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Crossing Stones

Page 9

by Helen Frost


  apart from a few hours on the train.

  Get some sleep now, Muriel, says Mama.

  Thank you, God, she breathes. Thank you, Muriel,

  says Papa as I pass him in the doorway.

  I Had My Rifle, Loaded

  Ollie

  Crown him Lord of all, Emma sings through a

  haze of tears, a triumphant song of quiet strength.

  We’re standing together by the water. I have come to tell her

  Grace got up and ate an egg; after Emma weeps and sings, we stay

  to talk. Grace is like a sister to me, Emma says. Then she listens as I

  tell her about the war; like Muriel, she doesn’t ask too many questions.

  My memory of it clears in patches, thick fog rising off a field. But Emma,

  why couldn’t I shoot him? That bothers me. I had my rifle, loaded with a

  shell—after all my training, I couldn’t kill a man. She thinks about it.

  You have been tenderhearted as long as I’ve known you. It’s not my

  place to try to read your mind—but I don’t think it was only

  fear. She dips her fingers in the creek, then lets them

  graze my cheeks, trying to smooth away my

  frown. Let love wash the war away.

  A Small, Cold Stone

  Muriel

  You’ve been asleep for thirteen hours, Mama tells me.

  I’ve been dreaming I was on a train, holding

  a baby, singing “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary.”

  (What a funny song to sing to a baby.) I dreamed

  a soldier came and took the baby from me;

  I’ll bring her right back, he said, but he

  got off the train and it went on without them,

  moving too fast for me to follow and get the baby back.

  I blink, trying to remember both the dream

  and what has happened since I got home.

  Was the train in the dream going to Washington?

  Who was sitting with me—Ruby? Was the baby

  hers? No … someone’s little sister … Oh!

  Grace … How is she? I ask. Mama looks tired,

  but she smiles. Grace will be fine, Muriel.

  Dr. Brower is as surprised as we are.

  Three of his patients have died this week—they’ve canceled

  the dance on Saturday, and won’t have school

  for at least another week, to keep the flu from spreading.

  Who is that, whistling at the door? Ollie

  comes in, so happy I hardly recognize him.

  I thought you’d never wake up, Muriel!

  Grace is going to be okay! She is okay! And

  Emma says you brought presents from Chicago.

  I turn to find my suitcase—it’s true, I do have gifts

  for everyone—but something catches at the edge

  of my attention: a small, cold stone sinking

  into a depth I can’t quite see.

  “Emma says…” said Ollie? She told him

  what I told her, and he is telling me

  what she told him. Something here

  has shifted while I’ve been away.

  With Our Three Arms

  Emma

  Ollie gently mentions Frank: I hate to see you cry

  about your brother. I’ll try to do things he would have done

  for you. The kindness in his eyes and voice loosens a tight place

  deep inside me, releasing an ache I’ve been trying not to feel. Instead

  of simply saying “Thank you,” I start to tremble, my shoulders shake,

  and I can’t stop myself from crying. Ollie, startled, steps back. I’m sorry,

  Emma. Of course no one can take Frank’s place. I know I could never …

  His arm drops to his side. I nod my head: It’s okay. All the tears I’ve ever

  kept myself from crying seem to be falling now, torrential. Don’t worry,

  Emma, I don’t mean … I want … I put my finger to his lips to make

  him stop apologizing. He leans down to kiss my forehead …

  and then somehow, with our three arms, we embrace.

  I whisper, You’re not my brother, Ollie—I find one

  clear smile—and I don’t want you to try.

  Nothing in the World

  Muriel

  It’s true, Muriel. I saw them, Grace confides.

  They didn’t see me, though—Emma might think

  I’m still sick. I’m sure Ollie has told Emma

  that Grace is out of bed, but it’s true that Grace

  can be so quiet you don’t know she’s there.

  Why shouldn’t I believe her? Ollie and Emma,

  hugging and kissing—I’m not surprised.

  Emma has always had a soft spot in her heart

  for Ollie, though he has never quite believed it.

  Two people I care for, together now—I’m …

  happy for them. What’s wrong, Muriel? Grace’s question

  catches me off guard. I’m on the edge of tears—

  I don’t know how to answer. Nothing,

  Grace, nothing in the world is wrong.

  Is that closer to the truth than I admit?

  Nothing. Is that what will be left for me, if

  Emma and Ollie are to be a pair? At home, we were

  always Frank and Emma, Muriel and Ollie.

  At school, it was Frank and Ollie,

  Muriel and Emma. If Frank is gone, and now

  it’s Emma matched with Ollie, where

  does that leave me? With no one.

  Nothing. Nothing in the world.

  Worth Knowing

  Ollie

  Clever words and witty conversation are not

  how I make friends. Still, I never dreamed that being

  nice could be enough to get a girl to notice me. All these years,

  I haven’t dared to hope for Emma’s love. And now, the past two days,

  old tunes come whistling back to me from who knows where; it’s like an

  “all clear” in my mind. Yankee Doodle went to town, a-riding on his pony,

  stuck a feather in his cap and called it macaroni. Macaroni? Something

  struck me this morning while I was whistling that song: What did he

  call macaroni, anyhow—the feather, the cap, or the pony? It’s not a

  bold original thought, no one has to tell me, but it stopped me in

  my tracks to realize: it’s the first time, since that bullet took a

  slice out of my shoulder, I’ve had such cheerful thoughts.

  Wow—that’s a fact worth knowing. Something can

  sever an arm without destroying your brain.

  A Quick Nod

  Muriel

  Oh—you shouldn’t have! Most people,

  when they say that, make it sound like thank you,

  but when Mama says it, I always feel I’ve done

  something wrong. Spent too much money,

  made a careless purchase, chosen a color

  that is not quite right. But Mama, I argue, it looks nice

  on you—I saw lots of women in Washington, D.C.,

  wearing hats like this one. She gives me a quick glance

  (am I putting on airs?), longing—I can see it—

  not exactly for the hat itself, but to be the kind of

  person who could wear it. I don’t know, girls …

  (Is Grace going to cry?) Mama tilts her head

  and looks at me—a peculiar mix of love and

  hard appraisal, with a touch of guilty vanity

  tossed in. Grace grabs her hand—Mama can’t stop

  herself from smiling. She gives a quick nod of

  acceptance. Thank you, Grace, it’s lovely.

  Thank you, Muriel, she says.

  I Can See Myself

  Emma

  Corn, potatoes, butternut squash. A woodchuck

  waddles through the garde
n. A V of geese flies overhead.

  I’ve always loved this time of year, when all the work we’ve done

  comes back to feed us. We put up ten jars of pickles, fifty pints of beans,

  sixty-five quarts of applesauce. Now I see Ollie, crossing the creek, carrying

  something to our house. Look, Emma, he says, here’s the first fish I’ve caught

  since I’ve been home! Just last week, we were all afraid that Grace might die,

  and now she (and everyone else, too) is brimming over with exuberant life. I

  was thinking that if Muriel ever takes another trip to Washington, I ought

  to go along—but it’s not likely. I can see myself staying here, marrying

  Ollie someday. I know Muriel is restless. She thinks marriage means

  we’d be hemming ourselves in. Mother calls her plucky. But one

  life can’t be less full than another; making sure everyone is fed

  and clothed and cared for—that also takes a kind of pluck.

  Bluebird Stitched in Such Detail

  December 1917

  We Have Reason to Believe

  Muriel

  Aunt Vera sends me a small parcel—

  a box of suffrage pins and fliers, a program

  from a speech she heard, along with a three-page

  letter, all about her work. I’m fully recovered,

  and all the prisoners have been released,

  but I’ve decided to stay here and see this through.

  A vote comes up in Congress on January 10th.

  We have reason to believe the president

  will offer his support this time! Everyone here sends

  greetings to you, Muriel, asking when you

  will return. Ruby asked me to enclose her letter—

  consider what she asks of you. We need

  all hands on deck these coming weeks,

  and I would love to see you be a part

  of what could be a historic time for women.

  Whatever you decide—thank you for coming

  in November. Your presence helped me

  more than I can say. Give my love

  to everyone in Michigan. With fond affection

  (and power to women everywhere!),

  Aunt Vera.

  My Friend Miss Muriel

  Muriel

  Dear Muriel, Ruby writes, I’m glad to hear

  you make it safely home, and that your sister

  is recover from her flu. I won’t beat the bush—

  is that how you say it? I hope you

  think about come back to Washington.

  She says they need an assistant kindergarten

  teacher, and if I want the job, it’s mine! Remember

  Joey, the little boy who not could tie his shoes?

  Now, every time he tie them, he say, “My friend

  Miss Muriel teach me how.” I haven’t told Mama

  much about my trip yet, and she’s full of questions:

  Who is Ruby? How did you meet her?

  Where does she live? Does Vera know her?

  I put the letter in my pocket while I take my time

  to think this through. In the kitchen, making rolls

  with Grace and Mama, I let my thoughts go back and forth

  from here (What if Grace gets sick again, and I’m not here

  to help?) to Washington (Ruby says I would be paid

  enough to support myself if I live where she lives—

  a room is vacant now, and I could have it).

  Ollie/Joey. Ruby/Emma. Mama and Papa/

  Aunt Vera and the other suffrage women.

  Grace—nothing in Washington comes close

  to balancing how I’d miss Grace. I go out to feed the hens,

  scattering these thoughts as I scatter corn, then climb

  Cobb Hill to see if any answers come to me.

  I look out over our two farms—

  there’s Mr. Norman coming home from work,

  stopping at the clothesline to kiss Mrs. Norman

  and help her hang the sheet she’s struggling with.

  I think about Grace—I left her sitting

  by the window reading Anne of Green Gables

  for the third time. Mama came in to feel her forehead,

  as if to reassure herself: Thank God, yes,

  Grace is still here, Grace is fine. I see Papa trying

  to repair the windmill by himself. Where is Ollie?

  Where, come to think of it, is Emma? I start

  back down the hill—maybe I can help Papa

  fix the windmill. I pass by Grace’s playhouse,

  recalling that day last June, when Ollie

  (with both arms) worked so hard to finish it.

  Grace seemed so much younger then,

  jumping up and down as she watched him work.

  Wait … what do I hear? Someone

  in the playhouse—not Grace—

  two voices—Shhh … she’ll hear us.

  Soft whisper—We shouldn’t …

  I hurry on; I don’t want to hear more.

  I am “she,” I’m sure of it.

  Ollie and Emma are “we.”

  This is how it is, how it will be

  from now on—their new forever.

  I start composing letters in my mind:

  Dear Ruby, I will take the job.

  Dear Aunt Vera, Count me in.

  It Also Happened to Us

  Ollie

  Tie his shoes? Muriel is leaving home because she taught

  a child in Washington to tie his shoes? I don’t understand. Aren’t

  there plenty of children around here that she could teach? Pa and Ma

  are determined not to tell her what to do: It’s up to you. We’ll miss you,

  but you’re old enough to decide for yourself. If you’ve made up your mind,

  we won’t try to change it. Pa is very quiet. Ma is thinking hard. I heard her

  crying after Muriel went to bed. She looks tired. Maybe she’s lonely. I’m

  trying to recall how it was before—Mrs. Norman came over all the time.

  She was here almost every day, before the war, I remind Emma. That’s

  what you don’t understand, Emma answers. We’ve changed, too. The

  war happened to you over in France, but it also happened to us

  here at home. She holds my hand. I think about that. Yes, I

  say, but now maybe it’s time for us to make some blackberry

  pie and fried chicken! Get together for a little music.

  Blackberry-Apple Cobbler

  Muriel

  It won’t be easy, leaving home;

  Ollie sounds so mournful when he

  talks about it, I’ll never tell him my decision

  has anything to do with him. In truth, it doesn’t;

  hearing him and Emma whispering together

  in the playhouse was just the nudge I needed

  to make me go out looking for whatever happiness

  will be my own. I promise Grace, I’ll come home

  as often as I can. And when you’re old enough

  to take the train, you can come and visit me.

  Emma hears our conversation and offers

  to come to Washington on the train with Grace.

  Ollie and Emma have accomplished what

  Mama, Grace, and I could not: the two of them

  have brought our families together, almost

  like we were before Frank and Ollie went to war.

  Ollie invited Mrs. Norman over, so sweetly, Emma told me,

  that she could not refuse, and Mr. Norman

  said of course they’d come: We have a lot to celebrate.

  Here they come now, crossing Crabapple Creek,

  Mrs. Norman carrying her blackberry-apple

  cobbler—I’ve been missing that these past few months.

  Why is Mr. Norman carrying Frank’s banjo?

  Grace, h
e says when they arrive, you’ve said

  you’d like to learn to play an instrument.

  This was Frank’s—we gave it to him when he

  was not much older than you are. Now

  we’re giving it to you. Mama’s hand

  goes to her mouth—she glances up—

  Mrs. Norman gives a brief nod

  and they both look at Grace, who simply answers,

  Thank you, Mr. Norman. Will you teach me

  how to play it? Mr. Norman smiles.

  Yes, he says. My father’s uncle taught him,

  he taught me, I taught Fr—

  I taught … my boy …

  I’d be happy to teach you.

  One Hand, Drying

  Emma

  Muriel and I are in the kitchen with our mothers, frying

  chicken, slicing sweet potatoes. Mrs. Jorgensen lays out her best blue

  tablecloth, the one she brought from the old country. As we set the table

  for eight instead of nine, we pause, but no one says Frank’s name out loud.

  The men come in together—they have managed to repair the windmill. I pay

  attention, watching how Ollie’s mother helps him when he needs it, without

  embarrassing him. She cuts his food into bite-size pieces before she brings

  it to the table and she moves his spoon to the left side of his plate. Things

  I might not have noticed if … (Does Muriel know I’m thinking about

  marrying her brother?) He glances over at me. He’s found a way

  to wash his hand and dry it. Is he showing off a bit, proud

  of the muscle in his arm? (Look, Emma, I’m capable.

  I can carry two chairs in one hand.) Inviting me to

  witness his accomplishment: one hand, drying.

  Bluebird Stitched in Such Detail

  Muriel

  After supper, Mr. Norman teaches Grace

  to play Frank’s banjo—she learns quickly. Emma

  sits beside Ollie, humming the tune Grace plays.

  Mama and Papa are outside looking at the windmill

  and I’m standing by myself at the window.

  Mrs. Norman studies me. She’s holding

  something white—clean, ironed, neatly folded.

  Muriel? she says, careful not to interrupt my thoughts.

 

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