Mennonites Don't Dance

Home > Other > Mennonites Don't Dance > Page 19
Mennonites Don't Dance Page 19

by Darcie Friesen Hossack


  “You know very well what I mean.”

  I looked over my shoulder at the train before turning back to face her, daring her to yell at me, tell me she cared more about the rug than she did about me.

  “You probably wish I’d thrown myself on the tracks instead, don’t you?”

  My mother lifted her hand as though she was about to slap me. In one movement though, she lowered her hand and closed the space between us, wrapped me up in her arms. When I tried to pull away, she only held on tighter.

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:

  THESE STORIES WOULD NOT EXIST WITHOUT my husband, who never asked how much longer it was going to take, nor once brought up the “job” word.

  I owe my sister, co-heir to whatever truth is in the fiction, credit for at least a few of my favourite lines. Thank you so much for getting on that October bus.

  Sandra Birdsell was my writing instructor through The Humber School for Writers mentorship program. I am grateful to her for expectations so high that I forgot to rinse the conditioner out of my hair.

  My writing posse from Humber helped me tread water while always insisting land was in sight. Among them, particular thanks go to Susan Toy, for reading and critiquing early drafts, wedging open doors and pushing me through them. And Vicky Bell, who gave considerable editing advice and asked nothing in return.

  Elsie K. Neufeld, editor of Half In The Sun: Anthology of Mennonite Writers, opened an early door and has never closed it.

  Thank you to Thistledown for rejecting these stories five years ago, and Antanas Sileka, Director of the Humber School for Writers, for providing such a rare proving ground. To Margaret Hart, my agent from the Humber School for Writers Literary Agency, for saving me from myself more than once. And my amazing editor, Susan Musgrave, for culling commas and not holding back.

  Thank you to my Grandma and Grandpa Friesen, for all the love and varenyky. To Nancy Tordiffe, for prayers that moved mountains.

  And while I hope to never again hear the words, “Why don’t you send your stories to Oprah?” I thank my mother for her unswerving belief that Oprah would have called.

  DARCIE FRIESEN HOSSACK is a graduate of the Humber School for Writers. She has been a food writer for the Kelowna Daily Courier and Kamloops This Week for the past six years, and most recently, thepeartree. ca. Her story “Little Lamb” was nominated for the 2008 McClelland & Stewart Journey Prize.

 

 

 


‹ Prev