The Search (19 page)

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Authors: Suzanne Fisher

BOOK: The Search
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Lainey felt strange, taking off her blouse and skirt and putting on this Amish dress for the first time. She wasn’t even sure what kind of underwear they wore. She forgot to ask Bess. Did women even wear brassieres? Well, she would be wearing one today, that’s for sure. One step at a time.

She slipped the dress on and tried to figure out how the pins should be placed so they wouldn’t work themselves loose. She had heard a taxi driver who came into the bakery complain about all the loose pins he found in his cab’s backseat after driving Amish women on errands. She folded the front pieces across each other and tried not to jab herself as she pinned them shut. Bess and Bertha never seemed to complain about the pins, but she knew they would take getting used to. Laid out on the bed were a prayer cap and a white apron. Lainey smiled. Bess had this all planned out ahead of time. She hesitated for a moment, but then decided to try them. She slipped the prayer cap on her head. It perched uneasily on her curls. She was growing out her hair, but she knew the covering probably looked silly. She tried to tuck her hair back under the cap. She had watched Bess do it one day and was shocked to see how long her hair was. Below her waist! She told Lainey it had never been cut.

Lainey put pins through the cap to hold it in place, the way she’d seen Bess do it. Then she pinned the apron into place and turned around slowly, trying to decide if she felt any different. She had pins holding her together from head to waist. There wasn’t a mirror, so she wasn’t as self-conscious. She had been wearing less and less makeup the last few weeks and hadn’t even missed it. Well, the first day or two she had felt practically naked, but then she relaxed. She even started to like feeling less made-up, more natural. Maybe that’s another secret the Amish have, she realized. If you aren’t looking in mirrors all the time, you aren’t thinking about how you look all the time. Your mind is freed up for other things.

She went downstairs to show Bess. Moving quietly as she always did, she found Bess washing dishes by the kitchen sink and said, “Well, what do you think?”

Bess whirled around, startled, dripping soapy suds on the floor. “Oh Lainey! Seller Frack bekummt dich!”
That dress becomes you!
Then her eyes darted nervously to the other side of the room.

Lainey looked to see what had distracted Bess. Jonah was standing by the door, staring at her. “Ya. Ich geb ihr allfat recht.”
Yes, I agree with her.
His smile got lost somewhere in that quiet moment.

Now
, Lainey felt different.

Dear Jonah,

It has been over four weeks since you left. Mose has been working as hard as a pack of mules for you, but he did take time out to stake the tomato plants in the garden for me. And take us for a picnic down by Miller’s Pond. And he built a treehouse for the boys with leftover wood from the furniture-making business. He said you wouldn’t object. Would you?

Yours truly,

Sallie

P.S. The celery patch is nearly six inches tall!

It took Jonah a few days to get up his nerve to tell his mother about the blood test not being a match for Simon. He had dreaded this conversation. He waited until Bess had gone to the barn, and then he quietly told her. He sat sprawled in his chair, one arm hooked over the back.

“I know,” Bertha said. “They sent a letter with the results.” Out of her apron pocket she pulled a letter from the hospital.

Jonah closed his eyes. “How long have you known?”

Bertha looked up at the ceiling. “Let’s see. A week.”

Jonah rubbed his forehead. “I know what you’re thinking. And I’m not going to agree to it.”

“Bess is old enough to make the decision for herself.”

“She’s still a child.”

“Fifteen years old is no child. Why, when I was a girl—”

“I know, I know,” Jonah interrupted. He’d grown up hearing plenty of hardship stories that started with that sentence. “There’s a remote chance, anyway, that Bess would be a match. Why take the risk?”

Bertha slapped her palms on the table and glared at him. “Why not?”

Right then, Jonah realized that the simplest, easiest thing to do would be to have Bess take a blood test. That way, the results would show his mother what he already knew—that Bess could not possibly be a match. “Okay.” He surrendered his hands in the air. “If she agrees to it, Bess can have the test.”

He thought his mother would be ecstatic or, at the very least, satisfied. He was giving her what she wanted. Instead, her gaze shifted to the window. From the look on her face, it seemed as if she just had a sense of something dreadful coming to pass.

That night, Jonah asked Bess to sit out on the porch with him to watch the sunset. She knew he had something on his mind. It was a clear night. They watched the sun dip below the horizon and the sky turn a bruised blue. Then he told her about his mother wanting her to get the blood test. Bess sat on the porch steps, hugging her legs, with her chin leaning on top of her knees as she listened to him.

“I want you to pray about this tonight. I don’t want you feeling any pressure to have the test.”

Bess turned her head toward him. “You were willing to give Simon your marrow, weren’t you?”

Jonah nodded. His heart ached in a sweet way when he saw the earnest look on her face. “I was willing, but that doesn’t mean you have to. The blood test is pretty simple, just a prick in your arm. The marrow test is a much more complicated procedure. You’d have to have general anesthesia and stay in the hospital, and it will be a little painful. The chance of you being a match is highly unlikely. I can almost rule it out. It’s just that your grandmother . . . well, you know how she can be once she gets an idea in her head.”

Bess lifted her eyebrows. “Sie is so schtarrkeppich as an Esel.”
She is as stubborn as a mule.

This time Jonah had no trouble smiling. “It seems very important to Mammi that we at least rule it out.”

Bess shrugged. “I guess I can understand that. Simon is her brother.”

“But that doesn’t mean you have to do this, Bess. If you’d rather not, I would never make you do it, no matter what Mammi has to say about that.”

“But you were willing. To give Simon your bone marrow.”

“I was willing.”

“And Mammi was willing?”

Jonah nodded again. He knew his daughter’s tender heart. “Bess, I don’t know if he . . . deserves such mercy.” He told her the entire story, all that he knew, about Lainey and her mother and how Simon treated them. He was surprised to realize that Lainey had never mentioned Simon to Bess. He knew the two had grown close this summer. He could see Bess was shocked when she learned Simon was Lainey’s stepfather. She grew quiet for a long time. Jonah wondered why Lainey had never told her, but then he decided that she was probably protecting Bess. Knowing what he knew of Lainey, he thought she was trying not to influence Bess one way or the other.

They sat quietly for a long time, watching the stars fill the sky. Finally, Bess lifted her head and gave him a soulful look. “Simon may not deserve our mercy, but Lainey is always telling me God has a different perspective on mercy.”

Those words cut into him as real as a sharp knife. That old disquiet filled him again, gripping his chest like an actual pain. He had discovered something about himself this summer—something that shamed him deeply. He had believed in God all of his life, but did he truly believe God was sovereign over all? Did he believe that God’s ways were truly merciful?

Fifteen years ago, he would have said yes. But after the accident that killed Rebecca, a part of him had stopped counting on God the way he had before. As if God couldn’t entirely be trusted.

And so Jonah had run. He had run from God, the same way he had run from his memories. It was too difficult to remain in Stoney Ridge, driving by the accident site nearly every day where Rebecca had died, constantly reminded of what he had lost.

Lainey had just as many reasons to leave Stoney Ridge as he did, yet here she was. Back, facing the very things that haunted her. She was even willing to face Simon in the hospital. When she had come out of Simon’s ward into the hallway, the look on her face nearly sliced his heart in two. It was filled with sorrow, but not for herself.

It was filled with sorrow for Simon’s lost soul.

Billy hadn’t been planning to go to the gathering tonight. It was Bertha Riehl who pinned him to the wall to go and take Bess along too. That woman had a way of getting what she wanted. She didn’t ask directly, she just stared at you until your knees buckled and you caved in.

He wasn’t in much of a party mood, and hadn’t been, and probably never would be again, since Betsy Mast’s departure. He still couldn’t believe she had up and gone. He had had so many plans for their future together. As soon as he turned twenty-one, he was going to buy some land to farm. He knew just the kind of house he wanted to build for himself and Betsy: it would have a southern exposure, and a barn on a right angle, and a pond to fish and swim in. A pond that would be safe from polluters.

In his vision, his father and brothers would see what he had done—bought a parcel of fine land, married the most sought-after girl in the district, started a thriving business—and they would treat him with respect, not just as the baby of the family. Der Kaschde.
The runt of the litter
, his brothers called him.

But that dream was gone now. What irked him most was that he thought he knew Betsy. He thought she would want the same things. It still stunned him that she was gone. She had left her family, her church. She had left him for another man.

Bess had told him once that he had made up the idea of Betsy in his head. Maybe he didn’t really know her at all, she pointed out.

He glanced over at his cousin Maggie, talking a mile a minute, and Bess on the other side of her. Bess was in a cranky mood today. The day had started out fine. She had been helping him get some plants ready to sell to a customer this morning, and he told her his latest theories on Betsy’s departure. She grew quieter and quieter, like she was getting a headache, and didn’t say goodbye to him when her grandmother called her in for lunch. Girls could be like that, he was learning. Moody and unpredictable.

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