Chapter Eight
The tingle from his kiss remained with Mariana even after he released her and pulled his buggy back onto the road. If this marriage to Reuben meant kisses like that, she was certain she could ignore anything Gertie Miller and Linda Stoltzfoos could dish out.
She studied Reuben’s face as he drove. Such a handsome man. She was so blessed to have him as a friend. Those blessings would increase when he became her husband and father to the children she carried. So many blessings she had to be thankful for.
“Do you mind if we run by my house real quick? I mean, it’s on the way, so you won’t have to be in the buggy for much longer.” He turned and caught her staring at him. “What?”
“Nothing.” She ducked her head to hide her smile. She felt like a teenager again.
“Okay then.” He cast another look in her direction. His expression was anything but convinced.
Thankfully he let the matter drop as he pulled his horse down the familiar drive.
“I’ll only be a few minutes,” he said as he set the brake on the buggy.
Mariana slid the door open.
“You don’t have to get out,” Reuben said.
“I need to use the restroom.”
The buggy rocked as Reuben jumped to the ground. He came around and helped her down as well.
“Why didn’t you go before we left the Millers’?”
“I did.”
Reuben shook his head. “Come on then.” He helped her up the steps, and once again Mariana was reminded what a wonderful father he was going to be. All at once those countless blessings surfaced again.
They entered the house and Reuben started for the staircase just to the left of the front door. “I won’t be but a moment. I just need to run upstairs for something.”
Mariana nodded and turned toward the back of the house where she knew the downstairs bathroom to be. She took care of her business quickly and was back in the kitchen before Reuben. She figured he would have beaten her back, but instead she wandered around his living space.
It wasn’t a bad house. Smaller than the one that she had shared with Leroy and not quite as fancy. Still, it was a good house with a beautiful front window that stretched nearly from the floor to the ceiling. It let in the bright Western sun.
Mariana could only imagine what it would be like to sit at the little table that Reuben had placed in front of it and read a book. Or her Bible. And it seemed that was exactly what he thought as well. His Bible, a notepad, and a pen rested there, waiting for his return. She would have to make sure when they were married that Reuben had a place where he could enjoy reading and the wondrous light of the sun.
She ran her fingers over the cover of his Bible, tracing the gold letters on the front. This was his English Bible. She knew somewhere in the house was the German Bible and his copy of Martyrs Mirror, but it seemed nowadays learning to read and speak in German was becoming a lost tradition.
She picked up his Bible and flipped through it, enjoying the flutter of the pages as they went from one side to the other. But it stopped as it fell open to a paper tucked between the pages.
It wasn’t any of her concern and certainly none of her business, but she extracted the paper and unfolded it. It was a letter, in Leroy’s handwriting. A letter to Reuben. Moreover, it was the list of things that Leroy wanted his best friend to do once Leroy was gone. Of course Leroy had left his tools to Reuben, but the letter contained more than that.
Please, please, please, I can’t ask you enough. Please take care of Mariana. She is a good woman and deserves a whole and complete life with a husband who loves her. I can’t be that for her, and I don’t know if she will ever have that again. She’ll need someone to watch after her. Someone to make sure that things at the house are taken care of. That she doesn’t want for anything. I trust for you to do this for me. I know that you will do everything in your power to make sure she’s seen about. I leave this world knowing that she is in your capable hands. She will not suffer loss or neglect as long as you are there to watch after her. Thank you.
Your loving friend,
Leroy
“Mariana, I . . .” Reuben’s words died as he came down the stairs and found her standing there, the letter in hand.
She had thought that Reuben had cared about her. That he wanted to marry her and take care of her babies, but it was all just a promise that he had made to Leroy.
“How could you?” She folded the paper even though her hands trembled. Then she placed it back between the pages of the Bible and put the Bible back on the table, giving him ample time to find an answer.
She turned to face him.
“It’s not what you think.”
Not the right answer. He’d had plenty of time to change his mind, change his thoughts, change something about the situation they found themselves in. And that was all he could say? That it wasn’t what she thought? How could it be anything else? “I want you to take me home now, Reuben.”
He shook his head. “I’m not taking you anywhere until we talk about this. There are things that you don’t understand.”
“I understand perfectly. Leroy asked you to take care of me and so you offered to marry me. It’s pretty obvious.”
“No. It’s not. If you let me explain—”
“I want you to take me home,” she said a second time. She had made a fool of herself in front of her in-laws and the church. But she would be a fool no more. The sentiment was there. And it had been nice to feel loved once again. But it had all been a lie.
“I’ll take you home if you let me explain.”
“I’m walking home.” She started for the door, but Reuben’s words stopped her.
“You can’t walk home in your condition.”
She stopped just short of the front door. “Then I’ll sit in your buggy until you decide to take me home.” She wasn’t yelling; she was simply stating a fact. She wanted to go home, and if she had to wait, then she would wait. But there would be no more discussion on the matter today. If ever.
She slipped out the front door and down the porch steps. Somehow she would keep herself together until she got home. Then, in the privacy of her bedroom, she would let her tears loose. She would cry for the loss she had suffered. A loss of something that was never really hers, but that she had wanted so badly all the same.
“Mariana, wait!”
She heard his footsteps behind her, but she wasn’t waiting, not until she got to the buggy. Then she would wait till he realized that she was serious. She reached up to pull herself into the buggy, her added girth a little awkward. She shifted and something in her side popped. A flash of red pain zinged before her eyes. She gasped.
“What’s wrong?” Reuben was immediately at her side.
“Nothing.” But she was stopped in position. She couldn’t get into the buggy and she couldn’t get back down. Every move caused her pain. More pain than she had ever experienced in her life. Her breath was stuck somewhere between her lungs and her lips. Her foot was still up on the buggy step, her trembling arms holding her in place.
“You keep saying that to me, and one of these days I’m going to believe you.”
“Reuben,” she started, trying her best to lower her foot to the ground. She felt as if she was being torn in half. Every move, every breath was excruciating. The pain took over as she slipped into his arms and out of consciousness.
* * *
“Well now, you gave us quite a scare.”
Mariana looked up as the doctor came into the tiny cubicle. “But everything’s okay?”
He smiled that kindly smile doctors had been giving to overly cautious pregnant women for generations. “Everything’s fine. You pulled a muscle in your side. Probably because you’ve been so inactive. It’s a double-edged sword, as they say. It’s easy to injure muscles that are inactive and suddenly put to use. But in your case, if you’re too active, then you run the risk of other complications. You’re just going to have to be really, really careful from here on out. Complete bed rest. You have at least two more months before the babies get here. You’re going to need that rest, so take it.”
Mariana nodded. As much as she hated the thought of being confined to her bed once again, she knew it was necessary for her and the babies.
“I spoke to your husband.”
The joy Mariana felt in knowing that the babies were fine, that she was going to be fine, was completely overshadowed when he mentioned Reuben.
“He’s not my husband.”
The doctor stared at her, a quizzical frown on his brow. “Somebody needs to tell him that.”
* * *
“Once we get you home,” Helen Ebersol said, “It’s right to bed.”
Mariana faked a smile. “Of course. Story of my life these days.”
Helen patted her hand. “You’re very lucky, you know. It could’ve been so much worse than a pulled muscle.”
“Jah, I suppose.”
But it was worse than Helen knew. She might have a pulled muscle physically, but her heart was broken. How could Reuben do that to her? She had believed him and trusted him. She had thought that he really wanted to spend his life with her. But all he was doing was upholding a promise he’d made to Leroy.
“Are you sure you’re okay?”
Mariana sighed. “I wish people would stop asking me that. I’m as okay as I can be.”
Helen studied her, those kindly eyes seeing straight through all of Mariana’s defenses. “It’s good to be loved, you know.”
It was. She knew that. So why had love been taken from her yet again? She simply didn’t know the answer.
“So is Reuben coming by?” Helen asked.
Mariana turned and looked out the window as the miles passed. Helen had rented a van to bring her home from Pryor. She had wanted to think that maybe Reuben taking such good care of her had changed things. Once he knew that she was hurt, he had run to his Englisch neighbor’s house and had the neighbor drive her to Pryor in his car.
Yet how did that prove his love? Who wouldn’t do that for a fellow human being? No, that didn’t prove anything other than he had a heart. It didn’t mean that it belonged to her.
“No,” she finally answered. “I don’t think Reuben will be coming by.”
“That’s a shame since he already talked to Cephas about getting married to you this fall.”
Mariana’s heart flip-flopped in her chest. She ignored it. “That was before. Everything’s different now.”
“It didn’t seem like he had changed his mind in the hospital.”
“Things aren’t always what they seem.” Mariana laid her head against the window and closed her eyes. How she wished that wasn’t true. How she wished everything was like it seemed. She had trusted too much, loved too much, maybe even loved too soon. And now it had all fallen apart.
“If you want to talk about this,” Helen started, but Mariana shook her head.
“There’s nothing left to talk about.”
Helen gave a quick nod. “If you change your mind, you know where I am.”
“Danki.” There was no way she was changing her mind. She couldn’t open herself up for that kind of heartbreak again.
* * *
“I don’t understand what the big deal is,” Clara Rose said at the quilting meeting two weeks later. “They know you’re going to take good care of the girls, don’t they?”
A pale and drawn Eileen nodded. “The grandparents don’t want the children, but they want to make sure that we’re not brainwashing them.”
“Brainwashing them!” Verna exclaimed. She shook her head with a tsk. “That’s the craziest thing I’ve ever heard.”
Almost the craziest, as far as Mariana was concerned. The craziest had happened two weeks before just after church. But she wasn’t letting herself think about that these days. She was going to be fine without Reuben. At least financially. For a while, anyway.
The benefit auction was coming up and she would have some money from that. She had paid into Amish Aid, and they would help pay for the babies to be born, the hospital bills, and anything else that happened to arise. She was Amish and they pulled together. It was just how it worked. But it would’ve been so much easier, so much nicer, if Reuben’s intentions had been pure.
“I’m sure the children will get to come back,” Tess said.
To Mariana the younger girl looked sadder than usual. But who was she to say? She had her own misery wrapped around her like a scratchy blanket.
She didn’t want any of her friends to know how Reuben had broken her heart. She had scoffed that there was nothing between them. Never had been. This just proved it.
He had come back twice since that afternoon after church, but she had locked the door and wouldn’t let him in. It was bad of her, she knew. But she needed time to heal—not physically, but emotionally—before she faced him again. She needed to be strong. She needed to hold her ground. And she didn’t need to be swayed by a pair of flashing dimples and soft green eyes.
Still, it was much easier to worry about the problems of others than her own.
Eileen murmured something unintelligible, then turned to Mariana. “So what about you and Reuben?” she asked brightly.
“There is no me and Reuben. I tried to tell you that a few weeks ago.”
“It surely didn’t seem that way at church.”
“Things aren’t always what they seem,” Mariana said. Then she realized how harsh the words sounded and she flashed her friend a smile.
“I suppose not,” Eileen said. “It just looked like the two of you were so happy.”
Mariana shook her head. “We’re just friends.”
A look passed between the other members of the quilting circle, and suddenly Mariana felt like she was on the outside of a story she should’ve known the ending to. “What’s going on?”
“Nothing,” Clara Rose said. “Mammi, how do you get your stitches that tiny?”
“It takes patience, granddaughter,” Verna said.
Clara Rose laughed and looked around at the others. “Why do elders always say that?”
A murmur of agreement and other comments rose up all around the quilting circle, but no one said much more. Mariana had the weird sensation that the whole exchange was nothing more than a not-so-clever tactic to change the subject. That was fine with her as long as they weren’t talking about Reuben.
“Are you ready?” Verna asked. She set her needle and thread down and looked around at the other members of the group. They all nodded.
“Ready for what?” Mariana asked.
Clara Rose flashed her a quick smile. “We have a little surprise for you.”
“A surprise?” she asked, but Eileen was already up and out of the room.
She returned a few moments later with a wheelchair. “Now, don’t think you get to keep this. We borrowed it from the First Baptist senior center and we have to have it back tomorrow. So don’t get any ideas about zooming around Wells Landing in it.”
Mariana laughed even as tears welled in her eyes. They had brought her a wheelchair? Even just for the afternoon, being able to get out of bed and do more than shuffle to the bathroom would be fantastic.
“Where are we going?” she asked as Tess helped her into the chair.
“To a party, of course,” Clara Rose said.
Eileen got behind her, and together they pushed Mariana into her kitchen. Pink balloons had been blown up and allowed to rest against the ceiling, creating a forest of pink ribbon. Crepe-paper streamers of pink and white swayed from side to side along the cabinets and the window. A cake iced with pale pink frosting and darker pink roses sat in the middle of the table. CONGRATULATIONS had been written across the top. There were pink plates, pink forks, and pink napkins. Pink everything.
Mariana laughed at the sight of it all. “Do you know something I don’t know?”
“No,” Clara Rose said. “But we figured it was the best way to celebrate. I mean, you want girls, right?”
Once upon a time, she had wanted nothing more than two baby girls. Now everything had changed. “I just want two healthy babies.”
“With any luck you’ll have two healthy babies who love the color pink,” Verna said.
Mariana wiped the tears from her face. She had the best friends anyone could ask for. “I can’t believe you did this for me.”
“This is what the Englisch do. They have showers. So we figured since you couldn’t get out and go shopping, we would try to get the things that you need,” Tess said.
“Come and open your presents.” Clara Rose motioned for her to draw near the table. Boxes were stacked one on top of the other, all wrapped in pastel paper with the pink ribbons.
“Babies need a lot of things,” Tess added.
Mariana dashed the tears from her cheeks again. She knew that she had everything that she needed right there. Almost everything. The whole picture would have been complete had Reuben been there.
* * *
“Do you smell paint?”
Clara Rose looked up from sweeping the bedroom floor and lifted her nose. “I don’t smell anything.”
Mariana had been reading a book about what to expect when having twins, and nothing had ever been brought up about smelling things that weren’t there. “I’m sure I smell paint.”
Clara Rose shrugged and went back to her sweeping. “I don’t know what to say.”
Mariana lay back on her pillows, wondering if the strong odor was just her imagination. “I really do appreciate the party yesterday. No one’s ever done anything that sweet for me.”
Clara Rose stopped sweeping again and turned back, a smile on her cherub face. “It was great fun. And so what if now we’re behind in getting the quilt done, right? We still have time to do plenty more before the auction in September.”
The Wells Landing quilting circle was one of the very few year-round quilting circles in the area. They sewed their quilts all during the calendar year, then donated their wares to the Clarita School Auction in September. From time to time they branched out and made comfort patches and things for disaster relief, but they were most known for their quilts.
“Oh, jah,” Mariana agreed. “We’ll have plenty of time to make quilts between now and then.”
Clara Rose tilted her head thoughtfully to one side. “Do you think so? I mean, the babies are going to keep you really busy. Do you think you’ll be able to come back to the quilting circle?”
Mariana hadn’t thought about that. But after the babies were born she was going to be so incredibly busy. She hadn’t even figured out how she was going to support herself. That jelly idea was looking better and better. Maybe if she practiced a little she could make something fancier than the normal fare and she could make a little bit of money. But how would that help? Probably not much, considering her jelly-making skills.
“I don’t know. I guess I’ll just have to see how it goes. Maybe when the babies get a little bigger.”
Clara Rose nodded. “Maybe,” she said. “And anytime you need a sitter, I’ll be more than happy to come over. Or you could bring them over, and Obie and I could watch them together. That’d be fun.”
Mariana laughed. She wasn’t sure who would have the most fun, Clara Rose watching the babies or Clara Rose watching Obie try to care for the babies. Either way it was sure to be full of laughs.
“I appreciate that.” Mariana helped Candy from the bed so she could run out to the doggie door. Despite the tiny staircase that Reuben had built, the puppy seemed to prefer Mariana’s assistance. She turned back to Clara Rose. “Are you sure you don’t smell paint?”
Clara Rose bent her head over the task of sweeping up the debris into the dustpan. “Nope. I don’t smell a thing.”
* * *
The first two weeks turned into another month. The hardest times for Mariana were in the morning when Clara Rose and Verna left and she was all alone until evening. The other members of the quilting circle had stopped coming by since Mariana had wanted to lock the doors. She had told them all a fib, that she was worried about a recent rash of break-ins happening in and around Wells Landing. The excuse seemed plausible enough. She didn’t need to tell them that she wanted to keep Reuben from coming in and trying to convince her to forgive him. Her heart wasn’t sane where he was concerned. So she locked her doors and kept to herself.
Verna and Clara Rose took turns. Sometimes they came together to make sure she had her food for the day, the chickens were fed, and Candy had food and water as well.
The first couple of days after that fateful afternoon, Reuben had come by and tried to talk to her, but she wouldn’t let him in. Thankfully he had respected her wishes and hadn’t tried to convince Verna or Clara Rose to let him come in. There was nothing left to say. He had promised Leroy that he would watch after her and that he would do anything it took. He hadn’t shirked his responsibility. He’d just been found out.
“Do you need anything else?” Verna asked. “I need to get back to the house.”
Just some more company. Or maybe all she needed was to be able to go back in time before she had discovered Reuben’s deceit. She missed him so much.
Or you could forgive him.
She pushed that thought away. “I’m fine.” The words had become her mantra. And maybe if she kept thinking them, she would somehow start to believe them.
“All righty then. I guess I’ll see you tomorrow. And . . . I’m sorry.” With that Verna disappeared from view.
“What do you mean, you’re sorry?”
But Verna kept walking, her footsteps fading and finally ending with the slam of the screen door.
Mariana watched out the window to see if Verna was actually leaving. Her horse and buggy were still parked out front.
Most everyone in Wells Landing drove a tractor during the week. All except Verna Yutzy. Ever since she had gotten that new horse, she drove her buggy everywhere.
She came into view striding toward her carriage. Then she turned and looked back at the house one last time before climbing in and driving away.
“Hi.”
Mariana whirled around, her hand pressed to her heart. “Reuben! What are you doing here?”
Candy barked, rising from her nap to wag her stumpy tail at this familiar face.
“You shouldn’t be here.” Wait. That wasn’t what she wanted to say.
“I need to talk to you.”
She wanted to tell him to go away, but her gaze drank in the sight of him. He looked good, the same as he had a month ago. Had it been only a month since she had read the letter written by Leroy? It seemed like yesterday and forever ago all at the same time.
“I don’t think we have anything to talk about.”
“But we do.” He stepped from the room and returned a few seconds later, pushing a wooden cradle in front of him. The cherry wood gleamed in the sunlight that streamed in from the windows. It was the most magnificent thing Mariana had ever seen.
She gasped as he pushed it closer to the bed. It was the perfect height for nighttime sleeping. The babies would be within reach and she wouldn’t have to get out of bed when they needed her.
“Reuben,” she whispered. “It’s beautiful.”
He beamed with pleasure. “I made it myself.”
She ran trembling fingers over the polished wood. It must have taken weeks and weeks.
“It’s one of a kind,” he told her, pointing toward the center divider of the cradle. “Both babies can sleep together, but they are separate as well. They can see each other, but they can’t tumble on top of one another.”
“It’s perfect.” Tears rose into her eyes. The closer she got to her eight-month mark the more fragile she seemed to be. And it had nothing to do with the fact that it was the most wonderful gift anyone could have ever given her.
“I have something else for you too. Do you think you can make it up the stairs?”
She nodded and started to rise from the bed.
He was there in an instant to help her to her feet.
She slapped his hands away. “I’m not an invalid.” Then she sighed and shook her head. “I mean, thanks. I appreciate your help.”
He nodded in return, and together they made their way up to the second floor.
“I smell paint,” she said as they started down the small hallway. The door at the end was the one she had determined would be the babies’ room. It was the perfect size and close to the room she had once upon a time shared with her husband.
Reuben walked ahead of her and opened the door. Mariana caught one look inside and stopped dead in her tracks. The room was painted the exact shade of raspberry sherbet. Deep, bright pink on all four walls. A plain white shade covered the window. The twin white cribs sat opposite and took up most of the space.
She wasn’t sure what to ask about first, the color or the furniture. There was a changing table, a chest of drawers, and several toys ready to welcome the babies home. A large rag rug of pinks, oranges, and white covered most of the dark wood floor, and an oak rocker waited patiently in one corner.
“The beds are the kind that convert into other beds. One for when they’re too big for a crib and not big enough for a regular bed. I forget what they call them.”
“A toddler bed,” Mariana whispered.
“Jah. Then when they outgrow those, the bed becomes a regular bed. All we’ll need to do is get them mattresses. I mean, you. You’ll need to get them mattresses.”
“And you did all of this?”
He blushed. “Most of it. The girls helped me pick out the furniture and the rug.”
“I don’t know what to say.”
“You can say that you like it.”
“I love it.” She wiped her tears away with the back of one hand. “I can’t believe you did all this for me. For us.”
“I made a promise to Leroy that I would take care of you. I didn’t know when I did that you were pregnant. I didn’t know that you were having twins.”
Her heart squeezed in her chest. “I think you have more than kept your promise to Leroy.”
“You think so?”
She nodded.
“Good.” He got down on his knees in front of her.
“Reuben! What are you doing?”
“It’s an Englisch custom,” he said. “But I think I may need some help up.”
She propped her hands on her hips and gave him her most skeptical look.
“Jah, right. You’re pregnant and can’t help me. I’m on my own. Got it.”
“What sort of Englisch custom is this?”
He took her hand into his. “I’m asking you to marry me. My promise to Leroy is already complete. This is about more than that.”
“More than a promise?” she whispered.
“I can take care of you and the babies even when you try to shut me out. I will find a way to care for you and the twins. Always. But I want you to marry me because I love you. I think perhaps I always have. But you were married to Leroy and I never let myself believe it.
“Now please say you’ll marry me so I can get up off this floor.”
How could she say no to such a romantic Englisch proposal?
“Jah,” she said, the word part laugh, part sob.
Reuben pushed to his feet and sealed their new promise with a kiss.
A few moments later, after he’d kissed her light-headed, he lifted his lips from hers. “And if you ever doubt my love,” he started, “just come in here and take one look at this room.”
“At all the wonderful things you bought for these babies?”
Reuben shook his head. “I painted a room bright pink for you. I’m not sure the bishop would approve.”
She laughed. She was fairly certain Cephas Ebersol wouldn’t care one way or another as long as they continued to love each other and be the family God had intended for them to be.
“About that . . . what are we going to do if this turns out to be a girl and a boy? Or even two boys?”
Reuben smiled and pulled her close. “Those boys will have the prettiest pink bedroom in all of Wells Landing. Or we could paint the room blue.”
She smiled into the eyes of the man she would soon marry. “Not a chance.”