“I won’t mind missing school.”
I laughed. “I realize that, but you have to go to school if you want to run Bergstrom Thoroughbreds someday. And I have to go to school, too, if I want to go to college.”
Claudia had been listening in. “Have you forgotten something?” she asked, approaching us from across the gazebo. She stood behind Richard and placed her hands on his shoulders. “I’ve graduated already, so I wouldn’t miss any school. I could look after you.”
“But Sylvia and I would have fun.” Richard’s face assumed its familiar stubborn frown. Claudia pursed her lips, and I shot my brother a look of warning. “We would, too, Claudia, but Elm Creek Manor couldn’t get along without you for so long.”
You charmer, I thought, as he tried to hide a grin. Good thing Claudia couldn’t see his face. “Since Claudia is needed here, and I can’t leave school—I’m sorry, Richard, but it doesn’t sound feasible.”
Richard looked down at the gazebo’s wooden floor, crestfallen. “I know you want to go to college, Sylvia. I’m sorry—I didn’t think about you missing school. But just think of it—the chance to go somewhere.”
I was thinking about it, and as much as I loved my home, I too wanted to see some of the world before I returned to Elm Creek Manor to settle down. “I’m sorry, sweetheart. Maybe when you’re older.”
“When I’m older. That’s what Father said. Everything’s when I’m older.”
Claudia sighed. “I’m sure they have schools near the college. You could both probably transfer easily enough. It’s only for a semester, after all.”
Richard brightened. “Do you think so?”
“I don’t see why not, if Father agrees. And if Sylvia wants to transfer.”
“Of course I want to,” I exclaimed. “It would almost be like going away to college myself. Think of all the new things to see and people to meet.”
My two young men frowned uneasily at that.
Richard crowed triumphantly and hopped down from the seat. He grabbed my hand and began to run from the gazebo toward the house, pulling me after him.
We spoke to Father, and without too much wheedling on our part, he agreed. Before long all the arrangements were made. We were to live in a faculty house on campus, and Richard would be able to attend a nearby elementary school. But the best part was that I would be allowed to continue my studies at the college.
My, how I enjoyed those days! I made many new friends, and Richard and I had a grand time exploring the campus. My classes were challenging, but not nearly as difficult as I had thought they would be. I was very proud that I could hold my own with the older students.
Our faculty home, while it could not be compared to Elm Creek Manor, was cozy and snug. Sometimes Father would bring home some of his students or other faculty members for supper, and they would banter and debate every conceivable topic late into the night. Often they discussed the news from Europe, sometimes in hushed tones that I had to strain to hear from the kitchen, sometimes in angry shouts that would make the china rattle in the cupboards. I would usually make some excuse so that I would not have to stay and listen. Even though we Bergstroms had considered ourselves thoroughly American since Great-Grandfather’s time, and if we still had any distant relatives in Germany we did not know of them, the stories about Hitler and his politics always filled me with dread. Richard would eavesdrop if I could not find his hiding place and shoo him off to bed first.
One evening, Father came home joking merrily with two students. “Sylvia!” he called. “Come meet our guests for dinner.”
In the kitchen, I sighed. I never knew when Father would bring company home until they stood on the doorstep. Wiping my hands on my apron, I hurried to the foyer, where Father and his guests were removing their coats and Richard was peppering them with questions. Then I froze in my tracks.
One of the young men was James Compson.
Father made the introductions. “James says he knows you, Sylvia,” he said, bemused. “But I can’t imagine how that’s possible.”
I gave James a sidelong glance. “We met at the fair, Father, last summer. He watched me ride.”
“And a fine rider you are.” James’s eyes crinkled when he smiled, and I found myself smiling back.
I served supper, using a few tricks I had picked up from Cook to stretch the food for three into a meal for five. Throughout the meal, every time I looked up, James would be gazing steadily at me. His eyes were so intense that I could hardly bear to return his looks, but I could bear less turning away from him. I tried to keep my voice steady during the polite conversation, but I admit I was nervous.
“I’m surprised to find you here, Sylvia,” James finally said when we were finished eating.
“I’m surprised to find you here as well.”
“He won’t be here for long,” Father said. “He has big plans for himself, don’t you, young man?”
“That’s right, sir,” James said. “I could stay with my family’s operation, but with my older brothers in charge, there isn’t a lot of room for me. Or for any new ideas.”
“You could come work for Father,” Richard chimed in. “Couldn’t he, Father?”
Everyone laughed. It was clear that Richard admired his new friend very much.
“Perhaps he could.” Father chuckled.
“What do you think of that, Sylvia?” James’s eyes twinkled with amusement.
“I couldn’t possibly say one way or the other. Why on Earth would you consult me about your plans?”
“James always wonders what pretty girls think about him,” the other student joked. “It’s one of his few redeeming qualities.”
“Thanks for nothing,” James protested with a grin, elbowing his friend in the side. “I was doing badly enough on my own without your help.”
I eyed Father surreptitiously, but his expression suggested nothing. We might have been discussing horse feed for all he seemed to care. I had expected a more outraged response to the obvious flirtation with his daughter being conducted under his very nose. It was indeed puzzling.
After I had cleared away the dishes and had attempted unsuccessfully to put Richard to bed, I went into the other room while the men drank coffee and talked by the fire. I was pretending to study, but in truth I was eavesdropping. I wouldn’t have, except I wanted to hear what James would say, and if he would say anything about me.
The conversation quickly turned to politics, and their voices became heated.
“I cannot believe it, not even of that little man,” Father’s voice boomed from the other room.
“He’s right, James. Be reasonable. Think of the Olympic Games,” the other student added.
“Berlin was whitewashed for the games. You know it as well as I.” James’s voice was low, but steady and emphatic. “It was a disgrace. A sham put on for an audience of people who want to be deluded, because we fear another war.”
My heart seemed to skip a beat. Another war? I clutched my mathematics textbook with cold and trembling hands. That could not be. Germany was so far away, and no one wanted to get involved in another war so soon, if ever.
“But twelve thousand Jews died for Germany in the Great War,” Father protested. “Surely that will count for something.”
“I wish I could believe that, sir,” James replied. “But I doubt it. Think of the Nuremberg laws. They aren’t even a year old and look at what’s happened already.”
“It’s strictly an economic problem,” the other student said. “You tell him, Mr. Bergstrom. When their economy improves, the Nazi influence will waver again. Hitler can’t last. With all his crazy talk about the Jews—why, surely he can only stay in power so long spouting nonsensical rubbish like that. He talks like an insane man.”
“An insane man that an entire country listens to with enthusiasm,” James said. “Haven’t you read his writings?”
“God forbid you should fill your minds with such filth,” Father broke in.
“Point taken, sir, but a man should kno
w his enemies. I’ve read them, and it’s clear that he fully intends to take over the world, if he can, and this alliance with Italy is only the beginning. There won’t be a Jew left in Europe, or the world, if he isn’t stopped. And if he isn’t stopped soon, now, as his power is still growing, I shudder to think what it will take to stop him later.”
A fist pounded on the table, and I jumped. “Germany will not follow Hitler like a newborn colt does its mother,” Father shouted. “We are a logical people. We will not so blindly follow a madman.”
There was silence.
Then the other student spoke up. “It’s a European problem, anyway. It won’t affect us here.” I could almost see Father nodding. He had said as much before.
“The Great War affected us here,” James reminded them.
I set down my book and crept away, my thoughts in turmoil. Was another war like the Great War truly possible? What would this mean for my friends—for James? They were old enough to go to war now, if there were to be a war. I thanked God that Richard was such a young child still. If the worst happened, he would at least be safe. I prayed he would remain so.
The disobedient subject of my prayers was crouched outside the door, listening to every word. I scolded him in a whisper and marched him upstairs.
“Did you hear, Sylvia?” His eyes were shining as I tucked him into bed. “Maybe I could be a soldier like Uncle Richard.”
“Yes, and get yourself killed like Uncle Richard.” My voice was harsh. I pulled the blankets up to his chin, blinking back tears.
But here I’ve been going on and on about one evening when you wanted to know how James and I fell in love and married. Well, that was the first of many evenings he spent at our residence that semester. When we returned to Waterford, James wrote me at least once a week, and two years later he asked me to marry him. I made him wait two years more while I attended Waterford College to study art. I fancied myself an artist and wanted to be an art teacher someday, but I left college before receiving my degree. When I was twenty and James was twenty-two, we were married, and James joined our family at Elm Creek Manor.
“Claudia had not yet married,” Mrs. Compson added. “My aunts said I should let her marry first since she was the eldest sister, but Father quickly silenced them. He was almost as fond of James as I was, and was eager for him to join the family.”
“Was Claudia jealous?”
“No, at least, not always. She would have preferred to be the first to marry, but she rarely complained. Besides, the shy young man from the party—Harold—had found his tongue, and so we all thought her own wedding wouldn’t be far behind.”
Sixteen
After work Sarah baked brownies to take to the meeting of the Tangled Web Quilters. She followed Diane’s map a few blocks south of campus to a neighborhood populated by Waterford College professors and administrators. The gray stone houses with their sloped roofs and Tudor woodwork looked like scaled-down versions of Elm Creek Manor. Their carefully landscaped front yards heightened the similarity, except that oak trees rather than elms lined the street.
As she parked the truck behind Judy’s minivan, Sarah figured that few landscape architects and personal assistants to wealthy recluses lived nearby.
A walkway of red bricks in a herringbone pattern led from the driveway to the front porch. Sarah went up to the house and rapped on the front door with the brass knocker.
The door opened enough for a boy about thirteen years old to look out and study her. “Yeah?” He wore jeans several sizes too big for his slender frame and a baseball cap turned backward. His black T-shirt bore a grinning skull with fire streaming from the eye sockets.
“Hi,” Sarah said. She heard the Tangled Web Quilters laughing somewhere inside. “I’m here to see your mom.”
He sighed and looked over his shoulder. “Ma!” he bellowed.
Sarah winced and tried not to cover her ears.
The boy turned back to Sarah. “Summer with you?”
“No.”
Disappointment crossed his face.
Sarah hid a smile. “She’ll be here soon, probably.”
He shrugged. “Whatever.”
Just then Diane appeared behind him. “Leave her standing on the porch, why don’t you,” she grumbled to the boy, who rolled his eyes and shuffled away. Diane turned to Sarah and opened the door wider. “I see you’ve met the pride and joy.”
Sarah smiled and went inside. “Just barely. I didn’t catch his name.”
“Michael. Except these days he prefers to go by Mikey J.” Diane led her along a carpeted hallway and downstairs to the basement. “He’s okay, if you ignore the flaming skulls.”
“I didn’t know you had a son.”
“Two, actually. The other’s eleven, so he’s still relatively normal.”
In the finished half of the basement, the Tangled Web Quilters were gathered around a card table covered with snacks. Sarah added her plate of brownies to the lot. “How come every time I see you guys you’re always standing next to the food?” she teased, by way of a greeting.
“You better hurry or there won’t be anything left for you,” Judy retorted. “Serves you right.”
A few minutes later Summer burst into the room carrying a large plastic trash bag. “Hi, everybody. Sorry—”
“We know,” Diane said. “Sorry you’re late.”
“I was here on time, but I was upstairs. Mike wanted to show me his new zip drive.”
Gwen grinned. “Oh, so that’s what the kids call it these days.”
“You’re sick, Mom. Mike’s just a baby.”
“Don’t tell him that,” Diane said. “You’ll break his heart.”
When everyone had sampled enough treats, they sat down in the sofas and chairs Diane had arranged. Sarah showed the others her new finished blocks, and they praised her progress.
Then Bonnie took a sheet of paper out of her sewing basket. “The president of the Waterford Quilting Guild dropped off a flyer at Grandma’s Attic the other day. They’re asking for volunteers to help set up for the Waterford Summer Quilt Festival.”
“Can’t they get their own people to do it?” Diane asked.
“I guess they need more help. Waterford College won’t let them set up until the evening before the festival because there’s some other display in the library atrium.”
Summer shrugged and looked around the circle. “I’ll go if some of you go.”
“I can help,” Sarah said.
“I’ll go if it will help me win a ribbon,” Diane said.
Everyone chuckled.
“You can have one of mine,” Gwen offered.
“Thanks, but I’d rather earn my own, if I live that long.”
Summer brushed some cookie crumbs off her lap and unfastened a twist-tie on the garbage bag. “While you guys were off having fun at quilt camp, I was getting some work done.” She reached into the bag and pulled out a folded bundle.
“Oh, you finished piecing the Bear’s Paw,” Mrs. Emberly exclaimed. “Let’s have a look at it.”
Summer and Gwen each took two corners of the quilt top and held it open between them. Sarah could see where the pattern had earned its name, as it did resemble a bear’s footprints. Summer had selected a different solid fabric for each of the twelve blocks, and the vivid colors stood out from the black background fabric. There were three rows of four blocks each, and a border of small isosceles right triangles surrounded them.
“Nice work,” Diane said. “You can hardly tell it’s machine pieced.”
Summer rolled her eyes. “Gee, thanks.” Then she turned a hopeful gaze on them all. “I thought maybe since we’re all here, you could help me baste it?”
“Baste it?” Sarah asked. “You mean like a turkey?”
The others burst into laughter.
Sarah looked around in surprise. “What? What did I say?”
“I’m so glad you joined the Tangled Web Quilters, Sarah,” Gwen said, wiping her eyes.
�
��Now, stop teasing the poor girl,” Mrs. Emberly admonished. “We were all new quilters once. Sarah, basting stitches are large stitches that hold something in place temporarily.”
“You might baste an appliqué to the background fabric so that it stays put while you blind stitch it down,” Judy said.
“But in this case, basting means sewing big stitches through the quilt top, batting, and backing fabric so that the three layers don’t shift around while you’re quilting them,” Summer said. “Basting’s actually kind of boring.”
“A true quilter enjoys all stages of the quilting process,” Diane said, and earned herself a chorus of groans.
Gwen shook her head. “You should’ve been a philosopher, you’re so concerned with what’s true.”
“Well, who says I’m not? Maybe I’m a quilt philosopher.”
Diane led them to a Ping-Pong table in another corner of the basement. After removing the net and the dust, Summer and Gwen placed a large piece of black fabric right side down on the table. Summer unrolled a sheet of thin cotton batting on the fabric, enlisting the group’s help to smooth out the wrinkles. Sarah then helped her place the quilt top right side up on the batting.
“This is what we call a quilt sandwich,” Gwen told Sarah.
Summer showed Sarah how to sew large, zigzag stitches through all three layers of the quilt. “I won’t take out the basting until I finish quilting,” she explained. “If you don’t keep the layers smooth your quilt will be all wrinkly and puckered on the back.”
Each of them threaded a needle and began basting a section of the quilt sandwich.
“How was quilt camp?” Bonnie asked.
Summer smiled. “Yeah, tell us all about it and make us jealous.”
“Oh, it was even nicer than last year,” Mrs. Emberly said.
Gwen, Diane, and Judy joined her in describing quilt camp: the classes they had taken, which nationally famous quilters had turned out to be equally skilled as teachers and which had not, and all the new quilts they were now inspired to make.
“It would have been more fun if you three had been able to come, too,” Judy added.
Diane sighed. “It was such a treat to be able to spend the whole weekend quilting, without having to worry about getting somebody’s dinner or cleaning house or doing the laundry—”
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