Amish Promises

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Amish Promises Page 25

by Leslie Gould


  Monika was delighted to see Eve, especially with the bishop. She said their arrival took her mind off Deacon King. “How’s the baby?” Monika asked. “Did she miss me today?” Before Eve could answer, Monika cooed, “Who’s watching her now?”

  “Tim,” Gideon replied.

  “Oh, good for him,” Monika said. “Now we just need to find that man a wife. Then everything will be as it should.”

  Deacon King was a little groggy but was happy to see Gideon. He nodded toward Eve, but that was all.

  The nurse came in and said he needed a break. “Let him rest,” she said.

  “Let’s go out to the waiting room,” Monika said. “The bigger one, where I can get a cup of coffee.”

  Gideon paid for Monika’s coffee after she ordered it from the little stand, and then the three stepped into the waiting room. In the back, Eve saw Karina and her in-laws sitting with Shani. Gideon saw her too and took Eve’s elbow to direct her the other way, but she waved, and once Shani saw her she stood and hurried toward her.

  Eve gave her a quick hug and then asked, “You remember Monika? From the auction?”

  “Of course,” Shani said turning toward the woman. “Eve told me about your husband’s heart attack. I’m so sorry.”

  Monika gave Shani a one-armed hug.

  Karina stood across the room and asked, “Would you join us?”

  Eve glanced at Gideon. He nodded, although it seemed with some reluctance.

  After all the introductions had been made and everyone crowded onto the two couches facing each other, and the side chairs, Gideon and Monika fell into a conversation with Karina’s in-laws, while Shani explained that she’d just finished a half shift.

  “Where’s Charlie?” Karina asked.

  “He went back to Philly today,” Shani said.

  Eve hoped her face remained expressionless.

  “Are you and Charlie dating?” Karina asked Eve.

  Eve shook her head at Karina, and Shani mouthed, “I’ll explain later.”

  Gideon glanced over at the three women. Karina was rightly confused and said, “Sorry.”

  “No worries,” Shani said. Eve’s face grew warm.

  Karina scooted to the edge of the couch, and said she was going to head back up to Samantha’s room. Her in-laws stood too, just as a nurse hurried into the waiting room, her eyes falling on Monika.

  “Mrs. King,” she said, motioning for Monika.

  “Oh dear.” Monika stood.

  “We’ll go with you,” Gideon said.

  Eve stood and put her arm around Monika, walking alongside her. Gideon led the way, passing Karina and her in-laws, who all had concerned expressions on their faces.

  Gideon, Monika, and Eve didn’t speak as they hurried down the corridor to his room. When they reached the nurse’s desk a woman Eve hadn’t seen before stepped toward them. “He’s coding.”

  Monika fell into Eve’s arms.

  “How bad is it?” Gideon asked.

  “They’re working on him now.” She motioned toward the grouping of chairs. “Please wait.”

  Eve held onto her friend, and Shani joined them. None of them said a word as Gideon stood watch. They sat like that for twenty minutes. Then another woman approached, and introduced herself as one of Deacon King’s doctors. Her face was red, and she clutched a stethoscope with both hands. “I’m sorry,” she said.

  He was gone. Monika turned white and gasped. Eve tightened her grip on her friend.

  The doctor used some medical terms Eve didn’t understand and then said she’d be back in a few minutes.

  After the woman left, Monika shuddered. “How am I going to tell my girls? Jenny’s so young to lose her Dat.”

  Gideon stood, following the doctor.

  “It’s okay to cry,” Eve whispered to Monika.

  Monika shook her head.

  Eve pulled her close. “Don’t feel as if you have to be strong,” she said. Shani leaned forward and put her hand on Monika’s arm.

  The tears began to flow. “Will I get to see him?” she asked.

  Shani pulled a small packet of tissues from her purse. “Yes, in a few minutes.”

  Monika dabbed at her eyes. “I didn’t think it was that serious.”

  “Something more must have happened,” Shani said.

  Monika shuddered. “He was the one person I could trust completely. The only person I truly felt I belonged to. I should have been with him—”

  Eve pulled her friend tight. Monika had been surrounded by family and friends her entire life, yet Deacon King had been the one who made her feel as if she belonged.

  “You have so many people who love you, who care,” Eve said as Gideon approached.

  “The doctor said you can go into the room,” he said.

  Shani walked with them down the hall. When they reached the room, Monika took Eve’s hand and started inside.

  “You come too,” she said to Shani.

  The three women stood at the end of the bed for a moment, and then Monika stepped forward and took her husband’s hand. “Denki,” she said. “For loving me.”

  Shani put her arm around Eve, and both women cried.

  Finally, Monika moved away from the bed, and Eve and Shani stepped to her side, embracing her. Gideon cleared his throat from the doorway. “Eve and I could go tell your girls,” he said.

  Monika nodded in agreement. “The older ones are all at the house with Jenny.”

  “I’ll stay here with you,” Shani said. “In fact, I’ll stay until you’re ready to go, and then I’ll take you home.”

  Eve was overcome with love for her new Englisch friend. “Denki,” she said, as she hugged Shani good-bye.

  As Eve and Gideon rode with the hired driver to the King residence in silence, Monika’s words kept replaying in Eve’s mind. “He was the one person I could trust, completely. The only person I truly felt I belonged to.” That was it. She would never belong with Gideon. He was a good man, but she felt no connection to him.

  After she and Gideon had told the girls, the driver dropped Eve off at home. Trudy had been cranky all evening and Tim was out of sorts, even more so after she told him Deacon King had passed. Finally, after Eve got the baby settled down and Tim had gone into his room, she put her cape back on. She had to talk to Charlie.

  As she opened the back door, Tim’s footsteps fell across the kitchen floor. “I thought you’d been sneaking out,” he said.

  “I’m just going to get some fresh air.”

  Tim continued forward, stopping a foot from her. “You’ll stay in this house.”

  “So I’m a prisoner now?”

  “You will not call the Englischman.”

  Eve crossed her arms, defiance surging through her.

  “If you go out that door, you won’t come back inside.” Tim’s face reddened with each word. “And you’ll never see the children again.” As he spoke the rain started again, coming down all at once in torrents.

  Tim reached around her and slammed the door shut.

  Eve didn’t move. Finally, Tim returned to his room.

  She stood for a long time, staring at the closed door, her cape still on. She wanted nothing more than to call Charlie and ask him to come get her. She wanted nothing more than to escape with him to a place where she was valued for who she was—not for who she was supposed to be. As unhealthy as the situation had been, she’d felt that during her time in the Englisch world—valued.

  As hard as she’d tried all these years, she’d never fit in, let alone belonged. The morning she was baptized she was doing it for Abra, not for God. By that time, she’d come back to him. Felt his grace, as much as was possible. She knew joining the church wouldn’t make her relationship with him any better. But she owed it to Abra—after everything that had happened—to remain by her side.

  And she wasn’t sorry she’d done it.

  But she knew no matter how hard she tried, she’d never feel as if she belonged in the Amish world. Not even with Gi
deon by her side. Especially when she didn’t love him.

  But she couldn’t abandon the children. She wouldn’t go back on her word to Abra.

  She took off her cape and hung it on the peg.

  25

  When Shani stopped by Monika’s the day before the service, the oldest daughter advised her to come to the burial not the actual service. “It will all be in Pennsylvania Dutch,” she said. “And long. Come to the cemetery instead.” She gave Shani directions.

  On her way home she stopped by Eve’s. She wanted to double-check with her to make sure it was okay if she went to the burial. But Tim was home and came out of the house into the rain without even his hat as she stepped down from the van.

  “I don’t want you coming around,” he said.

  “I have a question for Eve.”

  Tim crossed his arms. “She’s busy.”

  Shani replied. “Then I’ll ask you.”

  “I won’t answer.”

  Shani shook her head. The man was a brute. “I’ll see you tomorrow,” she said, yanking her door shut. Her stomach lurched as she backed her van around and headed to the lane. The baby must not have liked her rising anxiety, because he hauled off and kicked her, hard.

  She turned right at the lane instead of left, figuring she had enough time to get to the grocery store before Zane got home, but as always, it took longer than expected. When she reached the farmhouse she anticipated he’d be down at the creek with the kids, but he wasn’t. He was watching SportsCenter with Joel.

  “How come you’re not out with the kids?” Shani asked as she carried in the bags of groceries.

  Zane shrugged.

  Joel spoke up. “Because Tim met him in the field and told him his kids wouldn’t be playing anymore.”

  Zane’s eyes didn’t waver from the TV screen.

  “How come Tim’s not at work?” Joel asked.

  “I don’t know,” Shani replied, stepping into the kitchen, her blood pressure rising again.

  The next day, at the cemetery, she saw Eve across the gravesite but didn’t wave, feeling as if it wouldn’t be proper. But she smiled at her friend, and Eve smiled back—until Gideon stepped to her side.

  Shani exhaled. It wasn’t just Tim who had grown hypercontrolling.

  Charlie had called last night, asking if Shani had spoken to Eve. He sounded heartbroken, saying she hadn’t called.

  After the burial, Monika sought Shani out and gave her a hug. “I don’t know what I would have done without you that night—” Jenny, the youngest daughter, joined them, clasping her mother’s arm. Shani knew what it was like to have only one parent to cling to.

  “You have my number,” Shani said. “Call me. If you need a ride. Or someone to talk to. I’m happy to help.”

  After she gave Monika a hug, Shani searched for Eve but she’d disappeared. She’d probably gone back to Monika’s house to set up the meal. She didn’t see Gideon or Tim either. The children, it seemed, hadn’t attended at all.

  On her way home, Shani slowed down by the Lehmans’ driveway but didn’t see anyone. When she arrived home, she found Zane watching an old rerun of Bonanza with Joel.

  Between work and caring for Joel, Zane, and their home, the days zipped by for her—but Shani couldn’t seem to pull all of them out of the funk they were in. Zane was lonely without the children, Shani felt lost without Eve, and Joel’s nightmares and generally negative disposition grew worse. The last time Shani had asked him to see the therapist, he’d cursed. When he calmed down, he’d said, “Don’t bring it up again. I’m fine.”

  Shani felt as if she were holding her breath. She wished she could talk to Eve. Or at least ask her to pray.

  Charlie didn’t come to visit, not even for Thanksgiving. He called and talked to Joel, saying he’d had dinner at Nikki’s that day. Shani got on the phone and told him to get his butt down to Lancaster to see Eve, but Charlie said he still hadn’t heard from her. He wasn’t going to be one more man in her life trying to control her.

  “You’re right, but she does need one man in her life who truly loves her.”

  He didn’t answer for a long awkward moment. Finally he said, “She doesn’t want me.”

  “So you’re going to go back to Nikki?” Shani said. Joel frowned at her.

  “No,” Charlie answered. “I told her that we couldn’t see each other any longer.”

  Shani handed the phone back to Joel without saying good-bye.

  The next morning, on the way to the grocery store, she stopped by the Lehmans’, but they were all gone. She imagined they were off visiting—probably at Gideon’s. Her heart sank as she drove away.

  When she returned, Joel said Charlie had called and planned to come down for the afternoon. “Why?” Shani asked.

  Joel shrugged. “He misses us, I guess.”

  Charlie arrived midafternoon. He sat with Joel and watched college football on TV for over an hour but then asked Zane if he wanted to go outside and toss a ball around. Zane jumped at the chance.

  Shani headed into the kitchen to heat up the turkey breast from the day before. She’d thought Joel was going to the bathroom when he headed down the hall, but when she came back out to the living room, Joel sat at the window, the TV off and his .45 in his hand.

  “Hey,” she said, walking toward him. “What’s going on?”

  “I hate this time of day,” he said. Dusk wasn’t far away.

  “Give me the gun,” she said. “I’ll put it away.” She knelt beside his chair. “We’re safe here.”

  “There’s always a threat,” Joel said.

  “Joel . . .”

  “Leave me alone.”

  If they’d had cell service in their hollow of a farm, Shani would have texted Charlie to come in through the back door. But then what? She needed to stay calm.

  She followed Joel’s gaze outside. Zane caught the ball and then ran with it, back toward Charlie, zigzagging this way and that. Charlie reached over and slapped Zane’s shoulders with both hands. Next Zane threw the ball to Charlie.

  “I’m no use to any of you,” Joel said. “Not as a husband. Not as a dad. I won’t even be able to carry the baby when he’s born. You’d be better off without me.”

  “Stop,” she said, reaching for his free hand. He jerked it away. Back when he was in the hospital, she’d succeeded at quieting his suspicions about her and Charlie. But there was no proving him wrong in his recognition that Zane and Charlie had become close. It was totally appropriate—but it was still hurtful. Maybe she should have intervened—asked Charlie to be careful not to make it so obvious.

  “We love you.” She pulled herself up from the floor, using the arm of his chair. “And you are getting better. You’ll be out of the cast soon and back in rehab. This is just a setback.” Somehow she had to get him to agree to mental health help too.

  She started to wheel the chair away from the window.

  “I want to stay,” he said.

  “But why sit here and watch if it makes you feel worse?” She kept her eyes on the gun as she spoke.

  “Leave me alone,” he snapped.

  “I’m going to go get Charlie,” she said, starting toward the door.

  “Don’t.” The gun was still in his lap. He sighed. “We need to figure out how to get through life without Charlie.”

  Her eyebrows, involuntarily, shot up. “Then give me the gun.”

  He shook his head. “Just let me hold it. I’m not hurting anyone.”

  “I’m going to go check on the turkey,” Shani said, walking slowly into the kitchen. She passed the oven and opened the back door as quietly as she could, hurrying down the steps and motioning to Charlie. She was confident Joel wouldn’t use the gun on any of them—but she wasn’t positive he wouldn’t use it on himself.

  She put her finger to her lips, hoping it wouldn’t be obvious to Joel that she’d called them in, but both Charlie and Zane looked straight at her.

  “Shani!” Joel yelled. He must have caught on t
o what she was doing.

  She hurried back up the steps. “I’ll be right there,” she called back to him.

  Zane came up behind her first. “Wait a minute,” she whispered to him, catching his arm. She whispered to Charlie what was going on.

  He nodded and said, “I’ll go talk to him.”

  “Stay in the kitchen with me,” Shani said to Zane. “Wash up and set the table.”

  At first the voices coming from the living room were soft murmurs, but then Joel’s voice grew louder. “We don’t need you to keep coming here anymore.”

  Zane’s eyes grew wide.

  Shani put her hand on his shoulder. “It’ll be all right.” She hoped she wasn’t lying.

  Charlie’s voice stayed calm. “I’ll be on my way after dinner. How’s that?”

  “But you’ll be back. You and Shani treat me as if I can’t do a thing by myself. And the thing is—you’re right. I can’t do anything without one of you.”

  “Your leg is healing, Joel. You’ll be walking soon and out playing football in no time.”

  “Who are you kidding? I’ll never play football like I used to.”

  “No, but you should be able to play. With Zane. And your new son.”

  Joel grunted. Shani stepped to the doorway of the kitchen. Joel stayed at the window, but Charlie sat down on the couch.

  She shot him a questioning look. He shrugged.

  When it was time to eat, Joel said he wasn’t hungry. Shani asked Charlie to fill his plate and eat in the living room while she and Zane ate in the kitchen. The reheated turkey was dry, and the stuffing was still mushy. No wonder Joel didn’t want to eat.

  When Charlie came in with his empty plate, Shani sent Zane upstairs and then asked what they should do. “Call the police?” she asked.

  He shook his head. “That will only make things worse. Let’s wait until he gives it up or falls asleep. I’ll take it home with me.” Charlie ran his hand through his hair. “He obviously needs some help.”

  Shani nodded.

 

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