Read A Big Year for Lily Online

Authors: Mary Ann Kinsinger,Suzanne Woods Fisher

Tags: #JUV033010, #FIC053000, #Amish—Juvenile fiction, #1. Amish—Fiction, #Family life—Pennsylvania—Fiction, #Schools—Fiction, #Friendship—Fiction, #Pennsylvania—Fiction

A Big Year for Lily (22 page)

BOOK: A Big Year for Lily
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Besides, he didn't have to. Joseph gave him the entire blow-by-blow story, all the way home. Lily stared out the buggy window. The fog was gone now and the sky was clearing. Why had she worried about the weather? It didn't matter what kind of weather the day held. She had worried about the wrong thing. As long as Effie Kauffman was around, every day was a continual worry.

39
Effie's Quilt Block

O
n Saturday morning, Lily tossed the end of a rug over the porch railing and shook the dirt off. She flipped it back over to shake the other side. She heard a horse clip-clopping down the road, so she stopped to see if she knew who was passing by. To her delight, the buggy turned into her driveway. Beth waved to her from the front seat, next to her mother.

Lily tossed the rug on the floor and ran down the porch steps to meet them. Alice Raber got off the buggy and reached under the seat to get the tie rope for the horse. Beth hopped off the buggy, a paper bag in her hands. She ran over to Lily while Alice tied the horse to the hitching post. “We're making a quilt for Teacher Rhoda,” she said.

Lily eyed the little brown paper bag. It didn't look big enough to hold a quilt.

“Is your mother at home?” Beth's mother asked.

“Yes,” Lily said. “She's in the kitchen scrubbing the stove top.” Lily was happy to be outside for that chore. Rubbing the metal made a screechy sound that set Lily's teeth on edge.

Lily ran ahead of them and held the kitchen door open. “Alice and Beth are here.”

Mama wiped her hands on her apron and hurried to the door. “Come in, come in!”

“We don't have time to stay long,” Alice said. “We're stopping at all the families with schoolchildren and dropping off quilt blocks. We want to make a memory quilt for Teacher Rhoda as a thank-you for her years of teaching school.”

Beth handed the little paper bag to Mama.

Mama opened it and drew out two quilt blocks.

“If you could embroider Lily and Joseph's names on the blocks and get them back to me by the end of the month,” Alice said, “I'll sew all the blocks together. Then I'll have a quilting for all the mothers to get it quilted.”

“What a nice idea,” Mama said. “We'll start on these quilt blocks as soon as we're finished with the Saturday cleaning.”

Alice and Beth left to deliver the rest of the quilt blocks. Lily picked up a rug to shake it with renewed energy. Shaking rugs was much more fun if there was something to look forward to.

Mama spread the two quilt blocks on the table and handed a pencil to Lily and Joseph. “Write your names as neatly as you can,” she said, “and then I'll start embroidering them.” Mama held the sides of Joseph's quilt block to keep it from moving while he labored at trying to write his name as neatly as possible. Lily tried writing the
L
for her name but the fabric moved so she sat and waited until Mama was finished helping Joseph.

It was hard to write on fabric. Lily worked carefully until she had written Lily Lapp in big neat letters across the middle of the quilt block. “Can I draw a flower in the corners?”

“I think that might look nice,” Mama said. She held the fabric while Lily carefully drew flowers in each of the corners. They looked like little impatiens.

Mama found two embroidery hoops in her sewing closet and fastened the fabric in them. “You can embroider your name with a chain stitch while I do Joseph's,” Mama said. “And then I'll show you how to do the flowers.”

Chain stitch was Lily's favorite way to embroider, and she set to work making neat, small chains. She worked on the quilt block every evening after supper. She was pleased with it and thought her quilt patch would be the prettiest of all the ones in the quilt.

It wasn't long before both quilt blocks were finished. Mama folded them carefully and put them into a big brown envelope. She let Lily write Alice Raber's address on it and carry it to the mailbox. Lily hoped Alice would start sewing the blocks together right away. She couldn't wait until the quilting.

Church was at Effie Kauffman's house on a Sunday morning in mid-August. Lily didn't mind going to Effie's for church nearly as much as she minded having Effie to church at her house. When Effie's family hosted church, she was in charge, and when she was in charge, she was happy.

After the service, Lily and her friends were visiting in Effie's bedroom. The girls were looking through Effie's big collection of books on a shelf above her bed. Lily couldn't believe how many books Effie had. They all looked interesting.

“Maybe we could read,” Lily suggested. Reading was her favorite thing to do.

“No,” Effie said. “I already read those books.”

But Lily hadn't! Neither had the other girls.

“Let's play communion,” Effie said. “I'll go downstairs and get everything we need.”

As soon as Effie had disappeared, Hannah said, “I wonder why Effie thinks we're not too big to play communion.”

Beth nodded. “She thinks we're getting too big to do almost everything we used to after church when we were still little girls.”

Everyone agreed, but no one volunteered to tell Effie they didn't want to play communion. That was the thing about Effie. Somehow, she always got her way. No one dared to disagree with her—at least, not to her face.

Effie came back upstairs with several slices of bread and a glass of water. There was a strange lump in her dress pocket that showed through her apron. “What do you have in your pocket?” Lily asked. She just knew this was a bad idea.

“Since you need to know everything, it's my handkerchief,” Effie said, eyes narrowed. She turned to Malinda, who did whatever she said. “You can be the preacher and hand out the bread and water.”

Everyone lined up beside the bed. Malinda broke bits of bread off the slice she held in her hand and gave one to each of the girls.

When each girl sat on the bed, Effie said, “Now it's my turn to be the preacher, but this time let's do something different. Everyone stand with your eyes closed and your mouth wide open, and I'll put the piece of bread right into your mouth.”

Just like always, everyone followed Effie's orders. Lily
wished someone would tell her that her games were dumb. Someone besides Lily.

“Okay, here I come,” Effie said. Lily held her hands behind her back and stood with her eyes closed tightly and her mouth open. Effie started down the line, dropping a piece of bread in each girl's mouth. Lily was at the end of the line. All of a sudden, Beth and Malinda and Hannah started to cough and spit. Lily's eyes flew open and she clamped her mouth shut. Effie had sprinkled the bread pieces with cayenne pepper. She laughed and laughed as the girls ran to the bathroom, gagging.

Lily felt sorry for her friends. She ran to see if she could help them. They were trying to rinse their mouths with water. Tears were streaming down their flushed faces.

“It hurts so bad,” Beth said, gasping between gulps of water.

Lily was worried about Beth—her piece of bread had more pepper on it than Hannah's or Malinda's. She ran downstairs to get Beth's mother. Alice Raber hurried up the stairs to the bathroom.

“Make the burning stop, Mama!” Beth cried when she saw her mother.

“What on earth happened?” Alice said.

Everyone looked at Effie. “Effie told us to open our mouth and close our eyes and then she gave us bread sprinkled with cayenne pepper,” Lily said.

Ida Kauffman came upstairs to see what was happening and heard what Lily had said. Effie, now deflated, looked smaller.

“Clearly, these girls need to be watched more closely,” Ida said. “Whenever they're together, they seem to create mischief.” She gave Lily a look as if she probably started the whole thing.

“Beth, let's go downstairs and get something to relieve the burning,” Alice said.

Hands on her hips, Ida frowned at Hannah, Malinda, and Lily. “And now the rest of you go down and sit by your mothers for the rest of the afternoon.”

No one dared to speak up to her. Lily wanted to, though. She wanted to point out that Effie was the one who created 99 percent of the mischief. Did Ida realize that? But of course, she didn't say anything. Being rude to a grown-up was worse than being falsely accused.

Teacher Rhoda would be very pleased, though, to know that Lily had used some arithmetic in real life—a percentage—without it being an assignment.

Lily, Hannah, and Malinda went down to the kitchen and quietly slipped onto benches next to their mothers. All except Effie. She went outside to play with the older girls.

An hour or so later, the families started to head home for evening chores. Lily saw Ida Kauffman take an envelope and hand it to Effie. “Tuck that in Beth or Alice's bonnet,” she told her. “Don't let Rhoda see you.”

Lily and Mama helped gather the last of the dishes and put them in the kitchen sink. By the time Papa had brought Jim up to the door, their two bonnets were the only ones left. Lily put her bonnet over her prayer cap and tied the ribbons. A pin poked her head and she loosened the ties. She did not like her big bonnet.

When everyone returned home, Lily took her bonnet off and hung it on the wall peg. Something fluttered out and landed on the floor. Lily picked it up. Why, it wasn't a pin that had poked her. It was an envelope. Effie had put her quilt square in the wrong bonnet!

“Lily, come help me get supper ready,” Mama called from the kitchen.

Lily opened the envelope and looked at the quilt square: “EFFIE” it said in big, fat letters. Nothing else. Just her giant-sized name. And wasn't that typical of Effie?

Lily stood there awhile, wondering what to do with the quilt square. The right thing to do would be to tell Mama right away so Effie's quilt square would get to Alice in time to be included in the quilt. That would be the right thing to do.

But then Lily thought about all the mean things Effie had done to her: the sandwich switch, the taffy pull, even today—putting cayenne pepper on bread.

She crumbled up the envelope, tucked the quilt square into her dress pocket, and went to help Mama with supper.

40
The Quilting

A
few weeks later, a postcard arrived in the mail to invite Mama and Lily to the quilting.

“It looks like we're going to have a very busy week,” Mama said. “We have a lot of canning and garden work to do. But if we work extra hard, we should be able to make it to the quilting.”

For once, Lily didn't mind helping Mama with the garden work. Lily liked quiltings. She could visit with her friends, and Mama could visit with her friends. Everyone laughed a lot, and delicious food was served. Going to a quilting would be a fun change.

Every now and then, she felt a pinch of guilt about Effie's quilt block, hidden in her room. She quickly dismissed it when she imagined Effie's face as the quilt was given to Teacher Rhoda and her quilt block was missing. Nowhere to be seen. Effie would be furious! And it wasn't Lily's fault, she told
herself. She didn't purposely take that quilt block. Effie was the one who put it in the wrong bonnet.

The night before the quilting, Lily fell asleep quickly but woke with a start. She had been having a nightmare that Effie found her quilt square hidden in Lily's room and Ida sent Lily off to jail. She tiptoed into Mama's room and tapped her on the shoulder.

“Lily?” Mama said, startled. “What's wrong? Are you sick?”

“No,” Lily whispered, and mumbled the truth.

“What?” Mama said.

Lily hoped Papa wouldn't wake up. “I did something I shouldn't.” She held out Effie's quilt square. A beam of moonlight shone right on it.

Mama listened carefully to Lily's story, then told her to go back to bed. “We'll talk about it in the morning.”

Lily overslept in the morning and had to hurry when Mama woke her to say it was time to leave for the quilting. Papa had already hitched Jim to the buggy and handed the reins to Mama. Lily felt sorry for the boys as she climbed on the front seat next to Mama. The boys would stay at home with Papa today. Boys did not belong at a quilting.

Jim trotted through the cool morning air. Normally, Lily loved summer mornings when the air still had a bite to it, almost chilly. The days were warm but mornings were always nice. Today, though, she felt too guilty to enjoy anything.

Mama didn't say anything for a long time. Lily started to hope that maybe she had forgotten about what Lily said in the night. Maybe . . . Mama thought she was dreaming!

“Lily, Aufgeschoben ist nicht aufgehoben”
Omission is not acquittance
.

Lily had no idea what that meant. In Penn Dutch or in English.

“Not telling the truth about the quilt square is the same thing as lying.”

Oh.
Oh!

Mama's face softened. “I know that Effie is not an easy friend to have. But two wrongs never make a right.”

Jonas Raber was waiting in the barnyard to take care of the horses as the women drove up. Jonas unhitched Jim from the buggy and led him into the barn where he could eat hay until it was time to go home again. At least Jim would be happy.

In the house, Mama and Lily removed their bonnets and placed them on a bench. Mama checked to make sure Lily's covering was straight and tied neatly. Then they went to the living room where the quilt top was set up, ready for quilting. Lily noticed that every student's quilt block was set in place. All except Effie's. Her stomach twisted inside and out.

Lily and Beth sat behind the quilt. They were too little to quilt but they could measure the thread in yard lengths and thread a lot of needles for the mothers. Beth asked why Lily was extra quiet but she only shrugged. She was waiting for Effie and Ida to notice that Effie's quilt block was missing. Worse still, what if Mama asked Lily to confess in front of everyone? Lily felt like she was waiting for a thunderstorm to hit. Amazingly, no one seemed to notice.

When it was time to make lunch, Alice Raber asked the girls to help her. Lily, Beth, and Hannah set the table while Effie helped Alice prepare the food. Naturally, Effie volunteered for the most important job.

It wasn't long before lunch was ready. Alice had made a creamy potato soup and cute chicken salad sandwiches. She
filled a bowl with soup and a small tray with sandwiches and asked Beth and Lily to take it out to Jonas Raber in the barn. “He doesn't want to come inside,” Alice told the girls. “He said that it was better to let the women cluck all they wanted to without a man getting in their way.”

After lunch was over, Alice rinsed the food bits off the dishes and fixed the dishwater. “I think we'll let the little girls wash the dishes,” she said, and Lily's heart sank. There were piles and piles of dirty dishes!

Malinda rolled up her sleeves and started to slowly wash dishes. Lily rinsed. She made the plates float and twirl on the rinse water before putting them into the drainer for Hannah
and Effie to dry. Beth put the dishes away, since she knew where everything belonged.

“I wish we never had to wash dishes again,” Hannah said.

“Me too,” all the other girls chimed together.

“You know what I feel like doing with them?” Malinda said.

“What?”

“I would like to hang them out on the clothesline and shoot them with a big rifle,” Malinda said.

The girls looked at Malinda in surprise, then they burst out laughing. Malinda was usually quiet. She didn't come up with ideas like that. Effie did, but Malinda didn't.

Then all the girls thought up things they would like to do with dirty dishes. Lily said they could be buried in the garden. Hannah thought it would be fun to float them down the creek. Beth said she thought everyone should use paper plates—that would solve the whole problem.

They got so involved in their imaginings that the dishes were washed and dried in the blink of an eye. The girls put the last dish away and hurried outside to play. Lily had almost forgotten about Effie's missing quilt block. Almost.

By late afternoon, most of the quilt had been quilted and Alice said that she could finish it up by herself. Everyone oohed and aahed as they stood back and admired the beautiful quilt.

And then it hit. Suddenly Effie let out a wail. “Where's my quilt block?”

“Oh dear,” Alice said, distressed. “I don't think I ever got one from you.”

Ida started hunting up and down the rows for it. “Effie, didn't you put the envelope I gave you into Beth's bonnet?”

“I did! I did!” Effie said. “I know I did.” She started to cry.

Lily's belly clenched with a sick dread.

Mama went to the front door and came back with a shopping bag. She handed the bag to Effie. “Effie,” Mama said, “you must have put the envelope with your quilt block into the wrong bonnet at church.”

Over Lily's head, Mama gave her one of her direct looks. Lily felt tears prickle her eyes. She would not cry! She wouldn't. She had to be brave.

“It's an easy mistake to make,” Mama said. “The bonnets all look alike. But I just discovered your quilt block and it was too late for Alice to add it into the quilt top. So I turned it into a pillow for Teacher Rhoda.”

Effie pulled the pillow out of the bag and gasped. Mama had made a beautiful quilted pillow top, with Effie's big square right in the middle of it, surrounded by small quilted pieces. Effie's face lit up. “This can go on top of the quilt!” She looked around the room at Lily and Beth and Hannah and Malinda. “It can go on top of everyone else's quilt blocks.” She gave the girls a smug smile. “Everyone's.” Even Ida seemed pleased.

That was all that Mama said about the quilt block. Nothing more to Ida, to Effie, or to Lily. The subject was closed. The lesson was learned.

On the way home, Lily scooted close to Mama and rested her head on her shoulder. She had the best mother in the world.

Alice Raber planned to give Teacher Rhoda the quilt on Sunday, right after church. The rest of the week passed so slowly. Finally, Sunday arrived. After the church service and
fellowship meal, Alice gathered all the schoolchildren into a bedroom. She arranged the boys along one side of the quilt and the girls along the other side, then she went to get Teacher Rhoda.

A few minutes later, Teacher Rhoda popped her head into the bedroom. She looked puzzled when she saw all the children lined up. “Surprise!” they shouted.

“We wanted to make a memory quilt for you as a little symbol of appreciation for all the years of teaching you did,” Alice said.

Tears started to stream down Teacher Rhoda's cheeks. Lily was surprised. She had never seen Teacher Rhoda cry. “I don't know how to thank all of you,” she said, stroking the quilt gently and looking at each square. “I enjoyed my years of teaching and I will treasure this beautiful quilt always.”

Lily was pleased to see her block near the top middle of the quilt. She thought it really was the prettiest one. Then Effie pulled out the pillow Mama had made with her quilt block on it. “Here's the best part,” Effie said, plopping it right on top of Lily's quilt block. Teacher Rhoda was delighted and said it was just the right finishing touch to a beautiful quilt.

Somehow, Lily thought, Effie always ended up getting what she wanted. But as for the best part—Lily knew that wasn't true. The best part was having a family like the one Lily had. The best part was having friends she could trust like Hannah and Beth and Malinda.

The best part, Lily knew, wasn't a thing.

BOOK: A Big Year for Lily
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