A Big Year for Lily (2 page)

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Authors: Mary Ann Kinsinger,Suzanne Woods Fisher

Tags: #JUV033010, #FIC053000, #Amish—Juvenile fiction, #1. Amish—Fiction, #Family life—Pennsylvania—Fiction, #Schools—Fiction, #Friendship—Fiction, #Pennsylvania—Fiction

BOOK: A Big Year for Lily
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2
Bats in the Bedroom

L
ily loved her new bedroom. When the family first moved into the ugly olive-green house, over a year ago, the upstairs hallway had doubled as her bedroom. Joseph and Dannie galloped past her bed every time they ran to their room. Every sound in the kitchen floated up the stairs and to her room. The hallway bedroom had been a sore trial for Lily.

But just after school had let out for the summer, Papa had finished off a special room for Lily up in the attic. And now she had the best room in the house.

The window was Lily's favorite part of her bedroom. She pretended it was a picture frame, changing throughout the day and night. Mama had made a fluffy white curtain for it but Lily liked to keep the curtain drawn back so she could look out at the tall pine trees. The breeze that swept through the pine branches sounded like whispers to Lily. Sometimes,
when she lay in bed, she wondered what they might be saying to each other, if trees could talk.

She could see the rolling mountains far off in the distance from her window. The mountains changed color throughout the day and night. They went from pinks and lavenders at dawn to blues and greens at dusk. In the night, she could see the moon travel across the sky.

The walls were a soft honey color made from smoothly varnished maple boards. In one corner, Papa had built a closet. It was nice to have her dresses hanging neatly inside of it instead of on a hook on the wall. Mama had painted the plywood floor lavender and made a bright purple rag rug to use beside her bed.

The rug matched the pretty purple cushion Mama had made for the chair beside the bed. A long, low chest of drawers stood along another wall. Grandma had crocheted a lavender doily for Lily's little oil lamp to stand on. And Grandpa had built a pretty bookshelf for her books and made a small nightstand for her bedside. Lily kept a flashlight on top in case she woke during the night.

Tonight, after she got ready for bed, Lily pulled her diary from its special hiding place—far from the eyes of curious little brothers. She wrote a few paragraphs about her day and tucked it away again. As she crossed the room to blow out her lamp, she paused by the window to gaze at the moon, a tiny sliver above the distant mountains. If she squinted her eyes, it almost looked like a cookie with a big bite out of it.

She climbed into bed, pulled the covers up under her chin, and closed her eyes. Everything about her room made her feel happy.

Lily's eyes flew open. Her heart pounded like a drum. There was a strange noise in her bedroom. She held her breath and tried to listen. There it was again! A rustling flapping bumping noise. Something was
in
her room! Her hands trembled as she reached over to get the flashlight. She flashed the light around her room and found the sound: a bat fluttered about her room, darting and diving, trying to find its way back out.

Lily quickly ducked and pulled her covers over her head. She heard the bat fly around and around her room. She couldn't stay in this room for one minute longer. She jumped out of bed, holding her pillow over her head, dashed out of her room, and flew down the stairs to knock on Papa and Mama's bedroom door.

“Who is it?” Papa sounded sleepy.

“It's me,” Lily said. “There's a bat in my bedroom.”

Papa opened the door. “There's a bat in your bedroom? What does it look like?”

“It looks like an ugly little mouse with wings. And it keeps flying into the walls.”

“Wait here while I get something to catch it.” Papa put his boots on by the kitchen door and went out into the dark night. A few minutes later, he came back inside with the buggy whip. He told her to stay put as he went upstairs. Lily wondered how Papa could catch the bat with a buggy whip. She had never even seen him use the whip. It had been carried in the little whip holder outside the buggy as long as she could remember. She thought he didn't know how to use it.

Lily's curiosity got the best of her. She tiptoed up the stairs and opened the door to her bedroom a tiny crack so she could watch. Papa stood in the middle of the room watching the
bat. It flew back and forth across her room, bumping into the walls, trying to find a way to get out. Papa snapped the whip lightning fast and the bat fell to the floor. Lily clasped her hand over her mouth to keep from squealing out loud. Papa bent down and gingerly picked the bat up by the tip of one of its wings. Lily hurried down the stairs and waited for him.

“Did you kill it?” she asked when he came downstairs.

“No. I didn't intend to. The whip knocked it out for a little bit, but it will wake up soon. Bats are helpful little creatures as long as they don't get inside the house. They eat mosquitoes.”

Lily shuddered. The bat looked hideous to her. She would rather get a few mosquito bites than have a bat in her bedroom again.

Lily waited to go back to bed until Papa double-checked her bedroom to make sure that there were no more bats. Then she climbed into bed and fell sound asleep.

For an entire week, no bats came to visit Lily's room. She'd settled into a peaceful sleep one night when she suddenly woke, startled to hear the same bat-like flutters and bumps. She flew downstairs to get Papa.

This time, she waited downstairs while Papa knocked the bat unconscious with the buggy whip. Again, Papa double-checked her room for bats before she would go back into it.

The next morning, Papa went to inspect her room. “I need to see if I can find how these bats are getting into your room. This has to stop.”

Lily couldn't agree more. It was horrible to wake up in the middle of the night because a creepy bat flew around her bedroom. What if the bat flew right at her? What if it
touched her? Or bit her? Just thinking of its mousy little face made her shudder.

Papa examined every inch of the walls and ceiling, but he couldn't find any cracks big enough for a bat to squeeze through. “I can't figure it out,” he said, shaking his head. “I don't know how they're getting into your room. Hopefully, that's the end of it.”

And it was. Until the next week, when another bat found its way into Lily's bedroom. Two days after that, another one.

Papa had had enough. If he couldn't find a way to stop the bats from getting into Lily's bedroom, he decided she would have to move out of her pretty little attic bedroom. At first, Lily thought that meant she would have to go back to having a bedroom in the hallway. How sad!

But Papa had built a nice big addition to the house, and he and Mama already had planned to move their bedroom into what used to be the old kitchen. They would give Lily their old bedroom. “The bats only moved up the timetable,” he said. Papa spent that Saturday moving all the furniture from one room to another.

Lily was sad to leave her pretty attic bedroom. It was private and away from little brothers, and it had a purple floor. Her new bedroom was on the second floor, near the stairs, and she would hear the boys clomping up and down. On the other hand, there were no bats in this new bedroom and that was a definite plus. She still had her pretty purple rug and cushion. Another plus.

That night, as Lily got ready for bed, she looked around her bedroom. It wasn't nearly as pretty. There was ugly green-and-brown striped wallpaper on the walls. The floor was dark blue linoleum with big red swirls all over it. It almost
made Lily feel dizzy to look at it. Looking out the window wasn't much fun. The pine trees that had seemed so tall and majestic in her attic bedroom only blocked her view of the distant mountains. But she could still hear their whispers. That was a good thing.

As she lay in bed, she thought about her pretty attic room. She wondered if it felt sad and empty without her. Did things have feelings? She would have to ask Papa, she thought, yawning.

Since bats slept throughout the day, maybe she could play in the room during the day! It would be a fine place to play with her dolls or read a book. Whenever Cousin Hannah or Beth came to play, they would have a perfect place to play and not worry about being bothered by little brothers. She yawned again.

With plans on her mind to turn her attic room into a playroom, during the daytime only, Lily drifted off to sleep.

3
A Walk in the Woods

O
n a warm July afternoon, when the air felt still, Papa came into the kitchen to talk to Mama. “Jim needs new horseshoes. I'm going to take him over to the blacksmith.” He glanced at Lily and smiled. “I thought Lily might like to go along and play with Beth while her father works on Jim's shoes.”

Mama smiled. “I think Lily might be persuaded to go with you.”

“Oh yes!” Lily was excited to hear that she could play with Beth. She didn't get to see Beth often during the summer. She wouldn't even mind helping Beth with her chores.

Lily yanked her bonnet off its hook and ran to sit on the buggy seat while Papa hitched Jim to the buggy. Soon, they were off.

As soon as Jim pulled into the Rabers' driveway, Beth flew out of the house, surprised to see Lily seated next to Papa.
The two girls followed Papa as he unhitched Jim from the buggy and led him to a shady tree next to the barn. Jonas, Beth's father, plucked a big, heavy, black leather apron from a peg inside the barn door and tied it around his waist. He carried a wooden toolbox filled with nails, files, clippers, hammers, and horseshoes of different sizes.

Before Jonas got to work on Jim's feet, he made friends with the horse, which Lily thought was very smart. Jonas walked up to Jim and talked to him a little and stroked his neck. Then he picked up his front hoof. He held it firmly between his legs as he reached into the toolbox for a hammer and pulled Jim's old metal horseshoe off. Next, he took a big pair of clippers and clipped some of the hoof off.

“Does that hurt Jim?” Lily asked.

“No, it feels the same as clipping your toenails,” Papa said. “Jim's hooves need to be trimmed regularly so he doesn't stumble when he walks.”

Jonas picked up a file and started to file Jim's big hoof. Jonas's big German Shepherd dog, Bumper, came over to see what was happening. He sniffed at the bits of hoof clippings and started to chew on one.
Disgusting
, Lily thought.

Beth leaned over to whisper in Lily's ear. “Let's go play.”

The girls ran to a swing under a big maple tree in front of the house. They took turns pushing each other, stopping between turns to tell each other important news.

“Baby Paul is starting to crawl,” Lily said. “He tries to put everything into his mouth.” Just like that dog, Bumper.
Disgusting
, Lily thought.

It was Beth's turn. “I think my brother has a crush on Katie Miller. His ears turn red whenever he sees her at church.”

My, that was interesting. Much more interesting than Paul's
crawling. Lily was going to have to keep her ears open for better news.

Much too soon, Papa came looking for Lily. “Time to go home,” he said. “Jim has four new shoes and is ready to try them out.”

Lily hopped off the swing. “We just got started playing. Could I stay a little longer? I could walk home over the fields by myself. It isn't far.”

Papa lifted his hat and ran his fingers through his hair. “Beth might have something she needs to do.”

“I'd like Lily to stay,” Beth said. The girls held their breath, waiting to hear Papa's answer.

“Go ask your father, Beth, and see if it would be okay with him,” Papa said.

Lily and Beth ran to find Jonas Raber in the barn, putting away his leather apron and toolbox. Lily explained that she wanted to stay a little longer and then walk home by herself. “Do you mind?”

“I don't mind,” Jonas said, smiling. A person couldn't help but smile back when Jonas Raber smiled. His teeth stuck out in all different directions, a real assortment, and his eyes were warm and kind.

Lily ran to find Papa; Beth skipped along behind her. “I can stay!”

“Be a good girl,” Papa said. “And remember to come home before too late.” He climbed up on the buggy and gave Jim a
tch-tch
sound. Jim trotted down the drive with an extra spring in his step, proud of his new shoes.

Lily turned to Beth. “Now we can swing all day.” But after a few more turns on the swing, the girls grew bored and tried to think of something else to do.

“Have you seen my little playhouse?” Beth asked. “Dad made it for my birthday.”

The girls ran to the edge of the garden. Beside the garden gate was the cutest little playhouse Lily had ever seen. Beth held the door open and Lily ducked her head to step inside.

In the middle of the tiny room sat a small table and two little chairs. On one wall were several shelves filled with old pots and pans and chipped dishes that Beth's mother no longer used.

“Let's get some carrots and cucumbers from the garden,” Beth said. In the garden, they picked several small cucumbers.
They rubbed their aprons over the cucumbers to remove the prickles, just like their mothers did. Next came the carrots. This took a little more work: they held the carrot tops in their fists to get a better look at the small top of orange carrot that peeped above the ground. They didn't want a carrot that was too big or too little. The big ones tasted bitter and the tiny ones tasted watery. It was important to find the right-sized carrot—those were the ones that tasted the best: nice and sweet, crunchy and carroty. After they pulled all the carrots they wanted, Beth filled a pail with water from the springhouse by the barn. They took turns carrying it back to the playhouse. Water sloshed out of the pail and splashed against their skirts and over their bare feet. They didn't mind. It felt good on such a hot day.

In the playhouse, Beth filled one of the pots on the shelf with water. They swished their carrots in the water until the dirt had been rinsed off.

Beth set the table while Lily divided the carrots and cucumbers on the plates. Then they sat down to eat and tried to have an important, grown-up conversation. With a terribly stern and serious face, Beth brought up the worry of raising youth in this day and age, which made Lily giggle. Then Lily would try: she would make her face stop smiling, then purse her lips and discuss the behavior of the youth in church lately and had Beth noticed a lot of winking going on between the boys and the girls? With that, the girls were overcome by a giggling fit. They didn't even have to say it out loud: they were both imitating Ida Kauffman as she paid visits to their mothers! Lily was laughing so hard that her tummy hurt.

“Let's pretend to bake cakes,” Beth said. “We can fill some pans with wet sand and then decorate them with flowers and leaves to make them pretty.”

They rinsed the dishes they had used and set them back up on the shelf. Then they went to get sand from the sandbox, added water until it felt just right and ran to find flowers. They filled their aprons with bright yellow buttercups and sweet purple clover blossoms. They were so busy decorating their little sand cakes that both of them were startled when Beth's mother stepped out on the porch and called, “Beth! Suppertime.”

Lily was shocked! She had been having so much fun that she had forgotten all about watching the time. She had told Papa she wouldn't stay too late and the sun was already low in the sky. “I have to go home right now!”

Lily hurried down the driveway, too worried to even wave goodbye to Beth. She walked down the road until she came to a little shortcut that led through the woods. She thought it was the shortcut Joseph liked to use, but it looked different in the late afternoon light.

She gave a start, her heart leaping in fright. A sudden noise, a small crashing sound—something in the bushes. It sounded big. It sounded huge.

Lily didn't dare look around. What if it were a black bear? She had just heard a story about a farmer meeting up with a bear in his cornfield. She heard another sound. It was coming closer. Instinct took over and she started to run. Faster and faster! She had never run so fast in her life. Her lungs hurt from running so hard. Her side ached and her legs felt as if they could buckle beneath her. She simply couldn't run one more step. She stopped to catch her breath.

Crunch, pop, snap
. Something was following her. What if it were a mountain lion? Joseph was always talking about mountain lions in the woods. The noise got closer and closer. She started to shake, so frightened that she couldn't budge.
Right behind her, a bush crackled. She squawked and flung her arms over her head. She was going to be eaten alive!

A little cottontail darted in the underbrush beside the path. Every hop it made caused twigs and dry leaves to crunch and snap. Lily was relieved! And then, embarrassed. She had been running from a cute little bunny.

Lily walked a little farther and came to the edge of the woods. There, across the field, was her house. A buttery light glowed from the kitchen. Lily had never been so glad to see that little ugly olive-green house. She ran up to the porch and into the kitchen. Stirring a pot on the stove top, Mama spun around. A look of relief swept over her face when she saw Lily.

Papa was washing up at the sink. He didn't look very happy with Lily. “We were getting worried about you. I was almost ready to go looking for you.”

“I'm sorry, Papa,” Lily said and slid into her chair at the table. “I forgot to pay attention to the time. As soon as I realized how late it was, I ran all the way home. I thought a bear or a mountain lion was chasing me, but it was only a little bunny.” As soon as the words left her mouth, she wished them back.

Joseph and Dannie looked at each other, jaws opened wide, then they doubled up with laughter. “Only a girl would think a bunny is a bear!” Joseph said, between fits of laughter.

“Only a girl!” Dannie echoed, like he always did.

Even baby Paul started to giggle, which got Papa and Mama grinning.

Lily's face grew hot, as if she were standing too close to Mama's stove. She was humiliated. She didn't think any of them understood how frightening a bunny could sound in the dark woods.

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