Chapter
I
Fall 1867
A shadow on the sun should have marked the day the way God marked Cain, a warning to Ruth her quiet world would soon be cast asunder. But that September morning sunlight flooded the orchard ripe with peaches, pears, and apples, their scent carried on a breeze through Ruth’s kitchen window. She savored the smell, and black sleeves pushed above her elbows, she worked a ball of dough in steady rhythm.
A wisp of hair strayed from her white prayer cap and dangled in her face. With a flour-smeared wrist she brushed the brown strands aside. Her glance happened out the window to the dooryard, past the white barn, to the spread of gently rolling fields cut by the lane; and there they were on horseback, man and boy. Not Plain, not any sort of Amish, English in their sorrel colored pants and shirts, the man with red-veined cheeks, his hairless chin smooth as his son’s, the two of them on the road. They paused at the end of her lane.
Blood surged within her, and she swelled protectively, a she-bear. “Mein Gott.” Ruth dropped the dough. She moved fast to the door of their fieldstone house, made herself flat against the frame, and peered out. “Not a peep,” she said to Esther. Her three-year-old sat cross-legged on the kitchen floor, a doll in her lap, the doll in black dress, apron, and shawl.
Ruth pursed full lips, her rounded cheeks flattening. The tip of her nose felt cold. Her Opa had warned her against English. He’d told stories of hooded men in the Old Country, their torture rooms and his escape across the ocean.
Here, the dreaded Them rode hatless, fancy collars and buttons down the front of their shirts. These two, the first English ever to step on their land, hers and Aaron’s, pristine Lancaster farmland.
Granted, these English came without hoods and thumb-screws, never the less, having them close at her door gave Ruth a chill.
She put a finger to her lips. “Shhh.” She wished Aaron in from the barn where he’d been all morning. The boys were safe in the woods, Daniel, responsible at eleven, sent to watch Joseph and Matthew collecting nuts.
“Stay away from Gropa’s oak,” she’d told them. Who’d have thought the ancient tree they climbed high would be a lesser danger than close to home.
The English guided their horses into the lane. Ruth leaned toward Esther, her voice urgent, “Stay in the house.” The strings of her white cap flying, she left the child working on the doll’s bonnet, latched the door, and unmindful of floured hands, clutched her skirts as she rushed to the barn. She’d head the English off, but she needed Aaron.
Ruth stopped in the tack-room door, one eye on Them, and hissed toward the stalls. “Aaron.”
Thank God Joseph and Matthew weren’t in the dooryard. Too curious by half, what would they do faced with hatless English? They might talk to them. Incite them.
Hallooing, the English reined-in. Aaron came from deep in the barn, handed Ruth his pitchfork, and ducked under the lintel. He smoothed his beard and brushed straw from his black clothes.
Ruth gripped the fork’s handle and stood behind the door, her nose pressed to the cool hinge. She watched through the gap. If the English made a move toward the house, she’d… she’d what, stab them with the pitchfork?
She set the long handle against the wall. Aaron would deal with this intrusion. She listened to pigs snuffling in the barn and felt their restlessness, a change in the air, a change in her body. Aaron too, had been off his feed for months now as if he were the one blessed with new life in his innards.
From his horse, the English looked down at Aaron and said, “People say you raise the best horses.”
He stated a fact voiced throughout the Plain community, but it was something Aaron never claimed. On his tongue, the words would be prideful. A sin. He took pleasure in the raising and training as Ruth did, their work blessed with accomplishment.
“Do they?” Aaron said. He waited, square beard below his collarbones, no smile softening the line of his smooth upper lip.
Uninvited, the English slid from his saddle. “We’re going west,” he said, with a satisfied air. “Lock, stock, the wife, and three boys.” He spread his arms. “I’ve a big wagon, and nothing to pull it.”
Aaron, hat in hand, passed the flat brim through his fingers.
“Uncle’s out there,” the boy offered from his horse. The boy, maybe nine like Joseph. “Got a thousand acres, Idaho land, beats Pennsylvania hollow.”
“Free land, stake it and it’s yours,” the man said. “A government promise.”
Aaron’s shoulders twitched, his usual answer to something laughable. Government. Aaron and Ruth’s people had nothing to do with government, never would.
The man nattered on, “Apples, peaches, and apricots,” — whatever they were-- “all big as the boy’s head.”
Aaron eyed the boy and grunted. “Did you see?” Aaron said. “Your own eyes?”
“Couldn’t risk the family on hearsay.”
Behind the door, Ruth kept her hand to her mouth. Oh those English.
“What’s your land?” With a swing of his arm, the man took in Aaron’s fields. “Seventy-five, a hundred acres? Nothing to what’s out there.” He swaggered toward Aaron. “Got to get moving ‘fore it’s gone.”
“Won’t be gone.” The boy slouched in his saddle. “There’s lots.”
“So they said in ’49.” The English gave Aaron a knowing look. “And where’s the gold now?” He took Aaron’s sleeve. “I need horses.”
Aaron withdrew his arm and led them to pasture. Still talking, the English spread his hands bigger and bigger of whatever his mouth announced. Aaron nodded, a matter of politeness, Ruth assumed.
She nipped to the house and hovered by the door, an eye on Esther and one on the field where Aaron showed horse after horse, smoothing his hand down a haunch, rubbing tendons, exposing the frog on a hoof of each horse.
The men came back to the dooryard, the English all-a-chatter, leaning close to Aaron. Aaron shifted away and inclined his hat as a buffer. Finally the man mounted his mare. He and the boy turned toward the road.
At that moment, Ruth’s three littles in black pants, jackets and low-crowned hats broke from the woods. They ran across the stubble field toward Aaron. Joseph in the lead, always in the lead despite his short leg. His built-up boot clumped the ground.
Out of breath, Matthew lagged behind. He worked his stocky five-year-old legs. Behind him, Daniel, the eldest, walked with the bag of nuts. Joseph raced into the dooryard. “Papa, who’s that?”
The English looked back.
“Hurry,” Ruth said. She calmed her voice. “In the house.” She pushed Joseph along. “It’s near dinner, Esther’s waiting.”
Joseph balked. He shaded his eyes at the sky. “Not by the sun,” he said. Nine, and he questioned most everything.
“Verruckt,” Aaron said. “The man’s crazed, you should’ve heard him.”
Ruth checked the lane once more. The English, their backs to her, gained the road and set off at a trot. To her left, the noon sun fell on the orchard where branches burdened with ripe fruit bent toward the ground. This abundance, Ruth and Aaron’s reward for loving care, had been a blessing, but today the blessing weighed on her, as if their overflowing cup might exact a toll.
A week passed, and Aaron’s sister Anna bore her eleventh child, a son. Ruth dropped all thoughts of English.
Anna couldn’t hide her disappointment. She’d made no bones of wanting a girl, and oddly, Aaron seemed to share her distressed.
His nights grew fitful.
By day, he walked the furthest hedgerows of the farm and scratched his head. He ignored weeds flourishing around the dooryard fence posts. Paint peeling on the barn went un-scrapped until Ruth did it herself and brushed on whitewash.
He counted his sheep, then ignored them as they overgrazed the field. He traveled the county talking to who, she didn’t quite know. He held his own bubbling council.
“Aaron,” she’d start. “Shouldn’t we…” And he’d walk away mid sentence as if he hadn’t heard. At moments he seemed a different person.
Ruth moved the sheep to their upper forty where alfalfa grew knee high. What could these unknown people be telling him?
One restless bedtime with Ruth beside him, he lay on his back, arms folded across his chest. “Another child,” he said. “What will they do?”
“Your sister has a son, aren’t you happy? Wouldn’t you want one?”
“Yes,” Aaron said, “but when he’s grown, he’ll need a farm of his own. What then?
He worried about Anna the way Ruth’s brother Dan’l worried about her. Family, she knew the pull, the sweet ach, love wrapping them warm and safe.
“Acreage,” Aaron said. “They need acreage.” He rolled on his side and tapped her hand.
“I’m listening,” she said and bent her head, her long braid falling between them.
“They’ve a scant seventy.” He twined work-worn fingers in hers. “A farm for each son, they’ll sit cheek by jowl. They best think ahead.”
“How?” Ruth said. “Stop babies?”
“No.” Aaron laughed. “Only old age does that.” He stretched and pulled her against his body. “English would say go west.”
“Verruckt.” Ruth said. “They’re crazed, you said so yourself.”
Aaron nuzzled Ruth’s neck. “I’m crazed for you,” he said and kissed behind her ear. Pink surged from lobe to crest. She couldn’t hide her feelings if she wanted to. This man, the Aaron she knew and loved.
“Ahh,” he said.
A warm shiver took her, and she curled into the scent of him, myrrh and aloes. How she treasured the touch of his fingers at the back of her neck, his nuzzle, his heated breath as he whispered loving words. Words she’d be embarrassed to repeat.
Where would she be without him, his guiding hand at her back, the strength of his arms around her, their devotion like a stone bridge built rock-by-rock. Without him her world would be rubble. But why think it? She arched against him, loosing herself in the surge of their bodies.
Two evenings later, the English returned with money. Aaron gave horses in trade; they had little use for money.
Ruth stayed in the shadows of the barn milking Bathsheba, the smell of hay and warm milk rising around her. The man didn’t leave. He and Aaron lingered by the stalls where she heard the talk talk talk he stuffed in Aaron’s ear.
As the cow chewed her cud, the man made the westward trek sound simple, over the river and through the woods to Pittsburgh, as if Oma lived there. But instead of Oma, there’d be a gathering, hundreds of English from all over the east. Leave it to them. Ruth would stay snug where she was, on the farm. She milked faster as she listened, her head pressed to the cow’s side.
The man said, “Forty, maybe fifty wagons in a line, protection against highwaymen and Indians.” They’d live in the wagon for half a year, more if they wintered-over short of the mountains, the wagon their home.
What home? A box on wheels with a canvas bonnet, its tongue sticking out for horses to pull? A box made of beams and planks and slats in an order so exact the box had a name, not a useful name like corn crib or coffin, but a proper name: Conestoga. Still, just a box on wheels, so big it demanded a six-horse team. Ruth’s hay wagon used but two. So conspicuous, one could say fancy. Fine for English, but not for Plain like Ruth and Aaron.
The man’s voice rose. “… river, that’s the Mississippi,” he said. Over plains and mountains and deserts, and there it would be, free land. “The heaven of it.” He gave a triumphant laugh. “Sitting there waiting.”
How could anyone be so daft? Idaho wasn’t Heaven.
Without realizing, Ruth squeezed hard on Bathsheba’s teat. The cow kicked. Her hoof hit the pail and with a clang it tipped into the straw. The evening’s milk flowed to the gutter. Bathsheba lifted her tail and let loose a yellow arc.
“Amen,” said Ruth to the cow.
One early November evening, after supper, the littles in bed, Ruth and Aaron sat warming by the stone hearth. In her armchair, Ruth sewed in the light of a candle, the flame playing shadows on the whitewashed walls. The dark wood windows and doorframes glowed. Red coals sank in the ash. She couldn’t have been more content.
“West,” Aaron said. “Where the land is. That’s where they should go.”
“Your sister?” Ruth laughed. A separation like that? No. Their lives were too entwined, the same as Ruth and her family. When Ruth married and moved the other side of New Eden, the distance, only a few hours by buggy, felt enormous. She’d missed her parents and Dan’l most of all.
“Yes,” Aaron said. “With all those littles, they’ll have to. They can’t stay here.”
“Leave the Fold?” Ruth wasn’t laughing now. “They’d never, it’s against the Ordnung.” They all lived by the Ordnung, and the Elders held them to its rule.
Ruth flicked her hand as if green-heads buzzed in her ear.
Aaron sat forward in his chair. He took off his boots and scooped tallow from a tin. With a cloth, he rubbed first one boot, then the other. “There’s no better place.” He didn’t raise his head.
“Not better than here,” she said. “I know what happens.” Ruth rested the needlework in her lap. “People die, if not hunger, then worse.” She held up a hand and counted off on her fingers. “Tainted water, no water at all, frozen dead in the mountains.” She pushed her sewing into a basket on the floor. “Delia says Indians take peoples’ hair and skin to the bone.” Delia, her friend and constant visitor, had a gruesome story on every subject, from root rot to childbirth, and now Indians. “You wouldn’t wish that on your sister.”
“Wild tales, what does Delia know?”
“Horst told her.”
“He’s her brother, she has to believe him, but he doesn’t know everything.” Aaron worked the rag on his boot and scowled. “You can’t believe every wagging tongue.”
“You seem to.” Ruth shifted forward, hands on the wood arms of her chair. “Free land indeed!”
He lifted his head. “It’s true.”
“Land or no,” she said. “They couldn’t live among English.”
“Don’t be a goose.” Aaron dropped his boots on the hearth. “English don’t bite.”
“They have teeth,” she teased. “Great spiky teeth.”
“Nonsense.” He banged his stocking feet on the floor, and stood.
“Why so angry?” Ruth said. “This is nonsense, we’re not the ones with eleven children.”
“Not yet,” he said and stomped from the room.
Ruth blanched. He couldn’t think they themselves would go west. No.
She wouldn’t worry, their eleventh child was a long way off. Aaron always said, tomorrow’s sorrow is not for today. His habit of rhyming away her fears made her smile.
They couldn’t leave. God and community the structure of their life, Aaron the bread of hers, together her existence made whole. He wouldn’t ask her.
A wisp of hair strayed from her white prayer cap and dangled in her face. With a flour-smeared wrist she brushed the brown strands aside. Her glance happened out the window to the dooryard, past the white barn, to the spread of gently rolling fields cut by the lane; and there they were on horseback, man and boy. Not Plain, not any sort of Amish, English in their sorrel colored pants and shirts, the man with red-veined cheeks, his hairless chin smooth as his son’s, the two of them on the road. They paused at the end of her lane.
Blood surged within her, and she swelled protectively, a she-bear. “Mein Gott.” Ruth dropped the dough. She moved fast to the door of their fieldstone house, made herself flat against the frame, and peered out. “Not a peep,” she said to Esther. Her three-year-old sat cross-legged on the kitchen floor, a doll in her lap, the doll in black dress, apron, and shawl.
Ruth pursed full lips, her rounded cheeks flattening. The tip of her nose felt cold. Her Opa had warned her against English. He’d told stories of hooded men in the Old Country, their torture rooms and his escape across the ocean.
Here, the dreaded Them rode hatless, fancy collars and buttons down the front of their shirts. These two, the first English ever to step on their land, hers and Aaron’s, pristine Lancaster farmland.
Granted, these English came without hoods and thumb-screws, never the less, having them close at her door gave Ruth a chill.
She put a finger to her lips. “Shhh.” She wished Aaron in from the barn where he’d been all morning. The boys were safe in the woods, Daniel, responsible at eleven, sent to watch Joseph and Matthew collecting nuts.
“Stay away from Gropa’s oak,” she’d told them. Who’d have thought the ancient tree they climbed high would be a lesser danger than close to home.
The English guided their horses into the lane. Ruth leaned toward Esther, her voice urgent, “Stay in the house.” The strings of her white cap flying, she left the child working on the doll’s bonnet, latched the door, and unmindful of floured hands, clutched her skirts as she rushed to the barn. She’d head the English off, but she needed Aaron.
Ruth stopped in the tack-room door, one eye on Them, and hissed toward the stalls. “Aaron.”
Thank God Joseph and Matthew weren’t in the dooryard. Too curious by half, what would they do faced with hatless English? They might talk to them. Incite them.
Hallooing, the English reined-in. Aaron came from deep in the barn, handed Ruth his pitchfork, and ducked under the lintel. He smoothed his beard and brushed straw from his black clothes.
Ruth gripped the fork’s handle and stood behind the door, her nose pressed to the cool hinge. She watched through the gap. If the English made a move toward the house, she’d… she’d what, stab them with the pitchfork?
She set the long handle against the wall. Aaron would deal with this intrusion. She listened to pigs snuffling in the barn and felt their restlessness, a change in the air, a change in her body. Aaron too, had been off his feed for months now as if he were the one blessed with new life in his innards.
From his horse, the English looked down at Aaron and said, “People say you raise the best horses.”
He stated a fact voiced throughout the Plain community, but it was something Aaron never claimed. On his tongue, the words would be prideful. A sin. He took pleasure in the raising and training as Ruth did, their work blessed with accomplishment.
“Do they?” Aaron said. He waited, square beard below his collarbones, no smile softening the line of his smooth upper lip.
Uninvited, the English slid from his saddle. “We’re going west,” he said, with a satisfied air. “Lock, stock, the wife, and three boys.” He spread his arms. “I’ve a big wagon, and nothing to pull it.”
Aaron, hat in hand, passed the flat brim through his fingers.
“Uncle’s out there,” the boy offered from his horse. The boy, maybe nine like Joseph. “Got a thousand acres, Idaho land, beats Pennsylvania hollow.”
“Free land, stake it and it’s yours,” the man said. “A government promise.”
Aaron’s shoulders twitched, his usual answer to something laughable. Government. Aaron and Ruth’s people had nothing to do with government, never would.
The man nattered on, “Apples, peaches, and apricots,” — whatever they were-- “all big as the boy’s head.”
Aaron eyed the boy and grunted. “Did you see?” Aaron said. “Your own eyes?”
“Couldn’t risk the family on hearsay.”
Behind the door, Ruth kept her hand to her mouth. Oh those English.
“What’s your land?” With a swing of his arm, the man took in Aaron’s fields. “Seventy-five, a hundred acres? Nothing to what’s out there.” He swaggered toward Aaron. “Got to get moving ‘fore it’s gone.”
“Won’t be gone.” The boy slouched in his saddle. “There’s lots.”
“So they said in ’49.” The English gave Aaron a knowing look. “And where’s the gold now?” He took Aaron’s sleeve. “I need horses.”
Aaron withdrew his arm and led them to pasture. Still talking, the English spread his hands bigger and bigger of whatever his mouth announced. Aaron nodded, a matter of politeness, Ruth assumed.
She nipped to the house and hovered by the door, an eye on Esther and one on the field where Aaron showed horse after horse, smoothing his hand down a haunch, rubbing tendons, exposing the frog on a hoof of each horse.
The men came back to the dooryard, the English all-a-chatter, leaning close to Aaron. Aaron shifted away and inclined his hat as a buffer. Finally the man mounted his mare. He and the boy turned toward the road.
At that moment, Ruth’s three littles in black pants, jackets and low-crowned hats broke from the woods. They ran across the stubble field toward Aaron. Joseph in the lead, always in the lead despite his short leg. His built-up boot clumped the ground.
Out of breath, Matthew lagged behind. He worked his stocky five-year-old legs. Behind him, Daniel, the eldest, walked with the bag of nuts. Joseph raced into the dooryard. “Papa, who’s that?”
The English looked back.
“Hurry,” Ruth said. She calmed her voice. “In the house.” She pushed Joseph along. “It’s near dinner, Esther’s waiting.”
Joseph balked. He shaded his eyes at the sky. “Not by the sun,” he said. Nine, and he questioned most everything.
“Verruckt,” Aaron said. “The man’s crazed, you should’ve heard him.”
Ruth checked the lane once more. The English, their backs to her, gained the road and set off at a trot. To her left, the noon sun fell on the orchard where branches burdened with ripe fruit bent toward the ground. This abundance, Ruth and Aaron’s reward for loving care, had been a blessing, but today the blessing weighed on her, as if their overflowing cup might exact a toll.
A week passed, and Aaron’s sister Anna bore her eleventh child, a son. Ruth dropped all thoughts of English.
Anna couldn’t hide her disappointment. She’d made no bones of wanting a girl, and oddly, Aaron seemed to share her distressed.
His nights grew fitful.
By day, he walked the furthest hedgerows of the farm and scratched his head. He ignored weeds flourishing around the dooryard fence posts. Paint peeling on the barn went un-scrapped until Ruth did it herself and brushed on whitewash.
He counted his sheep, then ignored them as they overgrazed the field. He traveled the county talking to who, she didn’t quite know. He held his own bubbling council.
“Aaron,” she’d start. “Shouldn’t we…” And he’d walk away mid sentence as if he hadn’t heard. At moments he seemed a different person.
Ruth moved the sheep to their upper forty where alfalfa grew knee high. What could these unknown people be telling him?
One restless bedtime with Ruth beside him, he lay on his back, arms folded across his chest. “Another child,” he said. “What will they do?”
“Your sister has a son, aren’t you happy? Wouldn’t you want one?”
“Yes,” Aaron said, “but when he’s grown, he’ll need a farm of his own. What then?
He worried about Anna the way Ruth’s brother Dan’l worried about her. Family, she knew the pull, the sweet ach, love wrapping them warm and safe.
“Acreage,” Aaron said. “They need acreage.” He rolled on his side and tapped her hand.
“I’m listening,” she said and bent her head, her long braid falling between them.
“They’ve a scant seventy.” He twined work-worn fingers in hers. “A farm for each son, they’ll sit cheek by jowl. They best think ahead.”
“How?” Ruth said. “Stop babies?”
“No.” Aaron laughed. “Only old age does that.” He stretched and pulled her against his body. “English would say go west.”
“Verruckt.” Ruth said. “They’re crazed, you said so yourself.”
Aaron nuzzled Ruth’s neck. “I’m crazed for you,” he said and kissed behind her ear. Pink surged from lobe to crest. She couldn’t hide her feelings if she wanted to. This man, the Aaron she knew and loved.
“Ahh,” he said.
A warm shiver took her, and she curled into the scent of him, myrrh and aloes. How she treasured the touch of his fingers at the back of her neck, his nuzzle, his heated breath as he whispered loving words. Words she’d be embarrassed to repeat.
Where would she be without him, his guiding hand at her back, the strength of his arms around her, their devotion like a stone bridge built rock-by-rock. Without him her world would be rubble. But why think it? She arched against him, loosing herself in the surge of their bodies.
Two evenings later, the English returned with money. Aaron gave horses in trade; they had little use for money.
Ruth stayed in the shadows of the barn milking Bathsheba, the smell of hay and warm milk rising around her. The man didn’t leave. He and Aaron lingered by the stalls where she heard the talk talk talk he stuffed in Aaron’s ear.
As the cow chewed her cud, the man made the westward trek sound simple, over the river and through the woods to Pittsburgh, as if Oma lived there. But instead of Oma, there’d be a gathering, hundreds of English from all over the east. Leave it to them. Ruth would stay snug where she was, on the farm. She milked faster as she listened, her head pressed to the cow’s side.
The man said, “Forty, maybe fifty wagons in a line, protection against highwaymen and Indians.” They’d live in the wagon for half a year, more if they wintered-over short of the mountains, the wagon their home.
What home? A box on wheels with a canvas bonnet, its tongue sticking out for horses to pull? A box made of beams and planks and slats in an order so exact the box had a name, not a useful name like corn crib or coffin, but a proper name: Conestoga. Still, just a box on wheels, so big it demanded a six-horse team. Ruth’s hay wagon used but two. So conspicuous, one could say fancy. Fine for English, but not for Plain like Ruth and Aaron.
The man’s voice rose. “… river, that’s the Mississippi,” he said. Over plains and mountains and deserts, and there it would be, free land. “The heaven of it.” He gave a triumphant laugh. “Sitting there waiting.”
How could anyone be so daft? Idaho wasn’t Heaven.
Without realizing, Ruth squeezed hard on Bathsheba’s teat. The cow kicked. Her hoof hit the pail and with a clang it tipped into the straw. The evening’s milk flowed to the gutter. Bathsheba lifted her tail and let loose a yellow arc.
“Amen,” said Ruth to the cow.
One early November evening, after supper, the littles in bed, Ruth and Aaron sat warming by the stone hearth. In her armchair, Ruth sewed in the light of a candle, the flame playing shadows on the whitewashed walls. The dark wood windows and doorframes glowed. Red coals sank in the ash. She couldn’t have been more content.
“West,” Aaron said. “Where the land is. That’s where they should go.”
“Your sister?” Ruth laughed. A separation like that? No. Their lives were too entwined, the same as Ruth and her family. When Ruth married and moved the other side of New Eden, the distance, only a few hours by buggy, felt enormous. She’d missed her parents and Dan’l most of all.
“Yes,” Aaron said. “With all those littles, they’ll have to. They can’t stay here.”
“Leave the Fold?” Ruth wasn’t laughing now. “They’d never, it’s against the Ordnung.” They all lived by the Ordnung, and the Elders held them to its rule.
Ruth flicked her hand as if green-heads buzzed in her ear.
Aaron sat forward in his chair. He took off his boots and scooped tallow from a tin. With a cloth, he rubbed first one boot, then the other. “There’s no better place.” He didn’t raise his head.
“Not better than here,” she said. “I know what happens.” Ruth rested the needlework in her lap. “People die, if not hunger, then worse.” She held up a hand and counted off on her fingers. “Tainted water, no water at all, frozen dead in the mountains.” She pushed her sewing into a basket on the floor. “Delia says Indians take peoples’ hair and skin to the bone.” Delia, her friend and constant visitor, had a gruesome story on every subject, from root rot to childbirth, and now Indians. “You wouldn’t wish that on your sister.”
“Wild tales, what does Delia know?”
“Horst told her.”
“He’s her brother, she has to believe him, but he doesn’t know everything.” Aaron worked the rag on his boot and scowled. “You can’t believe every wagging tongue.”
“You seem to.” Ruth shifted forward, hands on the wood arms of her chair. “Free land indeed!”
He lifted his head. “It’s true.”
“Land or no,” she said. “They couldn’t live among English.”
“Don’t be a goose.” Aaron dropped his boots on the hearth. “English don’t bite.”
“They have teeth,” she teased. “Great spiky teeth.”
“Nonsense.” He banged his stocking feet on the floor, and stood.
“Why so angry?” Ruth said. “This is nonsense, we’re not the ones with eleven children.”
“Not yet,” he said and stomped from the room.
Ruth blanched. He couldn’t think they themselves would go west. No.
She wouldn’t worry, their eleventh child was a long way off. Aaron always said, tomorrow’s sorrow is not for today. His habit of rhyming away her fears made her smile.
They couldn’t leave. God and community the structure of their life, Aaron the bread of hers, together her existence made whole. He wouldn’t ask her.