.

Not that Eldress Lilith wasn’t wise. Sophrena was sure she was, else the Ministry would not have raised her to the position of eldress. But the young woman’s wisdom had been only lightly tested. Her smooth young face had no lines etched around her eyes or mouth to give evidence of the joys and sorrows she might have shared with her sisters. New to the position of leadership, she had much desire to perform her duties in a way pleasing to the Ministry. Such colored her listening talents until she seemed to be continually looking behind every word spoken to her in confession for some unrevealed sin, instead of merely responding to the admissions of her sisters’ wrongs with kind forgiveness.

Eldress Lilith had come to Harmony Hill from one of the eastern
communities. Which one, Sophrena could never remember. Age was such a worrisome thing, not only stealing a person’s peace but also impairing her ability to easily recall those things she knew she’d been told. Heaven forbid that she would get like poor Sister Alice who could not be trusted to find her way from her retiring room to the dining table without the aid of another sister. Then again, dear Sister Alice never seemed worried, so perhaps it would not be so ill to become like her. Happy in her place. Happy with her sisters. Of little concern to those in the Ministry.

Sophrena shifted in her chair and was thankful the seat was well woven so that it didn’t complain under her weight to give away her uneasiness. She did not like thinking of the Ministry discussing poor Sister Sophrena’s lack of unity and peace. True or not. She wanted to squirm in her chair again when she thought of all the times she herself had been concerned about the reluctant spirit of this or that young sister in her charge.

But she had not completely lost all discipline and managed to sit straight in the chair and meet Eldress Lilith’s eyes. After all, she had been a proper Shaker for many years, and being a Shaker required a great deal of disciplined behavior. She leaned on that discipline as she waited for whatever else the eldress was going to say.

The younger woman let the silence wrap around them for a long moment. Then she made a clicking noise with her tongue, a habit she had that signaled her effort to remain patient when the proper peace of the household was in question. “Have you nothing to say, my sister?”

Sophrena didn’t know what the eldress wanted to hear. Hadn’t she already confessed her weariness and the contrary thoughts she’d had regarding Sister Edna? She searched her mind for more sins to confess, but how could she confess what was only an aching feeling inside her that had no words? Another click of Eldress Lilith’s tongue poked Sophrena. She would have to say something. It was expected.

“I regret giving the Ministry concern. I realize their time would be better spent praying for our village and the direction of Mother Ann rather than in consideration of my shortcomings.” Sophrena dropped her eyes to the table. Perhaps she should confess her reluctance to confess to one so much younger than herself. But age did not matter. Spirit was what mattered. And Sophrena’s spirit was as dry and brittle as last year’s cornstalks.

“Nay, Sister Sophrena. It is the Ministry’s dearest duty to encourage those walking this path of love and salvation. Each sister or brother here is very important to our family. After all, as our Mother Ann teaches, man is more precious than anything he makes, and the best product of industry is character.”

“Yea,” Sophrena murmured without looking up at the eldress. “I have always endeavored to have good character.”

“So you have, my sister. So you have. You are much loved here. That is the reason for the concern over the evident weariness of your spirit.” She unwrapped her hands and tapped her fingers on the table a few seconds before once again clicking her tongue. “And for your growing interest in things and people of the world.”

“Nay, I have no desire for things of the world.” Sophrena pushed the words out too quickly, as though she needed the denial in her own ears even more than in Eldress Lilith’s.

“Nor for its people?” The eldress didn’t wait for Sophrena to answer. “What of these letters from your worldly family that have brought you tears?”

“Hard times have hit that family and I merely continued to write to them in hopes of offering them some peace.”

“One cannot offer what one does not have.” There was no click of the tongue this time, only words that Sophrena could not deny.

“Yea, that is true, Eldress. I confess that I have not the proper peace.”

The woman reached across the small table between them and touched Sophrena’s arm. She studied her a moment before she asked, “What is it you want, Sister Sophrena?”

“What we all want. The gift of a simple spirit. A spirit that does not poke me with unneeded worries.”

“A Believer has no reason for worries. Not if we put our trust in the Lord and wait for our Mother Ann’s help and guidance.”

“Yea. I surely misspoke.” Sophrena could not argue with Eldress Lilith’s words. She had often said much the same thing to the young novitiates she had guided along the Shaker path over the years. Many had strayed from that path. A few had embraced the peace of a proper Believer and happily continued to give their hands to work for the common good of the Society.

She looked at her own hands with fingers calloused from the peeling knife and stained from working with the apples. She was relieved when the eldress dismissed her to return to her duties.

What is it that you want?
Eldress Lilith’s question echoed in her head all through the morning as Sophrena worked through the bushels of apples. She wasn’t alone in the work. She and Sister Evelyn traded times turning the handle of the peeler or placing the apples on the spindle. Two other sisters worked beside them with another peeler to get the many apples ready for other sisters to cook into applesauce or apple butter. It was a good duty, one that profited the Society in sales or enjoyment at their eating tables, but the task took little thought.

Sophrena would have rather been in the Sisters’ workshop making cloth. She had great patience in threading the looms, a tedious process of many days for the larger looms and one that took much concentrated attention since one did not want to tie a thread out of its proper place.

That’s what she was, she decided. She set another apple on the spike and watched the blade strip off the peeling when Sister Evelyn turned the handle. Out of her proper place. Peeled of the comfort of her simple beliefs and no longer able to feel the unifying peace in her heart. But why?

Perhaps that question was more to be answered than the question of what she wanted. She had told Eldress Lilith she wanted peace,
but was that true? For over twenty-five years she had embraced peace and lived happily in the village. When she thought of it rationally, she saw no reason reaching a milestone of half a century in age should make any difference in that. But she was no longer thinking rationally or simply. Instead she was thinking of Susan’s family and how they must be suffering after her death.

She did so wish she could send a gift to the young daughter who of necessity was now caring for the family. Perhaps a silk scarf. She would gladly send her own scarf made from silk produced from the villages’ silkworms, but such would not be allowed without permission. She had little trouble imagining Eldress Lilith’s frown if she made such a request.

But weren’t Believers instructed by Mother Ann to share their plenty with the poor in their neighborhood? Especially with Christmas coming.

Sophrena let a sigh whisper from her as she bent to gather up more apples from the basket. When had she ever thought so much about Christmas? Surely not since she was a child and found a rag doll on her pillow one Christmas morn.

A smile awoke in Sophrena’s heart as she remembered the doll’s embroidered mouth and eyes and the mere tacking of threads for a nose. She’d carried that doll with her everywhere she went for years. Visible proof of her mother’s love that was never spoken aloud.

Life hadn’t been easy for her mother, who stared out at each new day with a dark weariness that did not change with the seasons or the chores. Some days Sophrena and her mother worked side by side in the kitchen for hours without a word passing between them.

Good practice for her life with the Shakers, Sophrena thought now as she continued loading the apples on the peeler. Unnecessary conversation was discouraged and silence the friend of spiritual peace and dedicated labor. A worker’s mind should be on her tasks. She pulled the slicer down to divide the apple into crisp chunks. As she watched them fall into the catching bucket, the wayward thought crossed her mind to pick up a slice and eat it. What would Sister
Evelyn think if she did that? Sophrena shook her head a little and gathered up six more apples for the spike. Had she lost all discipline? And why did tears keep prickling her eyes over the smallest things?

Her mother had cried. Tears streamed unchecked down her mother’s face when Jerome announced he was joining the Shakers and that Sophrena as his wife would have to go with him. Sophrena hadn’t cried even though she had no desire to leave her family and join the Shakers. At the same time, she thought anything might be better than the life she was leading married to Jerome.

It had been better.

Her new sisters embraced her and loved her. She fit in the Shaker dresses. She felt in place. The songs in meeting awakened her spirit and her feet were eager to dance. That had surprised her, but the dance had released something within her, freed her to worship. Her unhappy marriage passed out of her memory. She was no longer the Sophrena of the world. She was Sister Sophrena ready to give her heart to God and her hands to work.

She was still ready to do the same. Wasn’t she working every day with willing hands? But the Shaker dress no longer fit with comfort. The dark weariness that had weighted down her mother in the world seemed to hover over Sophrena’s shoulders now. Life was sliding past her and the rushing days had somehow stolen her contentment. She should stomp and tell the devil to get behind her. That’s what Eldress Lilith would tell her to do. That was what Sister Edna would point at her and tell her she had not done.

Another sigh worked up through her. Maybe she needed to ask Brother Kenton for a tonic. Some lemon balm for hysteria. Her heart began beating faster as she imagined Brother Kenton’s face listening to her symptoms and then his hands as he prepared the tonic. Oh dear heavens, where was this shivery feeling coming from at the thought of a brother’s hands?

She could tell herself she did not know, but it would only be pretense. Ever since spring when she had sprained her ankle and the doctor’s strong, slender fingers had moved across her leg to
determine the extent of her injury, she had been unable to forget his touch on her skin. She should twirl and shake to rid herself of such wrong thoughts, but instead she stood still and shut her eyes to better experience the feeling.

“What is wrong with you, Sister Sophrena?” Sister Evelyn spoke up from her stool by the apple peeler. “The spindle has been without an apple for a long minute.”

“Yea, forgive me, Sister.” Sophrena grabbed an apple and in her haste, set it on the spike at a crook. She kept her eyes away from her sister’s face as she pulled the apple off and reset it properly. Her hands trembled as she reached for the next apple.

Sister Evelyn turned the wheel at exactly the right speed to take the peeling efficiently from the apple. She watched as Sophrena set another apple in place. “If you feel ill, perhaps you should ask Eldress Lilith’s permission to rest in your room this afternoon or even see Brother Kenton for some sort of tonic.”

“Nay,” Sophrena said. “I am fine. I will do my duty.”

“To properly do so you must take care of your body and mind. Mother Ann tells us it takes a whole woman to be a Shaker sister.”

“I have been a Believer for many years.” Sophrena could not completely keep the irritation out of her voice. Yet another sin of lack of patience she would have need to confess. But would she dare confess the shivery feeling thoughts of Brother Kenton had sent through her? At her age, the very thought of such a sin was ridiculous. She was not a young person who had to stomp out such desires. She long ago picked up her cross of self-denial and carried it faithfully.

She would turn her mind once more to the coming Sacrifice Day to ready herself for the celebration of Christmas. She stepped back into a rhythm with the apples as she pushed aside her wayward thoughts and instead concentrated on the good things the Shaker sisters would cook with the apples for their Christmas dinner. Applesauce cakes. Spiced applesauce to go with the baked ham. Bread fresh from the oven.

But first would be a special meeting with songs and dances to recognize the birth of the Christ. This year Christmas fell on Sunday, so the meeting would be doubly good. A day to rest and pray for the peace promised by the angels on that long ago Christmas.

Other books

No Lease on Life by Lynne Tillman
The Black Opera by Mary Gentle
Necropolis 2 by Lusher, S. A.
Bad Kid by David Crabb
Whisper Pride Pack by T. Cobbin
The Lost Gods by Francesca Simon