Chapter 6:

Mission in Action

We must build dikes of courage to hold
back the flood of fear.

~Martin Luther King, Jr.~

I woke up from a bad dream. I looked at the clock—it had only been an hour since I had gone to bed. How can it be that, within an hour of falling asleep, I was already dreaming of being home for a visit and trying to run away again? In the dream, four weeks had passed since I had gone home to visit, and I was still trying to leave. After dreams like this, I am always relieved when I wake up to find myself in my own bed in my own apartment far from home. To make sure it was only a dream, I got up and snapped on the light switch and looked around. Thank God—I am no longer Amish. I walked into the living room and turned on the television. I have dreamt many times I am trying to get away from the Amish again, and it is always so much more miserable than what happened in real life. I often wonder why I never dream of going back home and being happy instead of returning and wanting to find my way out again. Instead of making me question my decision, I see each nightmare as a sign I have done the right thing by leaving.

§

It was a cold afternoon the day I walked away from the only life I ever knew. That morning, when Mem and Datt said they were going to town about eighteen miles away, my heart skipped a beat. I knew instantly this was my chance to make my escape. My parents could not be at home when my break finally came.

I could not wait to tell Sarah my plans. She was out in the barn milking our two Guernsey cows before breakfast. I decided to wait to tell her until after Mem and Datt were already gone, just to make sure she would not accidentally say something.

Sarah had always stuck with me while I planned my escape. Out of all my brothers and sisters, she was the only one I could pour my heart out to, and she rooted for me. She wanted to leave the Amish too, but we decided I should go by myself first, then come back for her.

Around ten o’clock, I pulled Sarah into the basket shop and cautiously whispered, “Today is the day I am leaving.” There was nobody in the shop, but it felt better to whisper.

Sarah looked at me for a few seconds, scared, but she put on her best smile and said, “Go for it, and get ready for me to come too. How are you going to let me know when I can come?”

“I don’t know yet, I have to wait and see where I will end up. We also have to wait and see what Mem and Datt’s reactions are after they find out I am gone. I don’t know if I can write you a letter because Datt is going to want to read everything that comes through the mail.”

Sarah said, “Well, we will figure it out somehow. If nothing else I will sneak some letters in the mail for you and let you know if I have a chance to get out.”

I started to get nervous because I realized this would be my last conversation with Sarah, my best friend and the only person who understood me, for who knew how long. I knew the next time I saw her nothing would be the same. I would be an English girl and an outcast. I wanted to give Sarah a hug and tell her I loved her, but affection was never expressed in my family; it would have made for a very awkward moment to do it then.

I left Sarah standing in silence and walked into Datt’s shop to make a phone call. I had a cell phone given to me by another rebellious teenager in my community. I had been hiding it in my room upstairs. I had never used a cell phone before except to figure out how it worked. I felt more comfortable using the phone in the shop because I could watch out the windows and have a clear view from every direction. I had to make sure no one was going to walk in on me. Even though my parents were not home, I was scared to death. Getting caught with a phone would be a total disaster.

I dialed Roger’s number hoping he would answer without being too surprised.

“Hi Roger, this is Emma,” I said when he answered. I was so nervous my heart leaped in my throat and I almost forgot to keep breathing.

“What can I do for you, Emma?” he asked.

I quickly explained to him I wanted to leave the Amish and asked if he could pick me up. I had not talked to Roger since I had gotten in trouble sitting in his vehicle, but I was hopeful he would still want to help.

I could not believe my ears when he said, “No, I don’t think I can do it. I am a little busy right now.”

I wanted to scream Why?! But I was just too shocked that now, when I was finally ready to go, he did not want to pick me up. I did not know how to react. For the past three years he had always been supportive, until we lost communication over the past year. I had written a letter to him, but I was not sure he had gotten it.

“Thank you for your time,” I politely said. I was hanging up when I heard him ask, “Are you sure you are actually going to do this?”

“I am sure. I know that today is the best chance I will ever have. Don’t worry, I can find someone else to come get me.”

“Who?” he asked.

“I don’t know yet,” I lied. I had an idea, but now I was irritated, and for that reason I was not about to tell him. Besides, my next option was a complete stranger, and I did not want to explain this to Roger.

He said, “Well, call me after you make your escape.”

“Ok, I will. I better get off the phone now.”

After I hung up, I started to panic. I had a feeling Roger was not busy like he said he was. I began to worry that everyone was going to back out when I asked for help to get away. The thought made me nervous. I did not receive this cell phone for nothing; it was supposed to help me run away. I paced the floor for a few minutes, kicking some of Datt’s pieces of scrap wood. Finally, I got enough courage to call the other person, but I did not have a good feeling about it.

I dialed the number Virgil gave me several weeks earlier. If I could just push the talk button, I would have it made. With shaking and sweaty hands, I pushed the button.

Ring… Ring… “Hello?”

Pause. “Ehm… my n-name is Emma Gingerich.”

“Oh yes, we were expecting a call from you,” the woman on the other end of the phone said. “We just didn’t think it would be this soon.”

I realized I did not have a time figured out for our meeting, but I got myself together and asked, “Would you be able to pick me up today?”

“What time?” the lady asked.

“How about two o’clock?”

“Okay, that sounds good. I’ll see you soon then.”

Whew… that was easy, I thought as I hung up after telling her where to meet me. I did not know the person I had just called, I did not even know her name, or maybe she did tell me and I was just too nervous to remember, but she graciously agreed to pick me up. I had to walk four miles to the nearest town because I did not know how to give directions to the Amish community over the phone. Plus I wanted to be out of sight so nobody would see who was picking me up. I wanted to be very discreet so my parents could not find me and take me back home. I had heard of several incidences where the parents found their runaway kids and talked them into coming back home. I was determined not to let that happen to me until I was sure I could not make it on my own.

I made my way back to the basket shop where I found Sarah hammering nails into the workbench.

“Sarah? The nails don’t go in there, you are wasting them.”

Sarah shyly answered, “I know, I just felt like hammering something.”

I did not dare say anything else. I knew she was scared, but I did not know how to make her feel better. Besides, I had a knot in my stomach and did not feel like telling her everything was going to be fine when I was not too sure myself.

Finally, after sitting in silence for a while, Sarah asked, “Did you call Roger?”

“Yes, I did, and he told me no.”

Sarah looked at me alarmed. “So now what?”

“I called someone else south of Bethany, and a lady agreed to pick me up at two o’clock. I am going to walk to Blythedale and she will meet me at the bank. I will have to leave at 12:30.”

Sarah did not say anything. She did not have to; her expression told me what was going through her mind. I was thinking Oh my gosh, I will miss her so much. I looked at her beautiful blue eyes, at her blonde hair. She had always been the funny one, cracking jokes and saying the darndest things. If I got into trouble, she was in it too. As we grew older, we both had grown to hate Datt with a passion. We thought he was just too lazy, and many times he pretended to be sick so we would do his work. He started doing this when his kids were old enough to keep up with the farm and bring home the income. Sarah interrupted my thoughts when she told me she was going into the house to get lunch ready.

“I will be there in a minute to help you,” I yelled as she ran out the door and looked back just long enough to give me a smile. At least she is trying to be cheerful, I thought. I looked around the basket shop, thinking, What a mess this building has become. The material we used to make the baskets lay scattered all over the floor, with a path just wide enough to walk from the chair I sat in to the door. I was so tired of making baskets. Mem had become dependent on me to be the main basket-maker, and I thought maybe after I left the business would go to nothing. The thought scared me.

I scrambled up and started to walk to the house. I did not want to think about what was going to happen because I knew I would feel sad for leaving Mem with the workload. I already knew leaving the Amish would completely crush Mem, and that was all I could bear to think about.

After we finished lunch and washed the dishes, I had thirty minutes to get ready. I did not eat much because my nerves were starting to take over my whole body. Sarah talked and laughed as if nothing unusual was about to happen. It warmed my heart to see she was able to act normally so the rest of the kids would not notice something was about to happen.

I climbed the stairs one more time to get my small stash of money I had saved from making little craft projects and selling them at the truck stop. I lingered in my room knowing it would be the last time. I had spent many nights here, crying and praying in secret. It was the only place I could be alone and vent to the walls to make me feel like I was winning.

I took off my white cap and stared at it for a second. “This is the last time I ever hope to see you again,” I muttered quietly. I hated when Saturdays came because that meant I had to iron a cap and sit at a table aimlessly putting pleats in the back. I was never successful with it like Rhoda was with hers. The pleats had to be a certain size and the cap had to fit just perfectly to cover up my hair. Satisfied with my last complaint, I put my cap in the bottom drawer. I did not need it—I would wear a scarf instead.

When I left the room, relief flooded over me. I knew in that moment I was doing the right thing. I walked downstairs and into the living room. Sam sat in the lazy chair taking his lunch break before going back to work. Rhoda sat in the living room too, reading a book. I grabbed a pen and paper from a table and wrote a note to my parents in English.

Mom and Dad;

The time has come for me to leave, I am not happy here anymore. I am sorry to do this to you but I need to try a different life. Don’t be worried about me, I will be OK.

Emma

I folded the paper and laid it on the table. I then told Sam to make sure Mem and Datt got the note. I turned around and left the room before he could ask anything. He had no clue what I was about to do. Sarah stood in the doorway and heard what I had said to Sam. Her face was red and I could not bring myself to say goodbye to her. Nevertheless, I felt good she knew what I was doing, but at the same time I wondered what kind of pain I was now causing her. Everyone knew Sarah and I were close to each other, so what I was about to do put the weight of my actions on her shoulders.

So at 12:30 in the afternoon, I walked out the door and left forever the only life I had ever known.

§

I made my way across the driveway into the shop and ran out the back door. I sprinted across a roughly-plowed field, the dry chunks of clay making me stumble. I hurried through a barbwire fence and onto the gravel road. As I got to a patch of trees close to the road, I slowed down; I wanted to get as far as possible before someone saw me. It seemed like everything was meant for me to leave this day, at this exact moment. The Bylers, our only Amish neighbor, were not at home. Thank God. I would have had to plan a different route if they had been home because there was no way I could have snuck by their place without them seeing me.

I was about a mile down the road when I heard a horse galloping up behind me. I turned around to see my brother, Sam, sitting tall on the horse’s back, breathing hard.

“Where are you going?” he asked.

Oh dear, he is actually worried about me; it looks like he is more scared than I am. I quickly gathered my thoughts and said, “Someone is going to pick me up and I won’t tell just yet where I will be at. You shouldn’t have bothered to come after me.”

“Rhoda wanted me to ask you what you think you’re doing. She read the note you left for Mom and Dad,” he said, trying to catch his breath.

“I made up my mind that I am going to leave the Amish and there is nothing you can do to convince me otherwise. I have to find a different life — I am not happy at home anymore.”

Sam looked at me. “Okay,” he finally said. “Machts gute, take care.” With that he turned around and slowly headed back. I stood and watched him until he was out of sight. I felt sorry for him, because he obviously was very concerned about my decision.

As I continued walking, I couldn’t forget Sam’s pale face as he rode away, his straw hat pulled down over his brow. I always thought Sam would run away from home before I did. He never discussed anything like that with me, but it could very well have happened because he was so unhappy at home during his first year out of school. He had a bad temper and often got in fights with Datt. But later he got a job at a steel roof shop and he gradually became a happier person.

As I walked it began to sink in that I was really leaving the Amish, and it was not just a nightmare; instead, it was a dream-come-true. I walked for a total of an hour and a half, and I arrived at the pickup spot a little early. I stood outside the bank, watching cars go by and thinking this was so unreal. I hoped I would soon be driving too. I wondered how easy it would be to switch from driving a horse to driving a car. A red Ford pickup slowly rolled by, and the lady driving the truck looked around as if she was unsure of where to go. I had a feeling it was my ride. My heart pounded harder as the lady came back and turned into the bank parking lot. Yes, this surely has to be the person to pick me up.

I walked up to her and started talking, and confirmed she was who I thought she was. The woman’s name was Kate, and she told me to get in on the passenger side.

“Are you sure you still want to do this?” she asked, looking serious, as I climbed in.

“Yes, I am definitely sure.”

“Okay, I just wanted to make sure you know what you’re getting yourself into.”

As Kate backed out of the parking lot and turned right onto the highway, I felt a strong sense of relief. I had been on this road many times with a horse and buggy, and if everything went okay, the next time I came through town I would be driving a vehicle with four tires and no horse.

When I got to her house, she introduced me to her little family and then she asked if I was ready to change into different clothes. She said, “There are clothes in this bag that you can pick from.”

I looked down at my long dress and black lace-up shoes and thought of the many times I wanted to get rid of them. I was tired of sewing dresses and making sure they fit properly so I wouldn’t hear complaints from the snobs.

“Yes, I am ready,” I answered. I got a pair of jeans and a long-sleeved shirt out of the bag, and then Kate walked with me to the bathroom. To make sure the children wouldn’t hear, she whispered, “Are you wearing a bra?”

“Yes, I managed to get one bra,” I answered shyly — I wasn’t comfortable talking about womanly things.

“I knew Amish women did not wear bras, so I was wondering if you knew how to wear one. Tomorrow we will go shopping for undergarments and other clothes you might need.” She smiled as she handed me some towels and demonstrated how the shower worked. Then she showed me a razor and shaving cream and said, “You might want to consider shaving, and in case you don’t know, that is deodorant.” She pointed to a funny-shaped bottle sitting on the bathroom counter. “If you need anything, I will be in the living room.” Still smiling, she closed the door and left me standing in the bathroom, speechless.

I couldn’t utter a word to her. This was so overwhelming — I had never taken a shower with faucets and running water. It had always been a metal bathtub sitting in the washroom, and I had to carry water with a bucket. Amish women don’t shave, and I began to wonder if it was true about what I had heard about the “English world,” that women shaved their legs and underarms. I didn’t have facial hair, so what else could this razor and cream be for if it was not to shave my legs? I was really scared to do it.

And then there was the deodorant. My word. What is this stuff for? I remembered the one time I found something similar in Jacob’s drawer, but he was trying to keep it hidden. I didn’t have the nerve to ask him what it was because I didn’t want him to know I saw it. I knew anything hidden meant it was private. I always just assumed that since he was dating a girl, it had something to do with her. Now here I was standing in front of the little bottle, not knowing what it could be. I picked it up and read the label and I was able to determine what it was used for.

By the time I processed everything I began to feel pressure in my head. This was a lot of information for me to have to figure out and not make a complete fool out of myself. I turned on the water in the shower then wondered if I was supposed to shave first and then take a shower. This was getting too confusing. I am not going to shave now, I need some more time to think about it, I thought.

After the shower, I got my only pair of panties out of my dress pocket. I am not going to wear the Amish handmade shorts anymore, I thought. About six months ago I was in town by myself and was in a second-hand store looking around. I wanted to buy some clothes but didn’t know how I would get them into the house without my mem seeing them. Then I came across some bras and decided they were small enough to hide. The only problem was, I had no clue what size to get. Finally I just grabbed one, along with a pair of panties, and hoped they would fit. The clerk looked at me strangely when I checked out. I guess she knew that Amish women didn’t wear this stuff. After I had gotten my possessions safely home and hidden in my room, I started the process of figuring out how to wear a bra and wondering when the day would come for me to wear it.

I hurriedly put on the jeans and shirt, and brushed my towel-dried hair. This time I would be leaving my hair down; no more fixing it up in a bun and covering it up with a bonnet. No more boundaries, I thought as I peeked in the mirror. I looked tired. Being a runaway girl was really exhausting me. I was not sure what to think about my different appearance. I was scared to look in the mirror too much. I felt proud to have gotten this far, but yet I was still stunned from all the different things I had processed so far that day. Maybe all this will sink in tomorrow.

I must have been in the bathroom for over an hour, much longer than I had ever been in a bathroom. At home, the outhouse was not a place I wanted to linger for too long.

That night I fell asleep as soon as I hit the bed. I was too exhausted and ecstatic to think much about my family. They seemed to be so far away from my thoughts.

I awoke with the bright morning sun shining in the window. I peeked outside and saw that sometime during the night it had snowed a little, making everything look glistening and clean. The millions of sparkling snow crystals told me that more angels than I could count were there to protect me and to welcome me into the new world. I had slept better than I had in a long time, and now I started to wonder what was going on at home.

I imagined my mem not sleeping at all, her eyes red from crying all night. She probably didn’t have enough energy to make breakfast. I had an awful feeling about how she was taking it. Mem worked hard her whole life and always did what she could to keep food on the table. She was not as strict as Datt, but if she got upset about something, it was time to straighten up fast. I could picture my datt, sitting in his usual chair smoking his pipe after interrogating Sarah for information about my whereabouts. Of course, Sarah didn’t know exactly where I was, so I wasn’t worried that he would find me before I left the area to start my new life. I had warned Sarah that she would be the first to be questioned. While she assured me she could handle the pressure, I began to worry that Dad might lose his temper and hit her if she didn’t tell him everything. I knew Sarah would stand her ground and not give him any more information than she had to, and I knew that that could get her in trouble. I closed my eyes and said a prayer for her.

By now I heard noise coming from downstairs and I decided to put my family thoughts behind me and focus on the new day. I could not wait to go shopping — it would feel so good to be dressed in pants and a shirt, and let my long hair get some fresh air. All this sounded like freedom. I was in a cocoon yesterday, I thought, and today I emerged as a butterfly. This is what freedom felt like. At last.