"No. Honor you go," I said trying to assess the situation and decide what made the most sense and would cause the least amount of disruption. "Verity, you and Danny go clean up the kitchen. I'll stay here and make sure he doesn't have a seizure or something."
"Don't murder him while he's out," Honor said grimly. "He's not a bad guy, just really stubborn."
"Takes one to know one, eh?" I said looking up at her with a wry grin. "I just want to make sure he's okay and then get him out of here. He doesn't belong in this house. Do you have any idea where he's staying?"
"Yesterday he said he was staying at Yoder's B&B,"
"If he's been staying at Yoder's, then Elsa is probably worried about what happened to him," I said. "Call her and tell her he's here. Then call the gas station and tell them to send a tow truck to get his car to t
he shop."
"That's a lot of calls, Grace," Honor said.
"I'm sure you are more than capable of handling it," I replied shooting her a look that sent her scurrying out the door. "Verity, bring me another towel, would you, please?"
She ducked into the kitchen and quickly returned with it. I lifted Adam's head and the ice pack underneath it and placed the towel down on the couch. It seemed like a silly thing to do, but I heard Mamm's voice in my head reminding me to take care of things and old habits die hard. Part of me was scared that Adam had suffered some kind of internal injury in the crash and that in listening to him brush off the need to see a doctor, we'd waited too long to call for help.
"Mr. Wallace," I said softly as I patted his face. "Adam, please wake up."
When I got no response, I began gently shaking his shoulder calling, "Adam, Adam wake up! Please, please wake up and talk to me!"
He stirred a bit and then raised a hand to his eyes forehead as he groaned, "My head is killing me."
"Stay still, we've got a doctor on his way to examine you," I said leaning closer to inspect the knot on his forehead. "You've got a pretty big bruise above your eye, and some cuts and scrapes across your chin, but it looks like Verity did a pretty good job of fixing you up last night."
"You're really very beautiful," he murmured as looked at me through glassy eyes. I inhaled sharply as he raised a hand and pulled a strand of hair from under my kapp. "Like spun gold."
"Adam, are you okay?" I asked genuinely concerned that something was terribly wrong. "Do you know where you are?"
"I'm in heaven," he said groggily.
"No, no you are most definitely not," I said pushing his hand away. "You passed out on my kitchen floor."
"Mmmm," he nodded as he closed his eyes and drifted off again.
I got up and walked to the kitchen to find Verity and see what she remembered about the accident. She and Danny were standing at the sink, one washing while the other dried. Verity was humming a tune I recognized from Sunday night singing.
It was Verity's voice that had attracted Levi, and her gentle nature and kind heart that had prompted him to propose to her after Christmas the year before. Like most Amish couples, Levi and Verity had kept their engagement a secret, but Mamm wrote and told me that when she began planting the celery that would be used to make the traditional casseroles and decorate the reception tables, neighbors started talking.
"You'll make such a good wife," I said as I stepped up beside her and grabbed a towel. "Much better than I ever would have."
"Oh, Grace, you're not giving up are you?" she asked as she rinsed the last of the plates. "You're still young, and you can still come back and be baptized, you know. Mamm and Dat always hoped you would."
"I think it's safe to say that I'm not going to find a husband in Corner Grove," I said grimly. "I'm just happy that you're happy and that you've found someone who will be good to you."
"And I to him," Verity said smiling. We stood next to one another silently lost in our memories of Mamm and Dat until Danny nudged me and signed that he was going outside to tend to the garden.
"Okay, but don't go too far!" I called as he ran out the back door. Too late, I yelled, "And don't let the door slam!"
The noise of the screen door slamming into the frame echoed through the kitchen and out into the backyard.
"Too late," Verity laughed. "He never remembers to close it quietly. It drove Mamm to the edge of madness. You know, she'd asked Dat to find a way to make him remember, but Dat just told her that boys will be boys and to let him be."
"I miss them," I said softly.
"I know; I do, too," Verity said taking my hand and squeezing it tightly.
"What would Mamm have done with this English man?" I asked knowing full well what she would have done before I asked.