My Dearest Naomi (27 page)

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Authors: Jerry,Tina Eicher

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There is no phone in the schoolhouse to call the parents, so I didn’t know what to do about getting Dawn home. I went ahead and called for fourth-grade English class, and when Lester came up he whispered that his brother Mark was acting as if he wanted to throw up. I raced back with the wastebasket and asked Mark if he was feeling sick.

“No,” he said, though he looked it.

I left the wastebasket there for good measure, with clear instructions where vomit belongs. Perhaps a boy can hit a wastebasket, but thankfully we never found out. He did start crying after a while, and when I asked him what was wrong, he said he had chills. The poor boy really was sick, his forehead hot to my touch. I felt sorry for him and got his coat from the rack.

Crystal soon came up with a solution, suggesting that she walk down and call from Lonnie and Luella’s place. Next time I’ll think of that sooner. Within twenty minutes two very worried mothers came tearing into the schoolyard.

Some weeks the work piles up, and then the next there seems to be plenty of time for everything on the schedule. I guess this way I appreciate the good weeks.

I’m presently enjoying seventh- and eighth-grade English. Since this is the second time teaching through the books, teaching involves only a refresher course each day before the class. We are into first person, second person, third person, adjectives, adverbs, predicate adverbs, and predicate adjectives.

Take care, and I will keep waiting for good news from your pen.

Love you,

Eugene

January 25

My dearest Eugene,

How are you feeling by this time? Hopefully better than I am. I have a cold/cough, and a big one at that. I think it’s what has been going around the community, and it sure leaves one feeling pretty rotten. Apparently this all contributed to my missed appointment this morning. I was dreamily working out in the kitchen, baking a cake, when Mrs. Vanhorn, one of my housecleaning bosses, pulled into the driveway. Suddenly I remembered my job with her. Mom went out to speak with Mrs. Vanhorn to explain while I raced upstairs to get ready in a jiffy.

Mrs. Vanhorn was very nice, of course, but that wasn’t the only thing that went wrong. I had told Mrs. Beck I would babysit for her this afternoon, and I didn’t remember that appointment when Mrs. Vanhorn asked me to work late. I arrived home to find out that Mrs. Beck came past to say that she wasn’t feeling well herself and didn’t need me, so things worked out. This is the first time I have been so forgetful in a long time, but it leaves me with worry pimples for days afterward.

Dad went to the work
frolick
today. They are laying block for Stan Yoder’s basement.

Richard and Joan still haven’t moved into the upper part of their house. They are still living in the basement. At least they are married and together, compared to some other people who shall remained unnamed.

I miss you so much.

Love you,

Your Miss Forgetful
Naomi

January 26

My dearest Naomi
,

I am rereading your letter, and I think I can breathe again. How wonderful that you have forgiven me for my stupid blunder. And you can call me Sweetheart all you want. I suppose that will have to wait until I get back home again. It will sound better face-to-face than in letters.

Thursday evening…

Things are in a state of shock around here. The bishop of the church passed away yesterday totally unexpectedly! School is called off out of respect for him. The chairman of the school board called last night and told me the news.

Lonnie and Luella walk around here like pale ghosts. They told me at the breakfast table what this could mean for the church. Another bishop will have to be ordained soon, and they fear Stan will get the office. This would be a disaster from their point of view, as the bishop has a lot of power to take the church in whatever direction he wishes.

They could probably tolerate Stan continuing in his office as a minister if his co-minister got the bishopric, but not if Stan does. No one has come right out and said it, but the fears of a church split are pretty strong, and the bishop still has to be buried.

On other matters, I continue to be amazed at how fast the eighth-grade girls can change their moods. There are days when they are so out of sorts they bring the proverbial thunderclouds with high winds and rain right into the schoolhouse. They challenge me on everything I say and make life miserable in general.

Then the next day they are all smiles, agreeable, accommodating, and sunshine and roses. On those days I can say what I want, and they absorb it without backfiring. I even got them to work on a poster today and received not a word of complaint. Beats me what I did differently. I told Luella I think it takes an angel to get along with those girls. She laughed and said I might as well get used to it. Whatever that meant.

With a happy heart,

Eugene

January 27

My beloved Eugene,

Whew! I finished giving Dad another haircut, even though he just had one a couple weeks ago. I think he likes the attention. And he likes to tease me the whole time. Once he yelled so loud I thought I took his ear off or something. Then when I gave him the mirror at the end, he studied his hair for the longest time and then said, “Why, it’s all crooked. I can’t even go out of the house like this.” He is terrible, that’s what he is.

Mom wanted my help in the kitchen afterward, so it was late before I got back up to my room. I reread your letter, taking more time to absorb things this time. It must have been written just after you read the awful one. I am so sorry, but you sure seem to have taken things well. It warms my heart that you didn’t fall apart. I think you’ll make a wonderful husband, and it wasn’t your fault. I bear plenty of blame myself.

Your sister Mary had new glasses last Sunday, and I forgot to tell you. I think they are close to the same color of mine, and about the same size as the others she had. I think she looks great in them.

How are you feeling by now? And how’s the diet?

Love you,

Naomi

January 28

My beloved Naomi
,

Here I am again, and another week of school is completed. Now for the lonesome weekend ahead and the longings to be with you. Sunday will be four weeks since I’ve seen you last, and they have been long, weary weeks.

How sweet it would be to see you this weekend, taking the buggy out on Sunday afternoon for a drive. We couldn’t stop anywhere with the snow and cold, but just to have you with me would be enough.

That was a nice little line about Richard and Joan still not having their house but being able to be together. I share your feelings exactly.

We had school today with only eleven pupils. I suppose it was because of the bishop’s funeral preparations. So I decided to leave the Friday Bible classes off the schedule. I also put the seventh- and eighth-grade science classes together since there was just one pupil per grade.

I went ahead with spelling, but with so many gone this will mean a lot of repeating next week.

I send much love your way as always,

Eugene

January 31

My dearest Eugene,

Greetings of love.

Dad and Don are digging postholes for the fence beside the sidewalk. It has to be frozen ground they’re digging through, but Dad says it needs to be done. I think he wants something to do, as the winter blahs have settled in around here.

Mahlons had church on Sunday, and the hymn singing in the evening. I had a sore throat and couldn’t sing very well, but I still attended with Don.

Sarah, the new girl I like so much, sat beside me, and at the end she asked me why I was sad. I shrugged. Adam Yoder must have been listening on the boys’ bench because he said, “She’s lonely” really loud.

He was right in a way. When you’re not here I don’t feel very well taken care of, but I know it’s not your fault. I wouldn’t want you away from your school teaching just so you could be with me. But the loneliness has been bad lately. I shed some tears the last two nights and told myself, “Brace up,
Naomi
! You’re acting like a baby.”

Julia, Joseph Burkholder, Elaine, and Robert all asked about you yesterday. I think Joseph and Elaine really make a good couple. Joseph was stretched out on the couch Sunday afternoon leaning on his elbow when I walked in. Elaine was curled up beside him on the corner of the couch. They seemed so at ease with each other, and it made me happy for them… but all the more lonesome for you.

Elaine told me later that Joseph also gets depressed sometimes, and he doesn’t know why. Joseph told her that maybe he should go on your diet. Elaine asks more often about you and is more sympathetic than any of the other girls. I really think a lot of her.

Missing you awfully,

Naomi

January 31

My dearest Naomi
,

The last day of January.
Whee!
February here I come.

I’ve been reading of your hair-cutting ventures with much interest. So I get a barber in the marriage deal? Well, that suits me fine as long as you cut straight. And it sounds like your dad is keeping tabs. That was funny.

Guess what? I saw a girl yesterday that could have been your twin. She looked so much like you, I could have cried. She was a little shorter and she had freckles, otherwise—there you were.

She was at the funeral, hanging really close to the boy she was with. I hardly ever saw them apart so I figured they were likely married. This evening I mentioned to Luella that I had seen someone at the funeral who looked like you. Luella had a vague recollection of the couple, but she was certain they weren’t married. They wouldn’t have hung around each other all day, she said, if that had been the case.

I said, “Sounds like someone is a little bitter,” which set Luella off, and she had to prove her point by calling down to Saul’s house. Janie knew the couple, and she also knew they weren’t married. So Luella rubbed that in really good.

Luella also asked Janie if the girl had looked like you. Janie said, “Yes, she sure did.”

I wish you were here—not somebody who looked like you.

Tuesday…

Last night was the school board meeting, and things went fairly well. I had a lot of items to ask them about, and it took time. All three of them commented on how different I seem and act since I’ve been on this diet. They brought it up, so there must be something to it. I know I feel better, but I hadn’t thought it was that noticeable a difference.

They seem very certain they want me back next year. I told them no because I want to get married.

Crystal’s dad is the chairman of the school board, and he told me last night they have been noticing how moody Crystal is lately, and that I was not to take it personally. She acts the same way at home, and they think it’s just part of growing up. A phase perhaps. He said his wife went through the same thing and even came close to blacking out at times when she was
Crystal’s age. After her first baby, the mood swings cleared up. This is all good to know, but I don’t think I’ve been taking her moods personally.

It’s very scary to be out here, not knowing what the next letter will hold. So I try to sit tight and hold my breath and hope for the best.

I love you,

Eugene

FEBRUARY

February 1

My dearest Eugene,

I have finished washing the supper dishes, and Mom and Dad are in the living room eating popcorn. I think I’ll scribble this letter quickly and then join them.

Yesterday I received a letter from an old friend, Beth Miller, from northern Indiana, whom I had written to on an impulse. I was thrilled when she wrote back, as I hadn’t expected to hear from her. The letter wasn’t anything you would be interested in, just girl talk and catching up on news.

It tickles me the way you and the eighth-grade girls get along. I agree with you on girls having moods. I’m a champion on changing mine from one minute to the next, so you have been warned.

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