Read Emma's Gift Online

Authors: Leisha Kelly

Tags: #FIC014000, #FIC026000

Emma's Gift (2 page)

George looked at Wilametta. “She ain't good then, is she?”

I could see one muscle sprung tight and quivering in his lower jaw. He glanced out the bedroom door to see if any of the youngsters were close enough to hear.

“No, she ain't,” Emma told him. “I'm thinking it's the dropsy, and I sure could use Doc Howell out here if you'll let 'im.”

George had never hired a doctor before, not ever. And to my knowledge, Emma hadn't pushed for one. But he must've known this time was different.

“All right,” he said. “But it'll take a while, goin' more'n ten mile with the snow out there. It's gonna get worse. The doc might not come.”

Emma nodded. “He'll come if he can. But we'll pull her through, one way or the other. You tell your boy that, so he won't be in no reckless hurry.”

George didn't answer but turned slowly and left the room. Emma started stripping off her coat. She kicked off her solitary boot and stood with one foot on the floor and the stump of her other leg balanced against the bed.

“I'll need you to steep me some red raspberry and some dandelion root too,” she told me. “An' bring me a towel and cloth and a bowl of warm water.” She leaned down close, steadying herself with her hand against the head of the bed. “Now, Wila,” she said. “It sure would be a comfort to your family if you'd wake up and tell 'em bye.”

She didn't wake up. I went to the kitchen and helped little Bert squirm into his pants and shoes, then wiped his nose and put on his too-thin jacket. It looked like there was a good three inches of snow on the ground already, and it was coming down so thick I could hardly see out to the barn. I began to pray that George's son would be able to make it through to the doctor.

“Tell Samuel not to worry,” I said to Lizbeth. “Emma just wants your mother to have some quiet. Try to rest over there too. Looks to me you could use it.”

She looked at me and shook her head. But I helped her wrap the squalling baby in blankets. “You're so awful good to your brothers and sisters,” I said. “Your folks must be proud.”

She didn't answer. She just grabbed what looked like nothing more than a spring sweater and headed back for her mother's room. I picked up little Emma Grace and held her till she calmed down. Then Joe took her so I could fish from my bag the “doctorin'” herbs, dried for winter use.

By the time Lizbeth came back out, the rest of the kids were dressed as warmly as they were able. I told them to bundle under the quilts, and they all headed out the door as I set on a pot of water to boil. There wasn't much wood in the wood box, but I threw a couple of chunks in the stove to keep it hot.

Wilametta gave a moan, the first sound I'd heard out of her since getting there, but it was no real comfort. I'd expected to find her fevering maybe, and miserable, but not like this. No wonder Joe had looked so scared.

In a few minutes, George came back in the house and told me he'd done what Emma had said and sent his oldest boy to drop off the kids and fetch the doctor. Then he went in the bedroom, looking pale and nervous, and I could hear him telling Emma that the kids would be staying the night at our place, even though it wasn't yet two in the afternoon. I hurried in when I had a bowl of water warmed up.

“Have you eaten?” I asked George.

“Don't want nothin'.” He sat on a chair that looked homemade, his eyes on Wilametta's plump, pink face. She was sweating, and one of her eyes was half open, but she didn't seem to be seeing us.

“Can you help me sponge her down, Juli?” Emma asked, pulling back the covers just a little. Wilametta had always been chubby, but today she looked more swollen than usual. Pink and kind of mottled white—funny colored, just as Joe had said.

“I ain't never seen her like this,” George told us. “She weren't this bad yesterday. Got up and cooked herself an onion. She says onion'll cure anything.”

“It don't hurt,” Emma assured him. “She knowed that much.”

I started bathing Wila's face and shoulders while Emma rubbed one arm.

“This morning she was painin',” George said real slow.

Emma turned his way. “Where?”

“To the chest. She told me not to fetch you. Heard you been sick an' didn't want to have you over here fussin' for her again.”

I thought of the last time Emma had been here, two months ago, when Wila'd been three days in bed. We'd heard it from the kids, and Emma had insisted on coming. I couldn't blame Wilametta, certainly. Then or now. But George should've had the sense to fetch the doctor before this.

The wind started whistling outside, and Emma asked George to light the oil lamp. It was getting darker, all right. In the middle of the day. I looked at the swirling snow and thought of the kids. They'd have a nasty time of it riding over to our house, though it was just over a mile by the road. I was glad I'd sent our quilts back with them.

Wilametta gave out another moan and suddenly opened her eyes. “Emma Jean,” she whispered. “You come to see me?”

“I sure did.” Emma turned to me. “Juli, get some drinkin' water. Those herbs ready yet?”

“Not yet.” I got up and ran for the water bucket, nearly tripping over the broom somebody'd left on the floor. It didn't seem possible that it'd been used lately.

Wilametta drank a sip and closed her eyes. “Tell Lizbeth to fix you some tea,” she said, all dreamy-like. “Ain't got a cookie in the house.”

“You shush,” Emma told her. “We ain't here to be pampered, now. You hurtin' anywhere?”

Wila looked around. “It's kinda quiet.”

“Yup. Good'n peaceful. Lay still a minute.” Emma laid her head against Wilametta's chest, listening, and then raised up and asked her again how she was feeling.

“Tired. You know. I'll be all right.”

“That's what we're countin' on.” Emma lifted the water and got Wila to take another sip.

“I'm gonna see that the cows got water,” George said suddenly and rose from his seat.

“Got wood enough in?” Emma asked.

“No,” I told them both, though I hated giving George another chore. It seemed to me that he ought to stay right here. But he wasn't minded in that direction.

It wasn't but a few minutes more and the red raspberry tea and root tonic water were ready. I carried them in, though I wasn't completely sure what Emma was going to do with either one.

She was rubbing at Wila's other arm when I came back in. She stopped to bathe the woman's face with the wet cloth. Wilametta looked to be asleep again, so soon.

“She doing any better?”

Emma shook her head. “I promised Lizbeth she'd be all right. How long you suppose it'll take the doctor, comin' from Belle Rive?”

“Oh, Emma, I don't know. It'll be a good while, the way it's snowing.” Her question was a real worry. Sam Hammond had only just left with the kids. Surely she knew it'd be a considerable time before he even got to the doctor.

Wila coughed and seemed to sputter a little. “Emma Jean?”

Emma took her hand, massaging it carefully.

“My heart's a-flutterin', ain't it?” She sounded quiet, far away, like she was talking to us from the next room.

“It may be that,” Emma said. “Does seem to be off a rhythm.”

I set the herbs down on the bedside table, scooting Wila's Bible over to make a space. Emma picked up the raspberry tea, poured some of the dandelion root into it, and offered Wila a sip.

“I can't feel my toes at all,” Wila said.

I felt the breath slide right out of me. But Emma answered calmly. “Don't worry about it. They's still there.”

She turned to me and told me to rub Wila's legs some, not too hard. I sat on the bed and did what I was told.

Emma coaxed another sip of the tea into Wila. “Just think, Wilametta,” she said. “Coming up this May, little Emma Grace'll be a whole year old.”

“I dreamed she was gonna sing pretty as a bird,” Wila said. “Her and Rorey too. I always did want my daughters to sing. They need more'n what we've had. You know?”

“I know,” Emma said quietly. “I been prayin' on that very thing.”

“Oh, thank you. Thank you so much.” Wila was losing her pinkness, instead looking pale and yellow and slick with sweat. “Will you sing me a hymn? Will you do that?”

Emma turned to me, and I saw that she was sweating too, cool as it was. And there was something in her eyes I'd never seen there before. “Please sing, Juli,” she told me. “‘Blessed Assurance,' all right?”

It was all I could do to swallow a lump down and take another breath. They were scaring me, both of them. I could hear George come in to the kitchen, dump a load of wood in the box, and head back out.
He should be in here,
I thought again. But I couldn't say it. I hated the very thought of what it implied. Wila was fading. Dying.
Oh, God! A mother of ten!

I couldn't shake the feeling of it as I started to sing, tears clouding my vision. I was slow and quiet, afraid to be otherwise and hoping for all the world that I was wrong. Emma's words went tumbling through my mind.
“I promised Lizbeth she'd be all right.”

Lord, help us! She's got to be all right. You wouldn't want it any other way!

I sang on, as much as I could remember, praying that I was just being foolish. The snow would quit and Wilametta would be back to her normal clamorous self by tomorrow, most surely.

“She sounds sweet as angels,” Wila said, and I almost had to stop the song. “You know what the Good Book says 'bout heaven?” she asked.

“There'll be no sorrow there,” Emma answered. “No sickness. No pain.”

“I'll be glad for goin' there, one day. You tell Emma Grace an' all the rest it's a wonderful place. Will you do that, Emma?”

I stopped singing and went to rubbing her legs again, feeling heavy and cold inside.

George came in again, dumped a second armload of wood, and moved in our direction with his slow, even steps. He shook the snow off his coat and left it lying by the bedroom doorway. “She still awake?”

“Yes,” Emma said. But that was all she said. She laid one hand on Wila's chest and left it there, moving her lips without making a sound.

“Good.” George came and leaned over the bed, not seeming to notice that Emma was praying. “Wilametta Hammond,” he said, “I called for the doctor. Folks that say I don't love ya, they ain't got a leg to stand on. I ain't never called a doctor for no one.”

Wila looked up just enough to meet his eyes. For a moment she and George stayed like that, not a word between them. Then finally Wila smiled, just a little. “I love you too,” she whispered, her eyes slowly closing.

George looked like he could jump out of his skin. “Emma!”

“She's still here, George. She's breathing just fine.” Emma lowered her head down to Wila's broad chest, as if just making sure. “Don't you worry,” she told us again. “She's breathin' fine.”

George pulled his wet hat down off his head. “She just give me the awfullest scare.” He curled at the brim nervously, sending little drips of half-melted snowflakes to the floor. “She's never been this bad,” he told us again. “You say she'll be fine, though, ain't that right, Emma? Didn't you say she'll be fine?”

I looked from one to the other, glad it wasn't me he was asking.

“I believe it,” Emma told him, solid as anything. “But it'd be a fine thing if you'd pray on it too, George Hammond. You got coffee in the house?”

“Yes, ma'am.” He looked like a schoolboy just then, his too-long hair all mussed.

“Juli, go and make us some coffee,” Emma ordered. “I'll set with her, but there ain't much more you can do while she's sleepin'.”

I made coffee, enough to give to the whole family if they'd been there. Then I picked up the bowls on the table, some of them still half filled with the strange gray porridge. I moved the pot with the same gray stuff in it, heated most of the rest of the water, and did all the dishes. George would have to fetch more water in so we'd have some at hand for the evening.

When the dishes were clean and put away the best I knew how, I went about picking up all kinds of odds and ends that had been left lying on the floor. I could imagine the Hammond children playing with the strangest of things, like the broken shoelaces and mason's trowel I'd found, and then leaving them lie. Anything I didn't know a place for I stacked in a pile behind the loft ladder, which rose from one corner of the kitchen.

Emma sat by Wila's side, praying quietly or singing most of the time. I brought her some coffee and a fresh bowl of warm water a time or two, and she bathed Wila's face and neck and told me at least three more times not to worry.

I remembered what it'd been like when baby Emma Grace was born right in this bedroom, coming breech, with Wila sick as a dog. Emma had commanded every minute, telling us they were both going to pull through fine. And they did. It was no wonder the Hammonds trusted Emma. After she'd birthed nine of their ten kids, they must've thought she could do anything.

But right then I couldn't help noticing her sunken, weary eyes.

“There's a rocker out by the fireplace,” I said. “You want me to bring it in here so you can rest while Wila's sleeping?”

She shook her head. “You cleanin's fine, Juli. But rearrangin' furniture on my account's another matter. George might want that chair.”

“He's in the kitchen. Patching a boot. I'm sure he wouldn't mind.”

She didn't tell me anything else one way or the other, so I went and dragged the chair in next to the straight-backed one that George had been sitting on earlier. The two chairs together took up about all the floor space there was.

I helped Emma to the rocker and covered her lap with the first spare blanket I could find. It seemed to be growing even darker outside, and cooler too. And I wasn't the only one to notice it. I could hear George getting up to throw some more wood on the fire. The Hammonds' sitting room and kitchen were one open area, so with the fireplace at one end and the huge wood cookstove at the other, it wasn't bad for warmth. Better maybe than Emma's house, but a lot more cramped.

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