watched her brother coddle her best friend, she could barely hold her patience. Anna had suffered a tiny burn, not a disastrous accident! Oh, she had much to learn. No self-respecting Amish woman would fuss over a burn so much.
She was just about to mention that when she realized neither Henry nor Anna would notice if she spoke at all. They were standing in front of the sink, cool water running, lost in each otherâs eyes.
Suddenly, it was too warm to be there with them. Too confining. Too much.
âIâm going to check on Roman,â she said, anxious to see the new puppy.
Neither looked her way.
Frustrated, Katie ran out to the pen that Henry had made for the puppy. He wiggled with delight when he saw her and yipped. She opened the gate, freed him, then sat on the ground as he jumped and played all around her. But to her surprise, even the bundle of black-and-white fur didnât lift her spirits.
No, he only reminded her that she had no special person of her own. And, unfortunately, that she had once had someone who had cared for her very much. Heâd cared for her and sheâd pushed him away.
Her mother, whoâd been out feeding the goats, slowly approached. âI do believe this is the first time Iâve not seen you laugh and giggle at this puppyâs antics.â
Her mother made her sound awfully young. âI need more than just puppies, Mamm . I am older now, remember?â
â Ach, Katie, you are surely havinâ a time of it, arenât you now?â
Katie scrambled to her feet and followed her mother back to the goatsâ pen. âIâm all right.â
âCome now, I saw you running out here. What is wrong?â
âI donât know.â How could she ever put into words everything she was thinking? She could never admit to her mother all the selfish and confusing thoughts that were brewing inside of her.
Her mother nodded to Katieâs hand. âCome now, somethingâs wrong. Look what you are doing! We both know you would never pet Gertie without a reason.â
That was unfortunately true. Oh, how sheâd always hated those ornery goats. She had ever since theyâd gotten loose one fine spring day and found her first Log Cabin quilt on the line. In a matter of minutes, Billie and Gertie had chewed on that quilt, making a mess of years of careful hard work.
Because her mother was patiently waiting for an answer, Katie gave her one. âItâs nothing. Anna and Henry looked like they needed a moment or two of privacy.â
âI suppose a courting couple needs a moment or two from time to time.â Looking toward the house, she wrinkled her brow. âI thought you were working on jam this morning. Did you already fill the jars?â
âNo. We had to take a break when Anna burned her fingers.â Unable to stop the flow of words any longer, Katie blurted, âThe way she carried on, you would think her finger was on fire. And of course, it happened just when Henry was coming in for some lemonade. The moment he saw her he rushed over and put her fingers under the water.â Katie didnât even feel like mentioning how Henry had kissed Annaâs fingers, too.
âThat was good thinkinâ.â
âBut that isnât the point! Anna couldâve tended to a blister by herself. She didnât need to act so helpless around my brother.â
âAh.â
Katie ignored her motherâs smile and continued. âAs a matter of fact, she wouldnât even have been burned if she would have listened to me and been more careful.â Thinking again to how long it was taking to can preserves, Katie felt her temper explode. âAnna doesnât listen, Mamm ! Iâve told her time and again to only fill the jars two-thirds of the way full, but she always ignores my suggestions.â
âI doubt she ignores you on purpose. This is all new for her.â
âEverything is new, even after