Everstille, A Novel
By Susan Szurek
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About this ebook
Viola Mitchell helped operate her family's store, Mitchells Emporium and Dry Goods. While ordering new stock for the store's shelves, she met traveling salesman, John Jasper. Viola was intrigued by John's charm and charisma. Later, she discovered his cruelty and callousness.
Viola lived in Everstille, Indiana, a small, flourishing town w
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Everstille, A Novel - Susan Szurek
Schuler Books
2660 28th Street SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49512
(616) 942-7330
www.schulerbooks.com
Everstille, A Novel
ISBN 13: 9781948237451
eBook ISBN: 9781948237550
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020907677 (Paperback edition)
Part of the chapter Business of the Day
was published as a short story in Imagine That! 2013, an ArtPrize Literature Contest Anthology.
The cover picture is from the set of Mary Mabel Shutes (1892-1984)
Copyright © 2020 Susan Szurek
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form except for the purpose of brief reviews, without written permission of the author.
Printed in the United States by Chapbook Press.
For my sisters,
Kathy and Anita
The characters in this novel are not real, nor are they
based on any living or dead people.
However, they have been living in my head for years.
Contents
First
Mitchell’s Emporium and Dry Goods
The Mitchells
Matilda Joan Harper (Schmidt) Smith
Nathan
Nathan and Edna
Viola
Miss Viola Mitchell
John Joshua Jasper
Then
Plans
Cottonwood Fluff
Marriage
Enceinte
Gossip
John’s Indiscretions
Green Milk Glass
Giving Thanks
Winter
Conversations
Gardening
Sugar Cookies
A Sunny Day
Family Time
Returning
Missing
Weak One
Sale!
Business of the Day
Funeral
After
Mike and Mitch
Purge
Drama in One Act
Clouds are Gone/Sun is Out
Moving Day
Smooth Roads
A Secret
Act of Contrition
July Fourth Weekend Celebration, 1941
War and Peace
A Late August Morning
Movie Night
Friday the 13th of April, 1945
April 22, 1945, Northern Italy
Sunday, April 22, 1945, Everstille, Indiana
Coming Home
Adjustments
Summer’s End
Continuing Education
Cousins
School Days
Winter and Wells
The Winter Family
Cabin in the Woods
Fathers and Sons
Christmas Bonus
Wednesdays the Library Gets Tidied Up
Problem and Solution
Home Sweet Home
Ten Hearts and Counting
Nine Pairs of Feet
Rebecca
What Was Lost, Now is Found
Hattie
Saturday Night
Trips
Sorrows and Joys and Revelations
Endings and Beginnings
Hattie and Mitch
Viola and Tillie
Salt-Less Cabbage Soup
Tillie’s Last Thoughts
Getting Familiarized
A Surprise
Journey
Telephone Calls
Bravery
Letters and Calls and Visits
Peppermint Tea
Questions
Here to Stay
Endings
Beginnings
Names
First
Mitchell’s Emporium and Dry Goods
Upon pushing open the substantially built entry door, the bell would tinkle, alerting everyone inside to the fact that another customer had arrived. It was only six or seven steps across the creaking wooden floor until the large glass divided case filled with an assortment of candy was reached. The wonderous array was overwhelming. Chocolate in all shapes: stars, malted milk balls, caramels, bridge mix, and large bars of pure unadulterated sugar; soft chewies which stayed on teeth until pried off with a finger; orange and sour cherry slices, peppermint slices, and perfectly formed raspberry bites; chewing gum: Juicy Fruit and Cloves and Beechies Peppermint, tiny multi-colored shards, and jaw breakers which needed to be sucked until the center collapsed; Boston Baked Beans, and giant swirled rainbow decorated lollipops, and Tootsie rolls, both tiny and enormous, all just needing the point of a small finger and a few pennies to loose them from the glass cage.
Over to the left of the candy territory were tables filled with indispensable kitchen items: potato mashers and cookie presses, white metal canisters and lemon colored breadboxes, strainer sieves, and all the accoutrements needed for canning vegetables and fruits when summer ended and their ripeness demanded use. Iron trivets, food mills, pastry cutters, hand mixers, slicers, molds of all sizes and types scattered along the tables and piled on the shelves. All important. All crucial. All with the prices marked clearly at the bottom.
The measuring table, counter, and shelves directly across the way connected sewers and quilters and embroiderers with their necessities. Threads, buttons, snaps, collar stays, pins, seam rippers, rick-rack, floss of all weights and colors, scissors of all sizes including the brand-new pinking shears, all for purchase. Bolts of cloth: linens and cottons, patterned and plain, and even silks and wools, cozied up to each other. Thick Butterick and McCall pattern books, available for perusal and stacked up underneath the measuring table, were leaning precariously to one side.
Pots, pans, and larger items were stored along the back. Step down three stairs into a room traditionally called the Men’s Corner to select any number of smaller tools hung on the walls, just in case one was needed and Jensen’s Hardware and Agriculture Needs down one street and over two more, seemed too far away. Hoes and shovels, rakes and planers, hand saws, pliers, hand drills and more could be acquired here.
A large table loaded with odds and ends: some binoculars, a butterfly kite kit, a rather tarnished silver hand mirror, a pair of swan planters that had been ordered and never picked up, whisk brooms, and an assemblage of wicker fly swatters which proved popular in the summer months, was entertaining to look through. Additional items continually enhanced the collection.
Mitchell’s Store had almost anything anyone needed. For decades, traveling salesmen assisted the proprietor in fulfilling the needs of the townspeople in Everstille. Michael Mitchell was the third generation to run the establishment and had many thoughts about how to improve and structure the store. In this endeavor, he was grateful for the advice and help of his wife, Mary, who had the inventiveness and vision to reorganize efficiently and restock attractively. At her suggestion, one of the first changes he undertook was to remove the ancient, faded, and splintered wooden sign which hung crookedly on the hooks outside the substantial entry door. He hired a proficient and professional sign painter from Chicago to stencil, paint, and outline in gold leaf across the new window he had installed, a sign which read:
Mitchell’s Emporium and Dry Goods
The Mitchells
Mary Mitchell was admired by the town and loved by her family who accepted her gentle and firm sovereignty. Certain neighbors and close friends were delighted to receive invitations to her Sunday suppers where they admired the dining room table decorated with seasonal plants and the pink flowered china set Mary’s parents gave the Mitchells on their wedding day, and enjoyed the delicious menu created by Mary and prepared by Tillie. Mrs. Mitchell arranged lavish formal parties as well as casual get-togethers for her groups of friends. Summer picnics convened on the vast and carefully manicured Mitchell lawn. She was repeatedly designated Rachel Circle’s chairwoman of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Her personal responsibilities were not overlooked despite her social activities, and she assisted her children, Nathan and Viola, with their school lessons when they were young, and encouraged her husband, whenever he was available, to act as tutor when those lessons became more intricate. When, in due course, her children did not need her constant supervision, Mr. Mitchell appreciated his wife’s periodic assistance at the Emporium and valued her advice about which items to acquire and how to display them, thus encouraging their purchase. She was considerate to her housekeeper-cook, Tillie, and did not interfere with her cooking and cleaning decisions. Mary Mitchell was committed to life.
Michael Mitchell was the proprietor of Mitchell’s Emporium. He spent his days at the store which had been in his family for three generations, and he needed Mary’s sense of sociability to keep him centered and to prevent him from becoming a social recluse. He was a man with high standards and expectations. Not everyone lived up to his ethics and work principles, and he had difficulty finding the right people to employ. He had begun to train his own son at age ten, but Nathan fared no better than past employees. Now, Nathan was close to sixteen and, unfortunately, did not have the ambition or the sense his father thought he should have had by this time, even though he had tried to instill in his son worthy work habits by requiring him to work at the store after school on Friday and Saturday, the busiest times of the week. After all, the store would one day belong to Nathan. Perhaps it was fortunate that Mr. Mitchell never knew that the store would not survive Nathan’s management.
One late afternoon, Michael Mitchell, sweeping the back area of his Emporium, put down the broom, straightened his back, and stretched his arms. He glanced at the clock and realized that it was almost time for the children. Several them regularly came after school to choose orange slices or chocolate malted balls or impossibly colored bits of chewing gum from the candy counter. Mary Mitchell had the patience to wait on them; he did not, and today, his sighs were audible as the children slowly completed their penny purchases. His wife had left a little after one o’clock because she was ill again. The idea that she could be seriously ill did not enter his thinking.
He closed the Emporium earlier than usual, and in the near dusk, walked down Main Street to his home. Mary was on his mind, and he wanted to check on her. She had been suffering from stomach pains, indigestion, and a cough for some time now. The teas and home remedies Tillie had fashioned eased but did not eradicate the problems. He saw Doctor Evans’ car parked in front of his house, and he hurried up the front stairs where he was met by Tillie who said, I was just gonna call for you to come home. Doc Evans is in the bedroom with Mrs. Mitchell. She just isn’t feelin’ good.
Mr. Mitchell took the stairs two at a time and upon entering the bedroom was relieved to see his wife sitting up and chatting with the doctor. He went over and kissed Mary’s cheek in greeting and turned to Doctor Evans and raised his eyebrows in question.
Well,
said Doctor Evans, I will not make a diagnosis just yet. There are tests to be done. It might be a gall bladder issue, and I have advised Mary about her diet and activity. I also spoke to Tillie about what and how she should be cooking for her. We’ll take a wait and see approach to this, and I’ll watch over her. Mary, you understand what to do? Good. Michael, will you walk me out?
The two men left as Mary settled back against the pillowed headboard and smiled weakly as Tillie, who had been lurking outside the bedroom to hear the diagnosis, enveloped her with the hand embroidered coverlet.
The two men walked out to the front and away from Tillie’s ears, and Doctor Evans turned and spoke, "Michael, I will not mince words. I suspect Mary has something called acute cholecystitis, a severe gall bladder problem. Tests are needed, and there is a possibility of surgery although it is a dangerous operation and rarely done. We’ll hold off for a while and see how she responds to some common sense changes in her diet. I also left some drops for her cough and will check on her in a couple days. Call if you need me sooner."
The men shook hands, and Mr. Mitchell watched him drive away. He went back to the house and up to the bedroom, and seeing that Mary had fallen asleep, he quietly closed the door and went into the kitchen for a cup of coffee.
Doctor Evans was correct about Mary’s condition. She did have severe gall bladder trouble, and while her jaundiced aspect and indigestion concerned him, he might have paid more attention to her cough which, to be fair to him, did not appear to be the major issue. Regrettably, it was. Mary Mitchell died of a particularly virulent form of pneumonia within ten days. Doctor Evans was a pallbearer at her funeral and never forgave himself for his oversight.
The funeral was an earnest affair. Rituals and traditions were observed, and afterwards, the Rachel Circle held a lovely repast luncheon in the church basement. Tillie made several of her famous blueberry pies, and Mr. Mitchell and the children were consoled by friends, and neighbors, and church members for the better part of the day. The inundation of casseroles and cakes delivered to the Mitchell home ensured that Tillie did no additional cooking for well over a week. Mitchell’s Emporium was shuttered for fourteen days, and when it did open, at first for shortened hours, a melancholy and quiet period was observed by all who came to shop the shelves and scrutinize the new widower. Even the school children who eventually returned with their pennies, pointed to their chocolate stars and peppermint candies, and in subdued voices, whispered their thanks.
Mr. Mitchell mourned for the remainder of his life and took to visiting Mary’s grave at North Cemetery on Sunday afternoons. Nathan offered to quit high school and help full time at the Emporium, but to both his and his father’s relief, that idea was rejected. Instead, Mr. Mitchell hired a temporary part-time clerk who proved adept at urging the townswomen to purchase supplementary sewing materials, and even more adept at pocketing just enough cash to make it seem like an accounting error. Thirteen-year-old Viola became weepy and withdrawn, but Tillie guided and watched her until the stinging pain became an aching discomfort.
The Mitchell family endured. They continued neighborhood friendships, and in time, with Tillie’s encouragement, served Sunday suppers to invited guests again although never with the elegance Mary Mitchell had provided. Her death, like all deaths, slowly faded to a fragile, lingering despondency. The Mitchells moved ahead with their lives, and eventually and occasionally, the family, collectively and individually, experienced something akin to happiness.
Matilda Joan Harper (Schmidt) Smith
Help comes in many forms. For the Mitchell family, that form was Tillie Smith. Tillie had been housekeeper and cook on a part-time basis from the time Nathan was born, but when Viola came along, Tillie agreed to work additional days. She had her own system of cleaning and cooking, and Mary Mitchell did not interfere with her ideas which was the perfect way for them to get along. The two women formed a strong partnership, and when Mary Mitchell died, Tillie honestly grieved.
Tillie nursed Mary Mitchell through her brief, vicious illness, remaining at Mary’s bedside while she struggled to take her final shallow, shattering breaths. After her death, when Michael Mitchell fell apart and could not budge from his chair to reopen the Emporium, Tillie allowed him time to grieve before persuading him to resume work. He operated shorter hours at first, as Tillie suggested, and she offered to organize the store shelves as his wife used to do. Mary’s son, Nathan, isolated himself because that was how he dealt with his sorrow. Tillie comforted him by talking about his mother and how she would have expected him to maintain his activities and interests, and how she wanted him to continue to assist his father at the Emporium. The daughter, Viola, being so young, needed the most help. Death was incomprehensible to her. Tillie babied her for a while, eventually encouraging her to become independent, to help her father at his business, to endure the loss of her mother.
Matilda Joan Harper (Schmidt) Smith was Tillie’s full name although no one knew it. She was born near Chicago, Illinois, met her husband, Herman Schmidt, married him, and eventually moved to Everstille to live with his mother who was suffering from a multiplicity of diseases. Soon after the move, Tillie and Herman became parents of a healthy boy, and shortly after that, old Mrs. Schmidt died. Then both Herman and the baby developed a terrible cold which progressed to a horrendous cough, then an atrocious bout with pneumonia, and then a ghastly death. Within two months, Tillie had three graves to attend at North Cemetery and was alone in a shambling cottage towards the furthest edge of the town. With the help of kind neighbors, she moved to a rented apartment close to the main streets of Everstille and began a series of part-time jobs to support herself. She also changed the spelling of her last name to the easier Smith and set herself the task of living.
Tillie found jobs cleaning houses for some women at the Methodist Episcopal Church where the Mitchell’s attended Sunday services. She baked pies and delivered them every Wednesday and Saturday morning to Peterson’s Bakery which was right next to Mitchell’s Emporium and Dry Goods. This was how she met Michael Mitchell. When the Mitchells welcomed baby Nathan to the family, Mary Mitchell realized that caring for the baby, cooking, cleaning, and keeping up with her church and social activities was overwhelming, so Tillie was hired. She stayed through the deaths of both Mitchells, the marriages of both their children, and, in turn, helped both Nathan and Viola with their families. She never let on to any of them that from the first time she saw Michael Mitchell, she loved him.
Michael Mitchell was not particularly handsome, although he was noteworthy. He was not talkative but rather reticent. He was polite, his manners were faultless, his etiquette unimpeachable, his work ethic admirable. Tillie never could determine exactly what it was about him that attracted her devotion. He treated her respectfully and gave no inkling that he saw her as anything but a kind and helpful individual, someone to whom he owed the same esteem as he would any other person. Maybe it was his greenish eyes, the small dimple in his cheek when he smiled, the tiny crooked little finger on his left hand that he had broken as a boy, his graying dark hair that had a slight curl, the way he stretched his arms towards the sun when he was tired, or the one ear lobe that was slightly longer than the other. Tillie noted it all. She was discreet with her admiration and regard and never, in any way, disclosed her feelings. She was deferential, and while she treasured being in his company, did not unnecessarily seek it out. She knew her feelings were indefensible, and she felt guilty. She tried not to think about him as she lay in her uneven bed in her rented apartment at night, as she helped Mary Mitchell set and decorate the family dining table for Sunday suppers, as she walked his children home from school and made sure they enjoyed a snack, as she ironed with utter precision and folded with loving care, his clothing. Tillie rationalized her love for Michael Mitchell by accepting it.
Tillie thought of herself as plain and ordinary. She was not educated beyond the sixth grade because that was when her father had disappeared and she, as the oldest, needed to stop squandering her time in a classroom, start to work, and bring in some money to help support her younger brothers. At least that is what Tillie’s mother said. So, Tillie, at age twelve, was taken on as a maid’s assistant and acquired knowledge and methods of cleaning, cooking, sewing, and organizing that would serve her well at the Mitchell’s. She never minded the hard work. the long hours, and the modicum of wages earned. If she were not pretty and educated, she might as well be handy and serviceable. And when she met Herman Schmidt, he took note of her practicalities.
Tillie and Herman married on a Wednesday and moved into her mother’s already crowded apartment on Thursday taking over the smallest back room. While Tillie’s brothers grew, moved on with their lives. and out of the apartment, she and Herman stayed. They were saving for a down payment on their own place, but after a couple of years, Herman’s mother became ill, and they moved to Everstille. Had he not been his mother’s only living child, they might not have done so. Tillie knew she was pregnant when they moved and thought a small town could be advantageous when raising the large family she expected. Then Herman and the baby died. And the Mitchell family became Tillie’s.
Tillie and Mary Mitchell were friendly but not friends. Mary Mitchell was benevolent and considerate but aware of their many distinctions. After all, she was attractive, educated, and schooled; she expected to marry successfully. Her family was disheartened by her choice of businessman husband, but she revived their spirits by becoming the town of Everstille’s leading female citizen. Church activities, social gatherings, charity work, and, of course, her family obligations would have been unmanageable were it not for Tillie’s service and support. And Tillie’s service and support, her succor and sustenance, her encouragement and comfort were provided for the rest of her life to the Mitchell family because she loved Michael Mitchell and the dimple in his cheek and his crooked little finger and that long earlobe.
Nathan
Sometimes children are a disappointment which was how Michael Mitchell felt about his firstborn, Nathan. Of course, not at the beginning when he felt the exhilaration of becoming a father, of seeing his eyes and nose reproduced in a small being, of knowing that he was its creator. The congratulations from others, the slaps on the back from his friends, the cigars he handed out were all symbols of belonging to that special club called Fatherhood. And it continued to be thrilling and invigorating right up until that time, some weeks later, when Nathan became a fussy, colicky baby who cried through the night and made his wife tired and unhappy and kept Michael from getting the sleep he needed to continue to run his business. Ephemeral were the congratulations, the slaps, the cigars. Everlasting was the crying child who looked like him and stole his sleep.
On an early Wednesday morning, a tired Michael Mitchell moved towards his Emporium and noticed a woman walking to the bakery next door. He nodded his head to her and suddenly it registered with him that this was the same woman who regularly cleaned his house.
Good morning, Mrs. Smith,
and Michael was delighted he remembered her name given his exhausted state. I want to tell you that your pies are delicious, and I regularly purchase one for our Sunday suppers. I especially like your blueberry pie.
Tillie Smith stared at him and felt her heart speed up and her face flush. Thank you,
was all she thought to say and continued to walk her pies towards the bakery.
Michael moved forward and held the bakery door for her and had a thought. Mrs. Smith, my wife and I have a three-month old son, and we are in need of some additional help. Would you know someone who would be willing to give us a few days a week? If she knew about babies, that would be extraordinarily helpful.
Tillie swallowed hard as she thought of her child in North Cemetery. Here was a chance to gain additional cash in a difficult time, and she had the knowledge. A small voice in the back of Tillie’s mind whispered: I would do anything you asked. Out loud, Tillie responded that she was available if they wanted her for more than a biweekly cleaning, she knew something about babies, and she would be happy to help. A deal was struck.
Tillie was able to settle Nathan down probably because she was not an anxious, apprehensive, sleep-deprived parent. She helped with cleaning, cooking, and the baby, three mornings a week and on alternate Sundays when the Mitchells gave their Sunday suppers. Tillie received fair payment for these duties and was also able, at times, to be near Mr. Mitchell. The Mitchells were able to get some sleep, and Mary began to feel normal again since she was able to meet with her friends and resume her social activities. Michael was grateful to have their baby, albeit intermittently, silenced
Nathan recognized, adored, and wanted his mother. He held out his arms when he saw her and became both excited and contented when she held him. He gooed and cooed and smiled at Mary Mitchell. He turned his head away and fussed when his father came close to him. This was not unusual behavior from young children, but Michael felt rejected and refused. He was busy six days a week for ten hours a day and felt drained when he came home. He asked about Nathan and sometimes saw him, and while Nathan grew to know him as Dada, that special bond Michael thought all fathers and sons naturally had was absent. His own father had died when Michael was quite young, and he did not realize that special bonds do not just occur but are created through diligent presence.
Nathan walked and talked and ran and hopped and jumped and did all things children did at the correct age children did them. But Michael did not find these actions remarkable. He expected more. He was not sure exactly what he wanted, what Nathan should be able to do, what a three-year old was capable of, but a disenchantment with his son began. And persisted.
Nathan was a normal child who continued to grow in the normal ways. He was a mediocre student and a conventionally behaved boy. He had some friends, and while he was not overly popular, he received invitations to more parties and activities than he could attend, although this was probably due to his parents’ business and social connections. His best friend was Edna Johnson, the little girl who lived across the street and three houses down, but with this too, Michael was dissatisfied. His son should be playing with the other boys in the neighborhood and not this little girl. Nathan should be throwing a ball and chasing after snakes and fishing in the pond. And occasionally Nathan did these things. With Edna.
One Saturday morning, when Nathan was ten, his father woke him early and brought him to the Emporium. This is the family business,
Michael explained to a disinterested and sleepy child, and you need to understand what it is I do and how you are expected to help out. One day, you will take over this store and run it, so you must begin to work at it now. Start by taking the broom and sweeping the back room. I’ll look in in you shortly to see how things are going.
Nathan, unhappy about spending a Saturday morning doing what was boring and unnecessary work, slowly made his way to the back, took the broom, and began to do the task in a typically average, ten-year old boy way. Michael sighed as he watched his son swish the broom around the floor without necessarily removing any of the obvious dirt. The next job, dusting the countertops, was performed in the same joyless manner. After three hours of tedious work, Nathan was turned loose with the reminder that every Saturday he would be expected to put in his time at the apprenticeship. Yes, Sir,
said Nathan, and went home to play with Edna.
For years, on Saturday mornings and Friday afternoons, Nathan and his father worked together. Michael taught and retaught Nathan how to order, receive, stock, organize, clean, and sell. But Nathan frustrated his father by his pedestrian and mistake-ridden approaches to ordering, receiving, stocking, organizing, cleaning, and selling. Attempting to escape what seemed like an eternal chore, Nathan, after high school graduation, talked his father into sending him to college. He managed to gain acceptance to Purdue University where he assumed he could effortlessly obtain instruction in something stimulating, but Nathan was disillusioned. He also continued to displease his father. Nathan spent one semi-successful year studying pharmaceutical science before giving up and coming home to work full time with his father in the Emporium. He did his best to understand the business, but he never enjoyed or valued the work he considered tedious and boring.
Some years the Emporium did well; often it did not due partly to the difficult times and partly to Mr. Mitchell’s continual extension of credit to the townspeople of Everstille. When Michael died unexpectedly of a heart attack and the business came to Nathan to handle by himself, the sheer responsibility and massiveness of doing what he never wanted to do exhausted him. After years of ineffective management and lost profits, Nathan and his wife, Edna, made the decision to sell the Emporium.
Had Michael been alive, he might have been comforted that the new owners decided to keep the name, and Mitchell’s Emporium and Dry Goods continued to do business in the town. In actuality, it was deemed, by the new owners, too expensive to change the expertly gold leaf outlined and stenciled name on the front window.
Nathan and Edna
Nathan hesitated when it came to introducing the worm to the hook. He made a face and threw the wiggly creature on the ground, then looked over to Edna who had no trouble sticking the pointed end directly through the middle of her worm so that both ends hung down evenly.
Nathan, just do it like this,
and Edna held out the example close to his face, and do it quickly. It is not hard if you push down fast on the hook.
I can’t,
Nathan looked at the worm which was attempting to relocate itself to the safety of a grassy area, Can you do it for me? I promise I will do it next time.
Edna sighed and caught the moving thing and expertly pressed the sharpness into the middle. She handed his pole to Nathan, and they moved to the edge of the pond where there were few fish, but where it was still amusing to sit and throw the line into the murkiness, and talk about nothing, and wait in the sunshine.
Edna was fearless. At least it seemed that way to Nathan. The two friends spent as much time together as possible, and Nathan never resented the directions and instructions Edna gave to him. He had trouble making decisions and completing tasks, but Edna could always find ways to encourage him. Other children saw Edna as dictatorial and domineering, but Nathan did not. To him she had superlative ideas and plans, and he knew she would assist him with any of his struggles. He would take her suggestions and turn them around in his mind until they became his plans. Edna never seemed to mind.
The person who did mind all the time the two spent together was Nathan’s father. Michael Mitchell lectured his son, during those infrequent times he spent with him, about the activities that he should be undertaking, and the boys with whom he should be associating. And then, a brief interruption in the friends’ closeness would transpire during which Nathan simply waved to Edna as she waited for him across their street, and he joined the neighborhood boys in their doings. These separations were never lengthy. Soon, he and Edna would be back together at the pond, or in her backyard swinging from the tire, or sitting on a porch as he listened to her. Edna never minded these brief splits. She was as self-assured and confident as a child could be.
When Nathan and Viola were older, they were each allowed to invite a friend to the Sunday suppers held at the Mitchell house. Viola alternated inviting her friends, not wishing to hurt any of their feelings. The only person Nathan ever invited was Edna. They would sit together at the dining room table talking quietly and ignoring the rest of the company. Mrs. Mitchell did not find this problematic, but Nathan’s father found reason for concern.
Honestly,
said Michael Mitchell to his wife, why is it that Nathan cannot ask one of the boys in the neighborhood? There is Jonathan down the street, and Ira Meager who is in his class. I know he spends some time with them. It just appears strange for Nathan to spend so much time with Edna. It seems as though they are courting, and that is ridiculous at their age!
Leave him be,
answered his wife, they are young and Nathan seems happy, and Edna is a good influence on him. Courting! You fret too much about Nathan.
And that would be the end of the discussion until the next Sunday supper when Edna would again be Nathan’s choice as guest. Eventually they were courting, and, had Mary Mitchell lived, she would have approved of it.
Nathan was a grade ahead of Edna in school, but they usually walked to and from classes together, talking about their day and planning for their evening.
I hate working at the store,
Nathan complained to Edna during a walk home. My father complains about everything I do and the way I do it. I have been there for years, and even when I do exactly as he has taught me, I still mess it up. I just can’t seem to do things good enough for him.
I know you work at it and have never wanted to,
commiserated Edna, Have you thought about doing something besides working at the Emporium? You mentioned going to Purdue to study a science course.
Maybe. I guess that might be something I could do. I know I am not that great at school, and it would mean being away from you, but I could start to think about it and talk to Pa. Do you think I could do it? What kind of science should I do?
And with Edna’s eager help, and his father’s reluctant money, Nathan decided on a course in pharmaceutical science. To everyone’s surprise, Nathan was accepted at Purdue University the year after high school graduation.
College classes like Physics, Dispensing Laboratory, Botany, Pharmaceutical Latin were much more difficult than high school, and Nathan did not do well. Not having Edna to encourage and sustain him was intolerable. After a stressful year, continual lecturing letters from his father, and a warning or two from the Dean of Students, Nathan decided that Purdue was not for him. He may not have enjoyed working at the Emporium, but it was something he comprehended. The summer after his year away, and after many lengthy discussions between Nathan and his father, it was decided that Nathan would stay home and work full time at the Emporium. And Nathan and Edna got married.
At the beginning of that fall, on an ideal autumn day with the sun blazing and multi-colored mums in full bloom, a perfectly lovely wedding was conducted at the Methodist Episcopal Church. There was a bitter-sweetness to the service and an emptiness in the pew where Mary Mitchell would have been. But Tillie had labored with Edna’s mother, Millie, and between them the wedding was almost as enchanting as Mary Mitchell would have wanted. Afterwards, a reception was held in the spacious Mitchell yard. The bride was glowing, and the groom blissful. Michael Mitchell and Edna’s parents, Millie and Ed, discussed the fact that this day had been ordained since their children were infants. All the neighbors agreed. Jonathan from down the street and Ira Merger who had been in Nathan’s class were his groomsmen; Viola and Edna’s best friend, Catherine were the bridesmaids.
The newlywed couple spent the weekend at the Grand Oakerton Hotel in South Bend, and then came home to their house just down the street from their families. The first year’s rent was a wedding gift given jointly by their parents. Edna, self-assuredly and competently kept a perfectly clean and splendidly decorated house, planted an amazing vegetable and flower garden at the side of the rented property, and learned to cook delicious and nutritious meals. Nathan kissed his wife each morning and went to work at the Emporium, joylessly ordering, receiving, stocking, organizing, cleaning, and selling under the watchful eye and in the disgruntled presence of his father.
Viola
Sometimes children are not a disappointment. When Viola was born, her parents were delighted with the sweet-tempered, cooing little girl who was so very different than their son had been. No crying, colicky infant this one. Mary and Michael were both charmed by their delightful daughter, but Michael was bewitched by her dark, curly hair and greenish eyes which were so like his. She held onto her father’s finger when he touched the center of her tiny, perfect hand, and when he spoke, she turned her head towards his voice and beamed. She gurgled. She laughed. The same dimple that was Michael’s was present in her cheek as he held and rocked his daughter. Viola completed their family…four corners, a quadrilateral ensemble, a square set.
The Mitchells were a bit concerned about Nathan