The food measured up to the festive table. After silent grace, Mammi and the aunts brought out platters and bowls piled high with turkey, chestnut stuffing, corn, green beans with bacon, rolls, pickles, and olives. Mammi’s fluted, long-stemmed glasses were filled with a layered pudding dessert that made Levi’s mouth water just looking at it. There were at least five varieties of cookies and Mammi’s special Christmas punch.
Levi, Beth, and Mom sat at the end of the table, an arrangement that seemed to satisfy everyone’s requirement for shunning, even though the relatives talked to Mom as much as anybody else.
Levi sat in amused silence and listened to several conversations at once. There was a great deal of teasing cousin Eliza about a new boy she was seeing. Toby showed the cousins sitting next to him the scrape he got while sledding this morning, and the middle-aged men talked about what they always talked about: the weather and farming.
Beth was admiring the new work boots Dawdi received for Christmas. “They look sturdy,” she said.
“They’ll do,” Dawdi said. “I’m partial to my old boots, but they is ruined.”
Mammi laughed and nudged Beth with her elbow. “His own fault.”
“I greased them up gute and put them in the cookstove for a quick dry,” Dawdi said.
“He forgot about them,” said Mammi. She tapped a finger to her forehead. “Memory’s going, ya know.”
Dawdi harrumphed and thumbed his suspenders. “I am still as sharp as a tack, Nancy. It just went out of my mind, is all. Next morning I got up and lit a fire and them boots was burned to a crisp.”
Everyone laughed, and Dawdi cracked a smile. “It wasn’t all bad. I got a new pair of boots.” He lifted his foot in an attempt to show off his gift and almost tumbled backward. Beth and Eliza steadied him before he picked up his fork and took a healthy bite of stuffing.
After dinner, the school-aged grandchildren presented the Christmas story. King Herod’s scepter looked suspiciously like one of Mammi’s spatulas, and “the Mother Mary” became “the Motho Mawy” because Annie couldn’t say her
R
s. Levi loved every minute of it.
After the presentation, the family sang their favorite Christmas songs. The Christmas spirit permeated the very air, and Levi didn’t hear a sour note in the bunch. Singing must have been a genetic inheritance of the Amish.
When strains of “The First Noel” died away, Dawdi, who’d sat perfectly still in his plump recliner, slapped his knee. “Let’s bundle up and go a-caroling to the shut-ins. They ain’t nothing that would make them so happy as to hear us sing.”
“Caroling is for
die youngie
,” Onkel Titus said. “John can take them around to the shut-ins, and we can eat a piece of pie while they are gone.”
Dawdi sank back into his chair. “Do you have pumpkin, Nancy?”
“With real whipped cream,” Mammi said.
Dawdi nodded. “I’ll wait here.”
Just like this morning, getting out the door proved to be a huge production. Each caroler needed a hat and gloves, coat and boots. They finally made it outside and down the lane with John leading the way. Levi held hands with his nine-year-old cousin, Sissy, until she stubbed her toe on a rock. Then he lifted her for a piggyback ride, singing and laughing all the way down the road.
Levi paid no attention to where they were going until they stopped in front of a house with a long driveway and a bright red barn with white trim. Of course they’d come here; Rebecca’s mother was a shut-in. His heart sank to his toes and did a tap dance at the same time. He hadn’t laid eyes on Rebecca since the ski trip last week. He’d been to her house every day to leave a rose on her porch but hadn’t been fortunate enough to even catch a glimpse of her.
Once he and Mom moved into the dawdi house, Levi looked for Rebecca everywhere. He went to a gathering when he heard that she would attend, only to be heartbroken when she left as soon as she caught sight of him.
The Petersheim cousins, oblivious to Levi’s history with Rebecca, trekked through the deep snow covering the Millers’ sidewalk and tromped up to Rebecca’s porch en masse. Levi momentarily hung back. Would Rebecca’s fater see this visit as a broken promise? Would Levi ruin Rebecca’s Christmas by showing up at her house? Or would she see him and remember the gute times they had together?
Small red circles dotted the snow in front of Rebecca’s house.
Rose petals, no doubt from the rose he had delivered early this morning, were strewn about like a handful of chicken feed tossed into the snow. He swung Sissy to the ground and pretended to ignore the hurt that bubbled up inside him.
He’d seen it before—rose petals from the previous day’s rose when he came to deliver the next one. But tonight, on Christmas, the sting of rejection felt especially acute.
Levi found himself standing on the porch but couldn’t remember moving his feet to get there. He melted in behind John and Ize, not sure if he wanted to be seen. He didn’t think he could endure the contempt in Rebecca’s eyes.
One of the cousins knocked, and they began to sing “Away in a Manger.” Danny threw open the door and stood listening with a wide grin on his face. Soon Linda joined him, and Max and Rebecca were close behind. Rebecca’s arm was still in a sling. Levi winced.
Like a sophisticated radar device, Rebecca zeroed in on Levi immediately, as if he were the only one standing on the porch. She hadn’t been smiling in the first place, but her frown deepened when she saw him, and she quickly averted her eyes. He held his breath, glued his gaze to her face, and drank in her features like a very thirsty man. She looked thin and pale and ten years older. Her eyes held none of the light that had reeled him in from the first day he met her. Still, she was the most beautiful girl he had ever known. His heart broke again and again as he stood there. Would she ever forgive him? Could he ever hope to win her back?
The thought of the accident no longer brought him to his knees. Jesus had taken his pain away. And if he had forgiven himself, surely she would forgive him too. Wasn’t that what the Amish did best?
After one verse of the song, Rebecca’s mother appeared at the door. “Cum reu, all of you, and get warm. How thoughtful of you to come and see me.”
Rebecca’s mamm ushered all seventeen of them into the front room, where a fire blazed merrily in the hearth and pine boughs decked the mantel and door frames. The house smelled of cinnamon and apple cider.
Rebecca’s mamm squeezed Levi’s hand as he stepped over the threshold. “Welcome into the community, Levi Cooper. We are very glad to have you back.” She winked at him and half smiled. She knew what an uphill battle this was going to be.
Both Max and Linda caught sight of Levi. Max furrowed his brow and looked away. Linda turned red in confusion and busied herself by stoking the fire.
Rebecca’s fater sauntered into the room and frowned when his eyes met Levi’s. His response almost perfectly mirrored Rebecca’s. They both refused to look at him and surveyed their guests with expressionless faces, as if they were reading some dull newspaper article. But Levi could see the tension in Rebecca’s shoulders and hands as she stood against the wall and pressed her good fist into it, as if it would fall over if she relaxed.
“Levi!” Danny opened his arms wide and threw himself at Levi. At least he had one ally in the Miller family.
“Hey, Danny.”
“We have missed you so much.” He looked at his sister for confirmation, but Rebecca studied the floor intently. Danny motioned for Levi to lean closer. “Rebecca said you weren’t ever going to come back, but I wish you would. Rebecca misses you something terrible even though she never says your name ever.”
Levi swallowed hard and tried not to let a spark of hope ignite. Better to be cautious with his deepest desires. “Thanks, Danny. I miss you too. And I really miss Rebecca.”
Danny smiled. “I told her you did. She shook her finger and told me to go milk the cows.”
Levi and his cousins sat on the sofas and the floor. Rebecca didn’t surrender her wall while they sang Christmas songs even though she looked like she’d rather be anywhere else. After “Silent Night,” she grabbed Linda’s hand and they bolted into the kitchen. Linda brought out hot cocoa and whoopie pies while Rebecca stayed hidden.
After everyone had cocoa, cousin John stood up. “Merry Christmas to you. May the good Lord bless you in the coming year.”
Rebecca’s mamm didn’t try to stand, but she held out her hand to John. “Lord willing. Thank you for coming.”
Each cousin stood and took her hand before walking out the front door. When it was Levi’s turn, she pulled him toward her until he felt compelled to kneel beside her rocker. She stared into Levi’s face and patted his hand. “Come and visit us again,” she said. “We could use some cheering up around here.”
Levi smiled weakly and nodded. He could use some cheering up too. But unless Rebecca quit ignoring him or her fater softened his heart, he held out little hope.
As the group moved on down the driveway, Levi stopped to lift a petal from the snow. He rubbed it between his fingers and thought of Rebecca’s silky skin. The longing to feel her hand in his overwhelmed every other sense. He didn’t even notice the cold.
The front door opened, and the light from within cast a shimmering glow on the snow. Danny leaped down the stairs and held out a small brown box to Levi.
“What’s this?” Levi asked.
“It’s a Christmas present,” Danny said. “Rebecca threw it in the trash, and I was spying. I kept it because I thought someday she might be sad she threw it away.” He stared at Levi with a mixture of childlike innocence and wisdom beyond his years. “I think you should have it. Merry Christmas.”
Levi took the box from him, and Danny ran back into the house.
The cousins were already far down the road.
“You coming?” John yelled.
“I’ll catch up,” Levi said.
“Don’t get lost,” said John. “Dawdi will scold me if you never come back.”
Levi loosened the crudely tied ribbon from around the box and lifted the lid. Inside was a small pile of tickets and papers. He picked up the top one.
D
ECEMBER
15. A
LL
-
DAY SKI PASS
. R
OCKY
S
PINE
S
KI
R
ESORT
.
Levi felt his legs go weak. He stumbled to the porch steps and sat down before he collapsed into a heap in the snow.
December fifteenth. The day Rebecca decided to hate him. The worst day of his life—and he’d had some pretty bad ones. He pulled out the next ticket.
F
OXFIRE
B
OTANICAL
G
ARDENS
.
A receipt for one hosta plant was taped to the ticket. Warmth spread through Levi’s body as he remembered the way Rebecca cradled that plant like a baby. That was the day she drove his car into a gulley. He cringed as the memory of Rebecca’s pale face and bleeding head assaulted him.
In addition to the Mt. Olympus amusement park ticket, Rebecca had kept the snapshot Uncle Joe had given her of his backyard
.
Levi smiled.
A small plastic bag full of sand. A pressed wildflower. And the movie ticket from their very first date. Levi unfolded a large piece of paper underneath the tickets.
T
HE
T
ETANUS
I
MMUNIZATION AND
Y
OU
—W
HAT
Y
OU
S
HOULD
K
NOW
.
Levi pressed the paper to his chest and chuckled. Why she would ever want to remember that experience, he’d never know.
The dry remains of several rose petals lay in the bottom of the box. Levi thought the lining of the box was crinkled, but when he looked closer, he realized it was a piece of notepaper clinging to the bottom.
He tipped the box upside down, and the paper fell into his hand.
Live in my very own house.
Plant an acre of roses.
Make Fater love me again.
And in very small letters in a different color of pen—
Kiss Levi Cooper.
Levi set Rebecca’s things on the porch step as if they had burned him. He shouldn’t have opened that box. Rebecca had a right to keep her deepest wishes and dreams private.
Kiss Levi Cooper.
Those three words made him almost giddy, as if he were soaring effortlessly above the tallest mountains. Despite all her protests, he held a place in her heart. Or at least he had before she found out the truth about him.
Levi looked at the pile of tickets and papers, picked up her list, and read it again. All Rebecca wanted was a little love. She was not only going physically hungry in this house, she was also starving for affection. Tears stung Levi’s eyes. All he wanted to do was love her. Why wouldn’t she let him?
He quickly stuffed the tickets and petals and memories into the box, put the lid on, and took it with him as he sprinted down the driveway. He wanted to get far enough away before anyone heard the sobs that threatened to overtake him.
Why wouldn’t she let him love her?
Levi sat on the hard bench wedged between two old men. His first Amish wedding. The groom hadn’t stopped smiling since the service began. Levi had never seen any two people so happy. The groom couldn’t keep his eyes off his bride. He gazed at her and grinned through four songs, two long sermons, and a prayer. However, Levi’s attention was divided between the ecstatic groom and the face of Rebecca Miller, who was sitting across the room with her back rigid and a frown pasted on her face. The sight of her always stole his breath and his reason.
It had been five weeks since the skiing trip, and still she refused to see him. At least he held hope that she would not bolt from the wedding. Someone had told him that she was related to the bride.
Finally the bishop invited the bride and groom to stand. Levi didn’t catch much of the ceremony itself. High German had completely escaped his memory. But the adoration and joy radiating from the bride and groom were evident enough as they stood clutching hands while the bishop performed the ceremony. When he finished, the couple sat down. Levi was a little disappointed. No kiss.