bin.
Eve reached for Roseâs hand.
âI want to stay,â the girl said. âWith the Englischers.â
Eve spoke softly. âNot today.â
As Charlie approached with another cow, Rose put her free hand on her hip and asked, âWhat did the lady mean when she said her husband was âout of sortsâ?â
Eve shook her head. âRose,â she whispered. âThatâs none of our business.â
Zane stood at the trough, balancing the shovel in his hands. âDid my mom say that?â
âJah,â Rose answered.
Zane turned toward Charlie. âHeâs always out of sorts these days.â
âYour dad had a rough time with the X-ray technician is all.â Charlie pointed toward the shovel. âDump the grain.â
Zane did as he was instructed.
âCome on, Rose,â Eve said, leading her niece toward the door. To Charlie, she said, âWeâll have supper waiting for all of you when youâre done.â Sheâd sit Rose down first and give her a talking to though. Eve had been lax in teaching the child her manners.
âGood-bye!â Rose called out to Charlie. As Eve dragged her through the barn, the little girl called out again, this time to Zane, âDonât scare the cows. They kick too!â
âRose,â Eve chided.
âWeâll be careful,â Charlie replied, the hint of a smile pressing against the serious line of his lips.
An hour later Eve put the noodles into the boiling water when Lila, Daniel, and Zane came inâwithout Charlie. âHeâs going to the store outside of Strasburg,â Zane said, âto get some groceries. But he said I could eat with all of you.â
Eveâs face grew warm. She shouldnât have asked Charlie to supper.
âThen I need to head home so we can move boxes and stuff around,â Zane said.
âWhy donât you help them?â Eve turned to Daniel as she dished up the green beans.
âI can help too,â Lila said.
Eve shook her head. âI need your help here.â She put the plates on the table and the children gathered around.
Rose climbed onto Timâs chair. âDo you have a TV?â she asked Zane.
He nodded.
âAnd a computer?â
He nodded again.
âHow about a cell phone?â
âNot yet,â he answered. âBut Mom said sheâll get me one by the time Iâm in high school.â He sat down next to Daniel. âYou donât have any modern stuff in your house, right?â
âJah,â Lila answered. âJust the phone in the barn.â
âWe donât need anything else,â Daniel said. âNone of our people have electronic stuff.â
That wasnât entirely true. Sure, none of the families in their district had TVs, but some had a computer in their shop or barn, to use exclusively for business. And many of the youth had cell phones they charged with batteries out in their barns, but she didnât need to explain that to Zane.
Eve drained the noodles and placed them on the table along with the creamed chicken, green beans, and applesauce. Daniel led them all in a silent prayer again. As the children ate, Eve started on the pots and pans and listened to their chatter. She wasnât hungry.
After a few minutes, Daniel asked, âWhat did your Dat do in the Army?â
âHe was a staff sergeant in a signal unit.â
Eve was grateful Simon wasnât hearing the conversation. Daniel leaned forward. âWhatâs that?â
âThey figure out the communication stuffâinstalling networks, connecting with satellites, teleconferencing, fixing cables, that sort of thing.â
âSo he wasnât really a soldier?â Daniel said, leaning back in his chair.
Zane shook his head. âHe was.â
âBut he didnât shoot anyone?â
Eve turned toward the table. âDaniel,â she said. âThere are all sorts of different
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