Rory's Promise (18 page)

Read Rory's Promise Online

Authors: Michaela MacColl,Rosemary Nichols

BOOK: Rory's Promise
3.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
CHAPTER
Twenty-Nine

T
HE CHILDREN H
A
D B
A
THED
A
ND WERE N
A
PPING.
A
N EXH
A
USTED SISTER Anna dozed in a plush armchair while Rory got ready for the party. She put on her only other dress, her best. She combed and braided her hair as neatly as possible. She watched the clock. At ten minutes to four, she was ready to go. Then it was a quarter past. She rebraided her hair. Rory told herself there could be any number of reasons Ramon was late. By half past four, the large room felt like a jail cell. What if Ramon didn't come? She should have found a way to talk to Ramon at church. What if the Martinezes had decided that it would be easier for Vi to adjust to the family without Rory? What if …

Tap, tap.

Rory hurried to answer the door, a welcoming smile on her face. But instead of Ramon a small Chinese boy in hotel livery stood in the doorway. Her smile faded. With a small bow he handed her a note.

Unfolding the paper, she read, “Cheng will bring you to me. Ramon.”

Rory nodded and carefully shut the door so as not to wake Sister Anna. Cheng led her down the uncarpeted back stairs into the kitchen.

“You're Chinese?” Rory asked.

Cheng seemed surprised that she was talking to him but what he didn't know was that Rory was friendly with the Chinese boys who delivered the linens to the Foundling.

“I'm American. My parents came here from China to build the railroad and I was born here,” he said, holding the door open. Sitting at a table in the corner of the kitchen, a cup of coffee in his hand, was Ramon.

“Ramon!” Rory cried. He cocked an eyebrow at the relief in her voice. “I was worried you wouldn't come,” she explained.

“I told you I would,” he said.

“I was just being foolish, I guess.” Rory hung her head.

“I understand,” Ramon said. “I know what is at stake for you. Nothing less than your sister's happiness.”

Rory gulped and nodded, unable to speak past the lump in her throat.

“Cat got your tongue?” Ramon teased.

“Why were you late?” Rory asked. Now that sounded more like her usual self.

“The hotel wouldn't let me come into the lobby and collect you properly.”

“Why not?” Rory was puzzled. “Who would stop you?”
She glanced around the kitchen ready to take someone to task for making her worry.

“No Mexicanos allowed,” he said simply. “This hotel is owned by the copper company. They built it for their own people, not us.”

“But that's not fair,” Rory cried. “Ramon, I don't like this town.”

“Neither do I,” he said with a cheerful grin. “But let them keep their hotel. They can't run their mines without us. Let's go.” He stood up and drained his coffee cup in one gulp. “Oh, I almost forgot. Elena wants me to give you this.” He held out a shapeless bundle wrapped in paper.

Rory hesitated, feeling the soft heft of it.

“Open it,” Ramon said.

Rory carefully unwrapped the package. It was a dark green handmade shawl.

“It's beautiful,” Rory said, stroking the wool.

Ramon looked pleased. “I told Elena you were cold last night.”

“It's the first new thing I've ever had,” Rory said. She held it to her cheek and used it to brush away a tear before Ramon could see. With his help, she wound the large shawl around her body and followed Ramon out to an alley that led to the street. The sky was dark with storm clouds and the streets were deserted.

Rory glanced back at the Clifton Hotel. Rory, a penniless Irish orphan, was permitted to stay there but Ramon couldn't
enter by the front door. There was something she had to know, even if she offended Ramon by asking. “Ramon, what will it be like for Vi to have Mexicano parents?”

“Elena thinks love is enough, but I'm more realistic than she is. It won't be easy,” Ramon finally answered. “But we're going to be good parents to Vi and William. They won't want for anything.”

Ramon looked to the sky. “We should hurry before it rains,” he said. “Our guests are already at the house to meet the children, and you of course. I wish the children's
padrinos
could be there, but it is impossible.”


Padrinos
?”

“Godparents,” he said. “We've chosen my brother and his wife, but they are still in Mexico.”

Rory heard the longing in Ramon's voice. She considered everything she knew about Ramon: his problems with the company, his homesickness for Mexico and his family, and how hard it would be for a Mexican family to keep white children in Clifton. Her stomach tightly twisted like a knot, and she forced herself to ask, “Are you going to take Vi and William to Mexico?”

Matter-of-factly, as though it didn't change absolutely everything, Ramon nodded. “Since the strike, the company wants to get rid of me. We have no future in Clifton. We only stayed here this long because we were waiting for Violet and William.” He walked on, not noticing that Rory could barely breathe.

Mexico! She had thought the Arizona Territory was far away from all they knew in New York, but Mexico was another country. What would it be like to always be a foreigner and have to talk in a language not your own? Would Violet even remember being American?

Violet would never know New York the way Rory did. She'd never have a chance to see the fireworks over the river. Or the balloons in Central Park. Vi would never have the fun of jumping onto the back of an omnibus. Maybe the best thing was to bring Violet back to the Foundling and they could try again. Sister Anna had offered Rory a permanent place at the Foundling. Rory could bargain with Sister Anna to keep Violet close to her a while longer. After the mess Sister Anna had made of the adoptions in Clifton, she owed Rory that much.

On the other hand, wasn't family the most important thing? Ever since Mama died, Rory had tried to be Violet's whole family, but now Elena and Ramon wanted to be Violet's parents. And they were good people.

First things first. She hadn't yet had the chance to ask the most important question of all. Hurrying to catch up with him, she began,“Ramon, I know you asked for two children—”

“Really only one—a boy. But Father Mandin is persuasive,” Ramon answered with a wry chuckle.

She steeled her courage before she asked, “Ramon, would you consider taking a third? Would you take me?”

He watched her, his face saying nothing.

“I'm a hard worker and I'm an expert at taking care of children.” The words tumbled out of her mouth. “I can write, read, and even do multiplication!”

Ramon ran his fingers through his thick hair. “Elena and I discussed this last night. Rory, we like you and it would be right to keep two sisters together …”

Rory knew there was a
but
.

“But we cannot afford three children,” he went on. “I'm sorry, Rory. But that is my answer. Two children are all we can take.”

“If Sister Anna finds out that you plan to take the children to Mexico, you won't have any children,” Rory pointed out. “She'd never permit it.”

“If she asks, I will tell her the truth,” Ramon said. “I can convince her if I have to. It will be a decent life in Mexico for William and Violet. We will love them as if they were our own blood. And don't forget, they'll be raised in the Church.”

“But if Sister Anna doesn't ask?”

He shrugged. “Then I don't feel l need to go out of my way to make trouble.” His eyes crinkled when he smiled, inviting her to smile back. But the stakes were still too high.

“She would worry most about the children having no one American to look after them … but if I went too …” Rory let her voice trail off.

Ramon laughed. “You are the clever one. Do you ever give up?”

“No,” Rory assured him.

He shook his head. Before he could say no again, Rory interrupted. “I'm old enough to work—what if I could pay my own way? Do people in Mexico want to learn English? I could teach them!”

“They do want to learn—but you are so young.” He tugged gently on her braid. “You deserve to stay a child a little longer.”

“Not if it means losing Violet.” Rory spoke simply and she could see from Ramon's face he understood.

The rain began coming down in sheets and the wind picked up. “Quickly,” Ramon urged, taking her hand.

“But we haven't decided anything!” Rory had to raise her voice to be heard against the rising wind.

“We'll talk later,” he promised.

As they ran, she consoled herself that he hadn't said no. When they reached Ramon's house, Rory could hear the muffled sounds of a party. But she wasn't prepared for the din when Ramon opened the door. There were so many people that Rory wondered how they fit in the room. The conversation stopped abruptly, then started up again when they saw Ramon. Greetings were called in Spanish, and Rory wondered how hard it would be to learn the language. If she didn't, she would never be able to speak to anyone if they went to Mexico.

She noticed that almost everyone had the same dark skin as Ramon. Rory held out her hand and compared the difference between her skin and theirs. Even freshly scrubbed,
the men still smelled of sulfur, from the mines. All the women wore white dresses with colorful embroidery on the bottoms of their skirts. Their shawls were a rainbow of bright colors. Some of them had paper flowers in their buns. Others had ribbons braided into their dark hair. Near the back door, an elderly man played a cheerful tune on his fiddle while a group of people sang and clapped. The tune was unfamiliar and she couldn't understand a word of the song. Feeling suddenly alone in the crowded room, Rory searched for Violet.

Ramon took her new shawl and hung it on a hook on the door as he joked with his guests. Elena hurried across the crowded room to embrace Rory, who didn't flinch this time. She was getting used to Elena's hugs.

“Rory, at last you are here!” Elena said. “Are you hungry?”

“No, thank you,” Rory said. “Where's Violet?”

“Where else but at the table with all the desserts.” Elena laughed.

“May I go to her?”

“Of course.” Elena hurried away to greet a new arrival.

Rory saw William first. He had found a friend, a boy who was as dark as William was fair. The two of them were running around being petted by the women. She saw Violet across the room, sitting on the lap of an elderly woman, and headed for them. Violet was taking tiny bites from a piece of cake in her hand. She saw Rory and waved. When Rory came within speaking distance, Violet said to the elderly woman, “This is my sister, Rory.”

The woman replied in Spanish, but her broad smile was welcoming. She set Violet on her feet and moved away to talk to another older woman watching the fiddler.

There was a gust of rain against the window. Rory hugged herself, glad to be inside.

Violet leaned her head against her sister. “Rory, I don't feel so good.”

“No wonder,” Rory said with exasperation. “How many cakes have you eaten? Vi, these cakes aren't like the cakes back home. They might upset your tummy.”

Violet started to count on her fingers. Suddenly she put her hands to her mouth, her throat convulsing.

“No, Vi. You can't be sick in the middle of the party,” Rory said. She swept Violet up in her arms and headed for the back door. She tried to catch Elena's attention, but she was busy refreshing the cakes on the other end of the table.

“Hold it just a little more,” Rory ordered. Outside the door, the day's light had gone, swallowed by the storm. Heedless of the drenching rain, Violet began throwing up what seemed like dozens of partially chewed cakes. Rory held her sister's hair away from her face until the retching was over. Then Violet held up her arms and Rory obediently picked her up.

“I'm sleepy,” Violet said, her face pale, as she leaned her head on her sister's shoulder.

“Let's take a little nap,” Rory said. She knew from past experience that a nap was the best thing to settle Vi's sensitive stomach.

The two wet girls slipped back into the noisy room. Rory carried her limp sister into the children's sleeping alcove, and placed her on the neatly made bed. She arranged the colorful folded shawl around Violet so snugly that only the tip of her snub nose showed.

“Now I lay me down to sleep,” Rory began. Violet dutifully recited the familiar prayer.

Violet's eyes grew heavier until she fell fast asleep. Rory thought, no matter how vexing Violet might be awake, she looked like an angel when she slept.

Rory waited a few moments to be sure her sister was truly napping before she rose from the small bed. Then she stood watching the party from the shelter of the curtains at the doorway to the children's room. They were all strangers to her, even Ramon and Elena. What did she really know about them? Their language, clothes, and food were alien to her. What kind of sister would she be to send Violet away from everything she knew to a foreign country? How would Violet cope?

Other books

Circo de los Malditos by Laurell K. Hamilton
Bottom Feeder by Deborah LeBlanc
Secretariat by William Nack
The Young Rebels by Morgan Llywelyn
Toygasms! by Sadie Allison
The Mirrored Shard by Caitlin Kittredge
Lyon's Heart by Jordan Silver