A Simple Song

Read A Simple Song Online

Authors: Melody Carlson

Tags: #JUV033010, #FIC053000

© 2013 by Melody Carlson

Published by Revell

a division of Baker Publishing Group

P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

www.revellbooks.com

Ebook edition created 2013

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

ISBN 978-1-4412-4170-2

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

1

Katrina knew it was wrong to sing purely for pleasure. Sure, it was permissible to sing a lullaby when rocking a baby to sleep. It was even acceptable to sing simple songs while working in the garden if it helped to get the weeds pulled and if no one was around to hear. Music, she understood from the Amish Ordnung, was mainly meant for worship. But even in worship, one had to be careful because it was sinful to sing too loudly—or too beautifully.

She'd learned that embarrassing lesson more than ten years ago when she'd allowed her voice to soar up joyfully during a hymn at church. Only seven at the time, she believed she was worshiping God with her whole heart. But her spirits plummeted back to earth when she discovered such vibrant singing was both sinful and vain.

“God does not want you to draw attention to yourself like that,” her daed somberly told her afterward. He claimed he had heard her singing above the others even though he was clear over in the men's section on the other side of the barn. “Your voice is not for your own enjoyment, Katrina. And it is vainglory to distract others with it.” His discipline for
her selfish display was being forbidden to sing for an entire month. That was a long month indeed. Because the truth of the matter was, Katrina loved to sing.

Yet Katrina did not feel like singing today. In fact, she barely raised her voice at all during the hymn. And she did not understand why her grandfather had encouraged singing at her grandmother's funeral service. Music was never allowed at funerals, and there would probably be talk of it all over their settlement before the week was out. Even the minister had seemed shocked when Daadi Yoder humbly announced that it was his wife's dying request to sing that particular hymn at her burial. It wasn't even from the
Ausbund
hymnal.

Katrina blinked back tears as she watched the smooth pine box being lowered into the grave. Despite his injured spine, Katrina's father had made the coffin for his mother, starting on it the very same day that she died, just three days ago. Although grieving was meant to be private, Katrina had witnessed her daed crying as he sanded the pine smoother than a coffin need be. However, the tears might have been from the pain in his back too. The poor man had been unable to walk or stand the next two days and had barely been able to get out of bed and dress in his black suit today. She'd witnessed the pain carved into his brow as he'd bowed his head to pray.

With tear-filled eyes Katrina turned away, gazing out over the countryside as she waited for the men to fill in Mammi's grave. Looking past the somber dark line of buggies and horses, her eyes came to rest on the fertile green fields, broken by an occasional fence line or big red barn and plain white house. Dairy cows grazed peacefully over at the Millers' farm. Just an ordinary spring day in Holmes County. Except that Mammi was dead. Katrina still couldn't believe it. Mammi
had always been one of Katrina's favorite people. Katrina would dearly miss her grandmother and her sometimes peculiar ways.

As Katrina listened to the minister finishing his speech by saying how they had all been created from dust and were privileged to return to dust, she realized that he'd hardly said a word about her departed grandmother. It only made Katrina feel worse to think that now she'd never have the chance to know her mammi better. Especially since she'd always suspected there was some untold story attached to Mammi. Although Mammi never spoke of it, Katrina knew that she'd left the English lifestyle long, long ago. Preferring the simple life, she'd been baptized and married Daadi. But the question Katrina had always wanted to ask was,
Why?
Why did she choose one world over another? Now it seemed unlikely that Katrina would ever hear that story.

“Can you believe your grandfather did that?” Cooper asked Katrina. She had chosen to walk back to the farm, hoping it would give her a chance to deal with her emotions, but she was touched when Cooper had offered to go with her. Cooper wasn't officially courting her yet, but some people thought it was just a matter of time. However, Daed would be quick to remind her not to put her buggy in front of her horse. The question of joining the church was supposed to precede any discussion of marriage.

“Did what?” she absently asked.

“Had us sing that hymn.” Cooper adjusted the brim of his straw hat, tipping it down to shield his eyes from the noonday sun.

She nodded. “
Ja
, that was odd. But then my grandmother was a bit odd.”

“I heard my grandmother saying that you are just like her.” Cooper made a chuckling sound, which he tried to conceal with a cough.

“Just like her?” Katrina turned to peer curiously at him. “I am like an old gray-haired woman, am I?”

He looked embarrassed. “I'm sorry. I shouldn't have said that.”

“It's all right. But I would like to know what your grandmother meant by that comment.”

“She meant that when your grandmother was young, she looked and acted like you.”

“Your grandmother knew Mammi back then—back when my grandmother first came to our settlement?”

“Sure.”

Katrina's curiosity was aroused now. “What else did your grandmother say?”

“Not much.”

“How did she say Mammi looked and acted?” Katrina was not ready to let this go.

“Like you.”

“Cooper.” She shook her head in disappointment, feeling the strings from her white
kapp
swishing against her cheeks. “Is that all you can tell me?”

“That's all I know of it. If you want more information, perhaps you should speak to my grandmother.”

“Perhaps I shall.” Katrina held her head high as she walked, hoping to send him the message that she was dissatisfied that he hadn't shared more freely with her.

“See,” Cooper pointed at her. “You're acting just like your grandmother now. I've seen her do that very thing. My mamm would call that ‘acting superior.'”

Katrina felt worried. “Do you think I act superior, Cooper?”

His lips curled in a smile. “I think you
are
superior,” he said quietly.

She glared at him now. “That you would say such a thing!” She stormed off, hurrying on ahead to where her aunt was walking by herself.

“Aunt Alma,” Katrina said as she linked arms with the older woman, “how are you doing on this sad day?”

Aunt Alma looked at Katrina with red-rimmed eyes. She had obviously been crying. “Not too well, I'm afraid.”

“I'm sorry,” Katrina told her. “I'm sure you will miss your mamm more than I can imagine.”

Aunt Alma nodded. “She was my best friend.”

Katrina knew this was true. Aunt Alma had never married, never left home. And even though Uncle Willis and Aunt Fannie lived in the same house, Aunt Fannie had never been very friendly with Aunt Alma. But then Aunt Fannie was not too friendly with many in their family. Sometimes Katrina wondered why Uncle Willis had married such a woman.

“I was just wishing that I'd known Mammi better,” Katrina admitted. “I never dreamed she would pass away so suddenly.”

Aunt Alma sighed. “Nor did I. She was only seventy-four. Daed is eighty-eight and still as healthy as a horse.”

“Can you tell me more about Mammi?” Katrina said suddenly. “I mean, you knew her so much better than I did. I'd love to learn more about her . . . and how she came to live here. You were a little girl when she came to the settlement, weren't you?”


Ja
. Even though I know Mamm wasn't my mother by birth, she was the only mamm I ever knew, and she always
treated me as if I were her very own.” She sniffed. “I will be so lonely without her.”

Katrina pulled her arm more snugly around Aunt Alma's. “Don't worry,” she told her. “I'll still come over to visit.”

Aunt Alma looked surprised. “Even though your mammi isn't here?”

“Certainly!” Katrina smiled at her. “I will come to see you.” Aunt Alma seemed encouraged by this as they turned to walk down the long driveway that led up to the family farm. Many carriages were parking along the drive and over by the big red barn. Already family members were clustered in front of the house. Others were milling about, everyone dressed in black—women huddling together in their white
kapps
and men off to the other side in their yellow straw hats—all waiting to assemble together and share a meal. The dinner was meant to be a celebration of God's goodness in providing Mammi with eternal life. However, Katrina did not feel like celebrating.

“I would be glad to tell you all I know of Mamm.” Aunt Alma spoke quietly as they came into the yard. “But it will have to be later, Katrina. Fannie expects me to help serve dinner.”

“I know.” Katrina looked over to where men were setting up tables outside. Fortunately the weather was fair today. “I'm working in the kitchen too.”

“Perhaps you can help me to clear out Mamm's things after dinner. Daed asked me to handle this for him. I'm sure there isn't much to be done, but we can talk as we work together.”

“Ja,”
Katrina eagerly agreed. “I would like to help you.”

Aunt Alma paused by the rosebush near the back door,
turning to look at Katrina. She had fresh tears streaming down her plump, ruddy cheeks. “Your friendship is very dear to me, Katrina. As you know, your daadi is a man of few words. It will be very quiet now.”

Katrina reached out to hug her. “You still have me, Aunt Alma.”

Her aunt nodded, then after adjusting the strings on her
kapp
and drying her face with her hands, she went into the kitchen. Soon they were all busily working to heat up casseroles, fill baskets with rolls, carry out plates and cutlery, and get everything ready for the big dinner. Katrina was thankful to be busy and grateful that her best friend, Bekka, had come over to help as well.

“You girls better eat before there's nothing left,” one of the older women finally told them. So they filled their own plates with the limited selection of foods, but instead of eating outside with the other women, they cleared a spot on one end of the kitchen table and huddled together, bowed their heads in prayer, and then began to eat.

“I'm sorry about your grandmother,” Bekka told Katrina. “I meant to come by your house and tell you after I heard the news, but we had a big order to package and ship before Saturday.”

“It's all right,” Katrina assured her. “It's been very busy here too.”

“I know you were close to your grandmother.” Bekka patted Katrina on the shoulder. “I'm sure you will miss her.”

Katrina simply nodded, breaking a roll and spreading some butter over it. The women were starting to wash dishes now, and the kitchen was getting noisy again. Out the kitchen window, Katrina could see that most of the diners were finishing
up. Children were playing. Adults stood about, conversing. It wouldn't be long until this “celebration” dinner would be over and everyone would go home to their chores. Katrina spied Cooper and his family, who looked like they were getting ready to leave too.

Bekka nudged Katrina with her elbow, tipping her head toward the window. “I heard you and Cooper had a fight today,” she whispered.

Katrina wrinkled her nose. “It wasn't a fight.”

“I heard you stomped off in anger.”

“We simply had a little disagreement,” Katrina quietly explained.

“A lovers' quarrel?” Bekka had a teasing glint in her eyes.

“A what?”

Bekka shrugged. “It's something I heard on the computer once . . . an old movie line.”

Katrina shook her head. She wondered about how much time her best friend spent on the computer—supposedly working on orders for her family's soap and candle business. Katrina was aware that Bekka watched movies in the little lean-to storage room that doubled as an office. Sometimes Katrina worried that Bekka was a little too worldly. But instead of responding to her friend's silly comment, Katrina stuck her fork into Mamm's special potato salad, taking a big bite as if she were truly ravenous, when in truth, all the food tasted like sawdust today.

“Will you come to the group singing on Sunday night?” Bekka asked as she was getting ready to go home with her family.

Katrina glanced over to where Mamm was just bringing in a new load of dirty dishes. “I don't know, but I don't think
so,” she said quietly. “I doubt that I'm allowed . . . so soon after a death in the family.”


Ja
. You're probably right. But we will miss you.” Bekka hugged her. “See you soon, I hope.”

As Katrina went over to help with the dish washing, relieving Aunt Alma from the task of drying, she tried not to think about how much she would miss the group singing. After all, she reminded herself, how could she want to sing while grieving for Mammi? Besides that, she still felt somewhat conflicted when it came to group singing. As much as she loved the informal socials where young people were allowed to visit and make music together, she always felt guilty at the weekly event. Not only for singing with abandon but for enjoying the music so much.

This was just one more thing about Amish religion that puzzled her—it seemed contradictory. Daed had warned her to be cautious when it came to music, and yet she had been allowed, even encouraged, to go to the group singing. Her first time there, she'd been shocked to discover some of the young people actually brought musical instruments to these gatherings. She'd assumed that the Ordnung forbade the use of musical instruments, but some of the young men had pulled out harmonicas and banjos—one fellow even brought an accordion once. She shook her head as she set a small stack of clean white plates in the cupboard. So confusing. Yet as much as she questioned these things, she was afraid to tell her parents. What if they made her stop going?

Katrina had been old enough to attend group singing for only a few months now, but it had quickly become the highlight of her week. Still, she found it hard to believe that group singing was actually allowed in her settlement. It made no
sense on so many levels. Yet she understood that it was related to
rumspringa
—a time when youth were encouraged to discover where they were going spiritually. She also knew that parents secretly hoped their teenagers would form romantic relationships at these gatherings, and that these relationships would lead to courtship, and that courtship would lead to commitment—both in marriage and in the church. It was simply a means to an end.

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