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Authors: Lauraine Snelling

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BOOK: Sophie's Dilemma
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‘‘That was good for now. Can I get you anything else?’’

‘‘No thank you.’’
Unless you could work a miracle and bring my mor here
. Her eyes drifted closed before Mrs. Soderstrum made it to the door.

Go away!
She kept from screaming the words, or even whispering them, with the greatest effort.

Later, opening her eyes, she saw afternoon sun on the floor.

‘‘They say I make the best chicken soup, so I brought more than just the broth. You got to feed that baby. Remember?’’ Mrs. Soderstrum set her tray down. ‘‘You sit up and I’ll put this across your lap. I’ll take out the pot and bring you back some warm water. Washing will help you feel a hundred percent better, and then I’ll brush your hair. My sisters and I used to brush each other’s hair, and it always felt so nice. There’s nothing like having someone else do it for you.’’

Gritting her teeth against the onslaught of words, Sophie did as she was told and realized her landlady was right. She did make good chicken soup. Sophie had cleaned the bowl before Mrs. Soderstrum returned with a clean pot and a pitcher of hot water.

‘‘There you go.’’ Mrs. Soderstrum stuck the chamber pot in the cabinet and poured the water into the bowl on top of the stand. ‘‘Will you wash? Or I can help you.’’

‘‘I’ll do it.’’

‘‘Good. Then I’ll be back to brush your hair. If you feel faint, sit down quick.’’

‘‘I will.’’ Sophie sighed. While her stomach felt better, the thought of getting out of bed made her sigh again. She watched as Mrs. Soderstrum picked up the tray and left the room. She didn’t deserve anyone being so good to her. When she stood and looked in the mirror, she almost didn’t recognize herself. Her hair was knotted and flying every which way, her face gaunt with black half-moons under listless eyes. Her skin looked nearly as white as the sheets she’d climbed from, except for the bruise around the bandage on her forehead. But what did it matter? Hamre would never come up behind her, never slide his hands around her waist and draw her back into the safe haven of his solid chest. Tears streaked down her cheeks as she dipped the washcloth in the cooling water and buried her face in the wet warmth.
Oh, God, I cannot bear this
.

I will never leave thee nor forsake thee
. She turned around, searching for the voice that spoke those words. No one else was in the room. That’s all her baby needed—a crazy mother. Already it had no father. It. Her baby was not an it. He or she. She needed to choose two names, one of each kind. Now that was something that bore thinking on.

She finished washing and drew clean underclothes from her drawer. Was she planning on getting dressed? No. But a clean nightdress would feel wonderful. She slid the flannel gown over her head and settled the bands around her wrists. Her hair, now that was another matter.

Mrs. Soderstrum bustled back in. ‘‘I brought clean sheets. I thought we might as well remake your bed while you are out of it. My, don’t you look better. Even a bit of color back in your cheeks.’’

‘‘I’m sorry to be such trouble.’’

‘‘No trouble. You’d do the same, I’m sure.’’ She pulled the blanket and quilt off the bed, then the sheets. Together they tucked the clean sheets under the mattress and finished making the bed, Mrs. Soderstrum plumping the pillows after donning clean cases and stepping back with her hands on her ample hips. ‘‘Now you sit down on that bench, and while I brush your hair, you tell me about what life was like growing up a twin.’’

The more she told, the more she wanted to go home. ‘‘Sometimes I miss Grace so much. . . .’’ The thought of missing Grace brought on the tears of missing Hamre. Ignoring the tugs as Mrs. Soderstrum worked the tangles out of her hair, she closed her eyes and pictured Grace doing the job instead, tsking at the rats’ nests, as she called them, scolding Sophie for not taking better care of herself. She saw Grace signing to the deaf students, her hands patiently forming the symbols so they could learn to talk. Grace was already a fine teacher, so full of love for her pupils that they strove hard to please her.

‘‘There you go. Do you have a ribbon to tie off the end of this braid?’’

Sophie dug in the carved wooden box that had been in the trunk her mother sent. Onkel Olaf had made it, and Ellie gave it to her for Christmas one year. ‘‘Here.’’ She handed over a white ribbon.

Mrs. Soderstrum hummed a tune as she finished the loose braid, weaving the ribbon in with the sections of hair. ‘‘You have such lovely hair. Does Grace look just like you?’’

‘‘No, her hair is as fair as mine is dark. She’s more slender, like a reed that bends in the wind. Our faces are similar, but her eyes are gray and more dreamy. Grace was born deaf, yet she learned sign language, which we all learned, and she also learned to speak. She worked so hard to be like everyone else. My sister is the bravest and kindest person I know.’’

Mrs. Soderstrum stepped back. ‘‘There now. Why, I do see a trace of that spunky Sophie I met a few months ago.’’

Sophie nodded and sighed again. Exhaustion settled on her like a Seattle fog, so thick she almost felt she was breathing in the dense mist.

‘‘I think I need to go back to bed.’’ Her stomach was picking up the morning nasties again. As she settled in, she thought,
I wonder if
Tante Ingeborg has something to help me feel better? Or Dr. Elizabeth?

What would happen if I went home?
The thought jarred her awake for the second time the next morning. The first she’d spent with her head over the basin again in spite of the dried bread Mrs. Soderstrum had left for her on the nightstand.

Mor had already written and said she could come home for the winter until Hamre came back from fishing. Surely Grace would want her home; she had written at least, even though the letter was so stilted. But Far? He had not written her a line nor sent a message by either of the other two. Somehow she knew that was where the trouble lay. But they didn’t know that Hamre had died. First things first. She took out paper and pen and wrote the briefest of notes, her tears splashing blots on the ink.

‘‘I’m going to the store. Do you need anything?’’ Mrs. Soderstrom asked from the doorway.

‘‘Just mail this for me, please.’’ She handed off the envelope. ‘‘Thank you.’’

When she heard the front door close, she went back to contemplating what to do. ‘‘So I won’t go home, er . . . back to Blessing. My room here is paid until Hamre returns or would have been returning.’’ Her voice caught. Spring would come, but Hamre would not return. She stared at the ceiling. If I stay here, I need to find work of some kind for as long as I am able. I can sew, though I’m not the best at it, or teach or clean houses. The last I can do just fine but don’t much like it. I could care for someone’s children, but how would I explain that I was getting fatter because of the babe I carry? I enjoyed working in Tante Penny’s store. I can read well and do sums. Surely there must be a store that needs a good worker.

After two days of visiting every store of every ilk, even a ship’s chandler, where they sold shipping goods, all she had was aching feet and a runny nose. No one required a young woman who, while she claimed to have worked in a cheese house, a general store, and a boardinghouse, had no proof and who, in one case, had to run to vomit before she could talk again. She forced herself to hike up the hill to the boardinghouse, stopping to lean against light posts and trees ever more frequently. After three stops on the stairs to her room, she flung herself across the bed and slept until the supper bell.

The next day she packed all of her belongings into a trunk, drew the pouch of money from the back of the chifforobe, and announced she was going back to Blessing on the morning train.

‘‘Much as I’m going to miss you, I do believe you are making a good choice.’’ Mrs. Soderstrum dabbed at a tear. ‘‘Having you here has been such a blessing for me. You are almost the daughter I never had.’’

She hugged Sophie close. ‘‘Will you telegraph your folks?’’

‘‘No. Someone there will take me in.’’

‘‘I’ll pack a basket of food for you.’’

But the rocking of the train forbade her to eat any of the things packed, and Sophie made visit after visit to the necessary, where the stench made her even sicker. The wheels clacked off the minutes, and the piston drove past the hours as the train headed east, each turn taking her closer to Blessing and home . . . if Far would let her come home.

As she drifted in and out of consciousness, she vaguely remembered a woman with a black hat and feather encouraging her to drink water and a woman wearing purple who fed her crackers and held her head when she lost them—at least she thought the two women were real. Perhaps not.

‘‘I’ve telegraphed ahead to the doctor in Blessing, miss.’’

Had the conductor said that, or did her mind make it up? She had made herself a nuisance to everyone on the train. It seemed something she was good at. She’d been a nuisance to Hamre the night before he left. . . .

‘‘Can you stand, miss?’’ A man in uniform, but not the same man as before.

‘‘I-I don’t know.’’ Sophie opened her eyes enough to realize the train was no longer rocking. ‘‘Where . . . ?’’

‘‘We are at the Blessing station. Let me help you off.’’

‘‘Ja, help me off.’’ But when he helped pull her to her feet, she swayed, and he caught her before she fell. ‘‘Sorry.’’

‘‘That’s all right. We get you the help you need.’’

Sophie clung to his neck as he picked her up and descended the steps to the platform. Had he said Blessing? How would she make it home from the train station?

She felt strong arms reach for her, saw the Bjorklund blue eyes above her. Hamre? Hamre with such beautiful blue eyes. Everything would be all right now. ‘‘Hamre.’’

20

‘‘
M
OR, YOU CAME FOR ME.’’ Sophie tried to sit up. Relief made her dizzy.
Mor is here. All will be well
.

‘‘No, dear child, you came home on the train. Don’t you remember?’’ Kaaren smoothed her daughter’s hair back. ‘‘You’ve been here at Elizabeth’s for two days.’’

‘‘Hamre—he carried me here.’’ Sophie’s heart leaped. ‘‘Tell him I’m here. I must see him . . . tell him I didn’t mean . . .’’ She clutched her mother’s hand.

‘‘No, Sophie, Thorliff carried you here. The conductor carried you off the train.’’ Kaaren held a cup to her mouth. ‘‘Drink this.’’

Sophie did as her mother ordered.
Hamre won’t be here. He’s gone
. Reality stabbed her with deadly accuracy. She had no strength to fight the tears. When she could speak again, she asked, ‘‘Where’s Grace?’’

‘‘She has been here off and on. She’s at school now.’’

Sophie lay back in the bed. ‘‘I was really sick on the train. Some women took care of me, I think. It is all so confusing.’’

‘‘We got the letter two days ago, Sophie. I am so sorry. Hamre was a fine man.’’ Kaaren took her daughter in her arms as the tears flowed again. ‘‘You wrote the date in the letter. Grace knew. That day she wanted to get on the train and go to you. She said something terrible had happened.’’

Sophie mopped her eyes. ‘‘The captain’s wife came to tell me. There were no survivors.’’ The bleak words lay where they fell. ‘‘I thought my world had ended. Hamre gone. Fired from my job. Pregnant.’’

BOOK: Sophie's Dilemma
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