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A Lancaster County Christmas
A Lancaster County Christmas
A Lancaster County Christmas
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A Lancaster County Christmas

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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Jaime and C. J. Fitzpatrick began their married life as most couples do--in love and looking forward to a bright future together. But four years later they've drifted apart and are almost ready to call it quits.

Mattie Riehl was hoping to give her husband Sol the Christmas gift they have both longed for--news that a baby was on the way. But as usual, she is disappointed. The holidays bring an acute awareness to Mattie that her dream of a big family isn't likely to become a reality.

Then a winter storm raging outside blows the Fitzpatricks into the Riehl home--and into a much slower pace of life. Can these two couples from different worlds help each other understand the true meaning of love this Christmas?

With her trademark plot twists and attention to detail, Suzanne Woods Fisher offers readers a beautiful Christmas story of love, forgiveness, and what truly matters in life.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 1, 2011
ISBN9781441234162
A Lancaster County Christmas
Author

Suzanne Woods Fisher

Suzanne Woods Fisher is the award-winning, bestselling author of more than forty books, including The Sweet Life, The Secret to Happiness, and Love on a Whim, as well as many beloved contemporary romance and Amish romance series. She is also the author of several nonfiction books about the Amish, including Amish Peace and Amish Proverbs. She lives in California. Learn more at SuzanneWoodsFisher.com and follow Suzanne on Facebook @SuzanneWoodsFisherAuthor and X @SuzanneWFisher.

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Rating: 4.1875 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the first story I have read by the author and I look forward to reading more of her work. I liked her writing style and I liked the message this story left me with; that Emmanuel, God is with you, in the midst of your life, through every up and down in your life and how that can and will change one's perspective. Jamie Fitzpatrick feels life is spiraling out of control. Her Mom has died, her father suddenly reappears in her life after all these years and she thinks her husband C.J. is in the beginnings of a relationship with another woman. As her and C.J. set out to meet her Dad and go on a cruise they get stranded in a bad snowstorm and end up being taken in by an Amish family; Mattie and Solomon Riehl, and their son Danny and their cousin Zach. Mattie too is struggling with the fact that she only has one child, when she desperately wants a house full of them. She will come to terms with the fact that although her life is not exactly how she imagined it as a girl, it is her life and it is good and her God is good. Mattie will help Jamie in her struggles and Jamie in turn will help Mattie see things more clearly in her life.The ending, where they are searching for their son Danny and C.J.'s rescue dog, will help everyone to see things more clearly, even in the midst of a blinding snowstorm.This story only spans the time of three days, but there is a lot of things that happen in those three days and it held my attention all the way through. I liked the way this author dealt with the Amish way of life and how they embraced the English couple and how both families were helped. A great story to add to your Christmas collection. Bundle up and be prepared to enjoy this 'Lancaster County Christmas'.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A English couple end up spending Christmas with an Amish family.

    Lots of mini stories in ths book as well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    From the gorgeous Christmas cover to the content complexities, this is a great novella addition to a Christmas reading shelf. Realistic relational issues and situations that reveal unique character qualities. Good pacing, satisfying development and positive conclusion of the issues.

    Thanks for adding to my Christmas pleasure, Suzanne!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Are you as curious about the Amish as I am? It seems I've had a sense of awe about them and what seems their secretive ways. A couple of my children went to small, private colleges near Lancaster County (Dickinson and Gettysburg), affording me an opportunity to visit the Amish villages, and see their farms once in a while. Since I stopped to shop in their small town, I was a heartbeat away from these gentle people whose nearly downcast eyes and shy smiles felt like gifts to me as they passed by. My spirit was lifted just be being around them. Although, I'll never forget nearly crashing into a buggy with my too- fast-moving sports car one afternoon...an English lady not paying attention to what I was doing! The Quilt Museum in Lancaster County is a display of the most astonishing quilts I've ever seen. With simple, unpatterned cotton in every hue, Amish women have created quilts that flash and vibrate. It's truly other-worldly. I've never experienced anything like it. The juxtaposition of colors makes your eyes "play tricks" on you so that the quilts actually sparkle! Such is the plain life of these people~they quietly sparkle in their simplicity. And lest one think their clothing is too plain, it's amazing how inventive women can be with plain, beautifully colored cotton and cotton blends...no zippers or buttons included. In "A Lancaster County Christmas" Susanne Woods Fisher brings us a story of such an outwardly simple, plain Amish couple with one cherished son, who meets and takes in a young "Englisher" couple in trouble. The couple is in trouble both physically, as their car is disabled in a raging snowstorm, and in that their marriage is on the brink of divorce. Through this story during the weekend of Christmas, we learn about loss and love, the meaning of friendship and faith, family and following the light we've been given. We also learn that whether Amish or not, people are the same in their life-struggles and in their feelings of insecurity and pain. The theme of the book, "Emmanuel (God) with us" reminds us of the true meaning of Christmas. That He came down to be with us. It's the reminder that we would not always find life to be perfect and without struggles, but that we would have the promise that He would always be by our sides~with us~and He would never fail us through it all. It's a story that's simple and, yet, so complex to grasp. "A Lancaster County Christmas" is a book that leads us along the path to understanding the importance of real communication. I loved the story of the two couples, of how they saw the similarities in the troubles they had to deal with, how they gave each other hope and strength. It's a book that's gentle to read, and a book that leaves you stronger for the reading. A sit down between cookie baking novel... May you know that Emmanuel is with you this Christmas. Recommended for now through January--and beyond. 4 winter stars
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Mattie and her family meet Jamie at the doctors office. Mattie's son, Danny, leaves his owl whistle there and the doctor asks Jamie to return it. As she and her husband leave for a Christmas cruise with her somewhat estranged father, they stop to return the whistle and wind up staying through Christmas due to a snow storm. Jaime is ready to leave her husband for a photography job her father assures her he can arrange. But her father has never come through for her in the past and Jaime has convinced herself that those days are over and her fathernow wants to be a part of her live.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "A Lancaster County Christmas" is a tenderly moving story in the renewal of faith and love. This story centers on two women coming together from two totally different worlds, but gaining from each other the wisdom to put their faith in the Lord to help them through their personal struggles. Mattie, A Plain Amish wife and mother, dreams of having a large family with her loving husband Sol, but after miscarrying their second child fears that will never be. Jaime, a photographer and young wife, after losing her mother in a senseless accident, is trying to live up to her father's high aspirations even though it is damaging her marriage in the process. A fateful weekend snowstorm, over the Christmas holiday, brings these two families together and makes them realize what really is important and how they should continue on in their daily lives. This is a thoroughly enjoyable and touching story that Ms. Fisher has shared with us. The story is so simple but powerful in message because we really should just have faith and let the Lord's love take care of all our struggles and she puts that on paper so well. I enjoyed getting to know these couples and especially the character, Danny. Ms. Fisher nailed his 6-year old character full of inquisitiveness right on the head. Also, when a story can bring a small tear to my eyes, you know it involves something special and tender and this book definitely has that touch to it. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a sweet Christmas Amish fiction story. This book was kindly provided to me by the Baker Publishing Group for my involvement with Lit Fuse Book Tours and my honest review.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I absolutely LOVE Suzanne Woods Fisher! She has been my favorite author for sometime now and I look forward to each and every novel she releases, both fiction and non-fiction. So, I was quite excited to have the opportunity to read this newest novel in her Lancaster County Secrets series. Christmas. My favorite time of the year, both to experience and to read about! There's just something about the miracle to The Baby and the smells and sights during the Holiday season. Reading about Christmas is always so fun. I lose myself so fully among the pages, nothing else matters, and the story comes to life for me. In this particular novel, I got to visit friends, as well as meet new ones. Sol and Mattie. They were amazing characters and first introduced in Suzanne Woods Fisher's The Choice. I fell in love with them then, and this novel only made me closer to them. Sol has been through a lot in his life(I won't tell you what he went through in case you haven't read The Choice-book 1 in the Lancaster County Secrets series), but through the power of God, he always embraces it and moves forward. Sweet Mattie. Wanting to please her husband, Sol, she is trying to give him more children, yet she can't, when she experiences the awful heartache of a miscarriage. Watching these two embrace the miracle of the season, embrace each other and their son Danny, and embracing God to lead them through anything was powerful. But, I would like to say that though Sol and Mattie will always be my favorite characters from Lancaster County Secrets, Jamie and CJ, Englishers who are on the brink of loosing each other, quickly became a part of my heart. Watching them, and their struggles, my heart just went out to them. Seeing them learn the power of forgiveness and the way Faith in God will move any mountain, was beautiful. I definitely give this novel a high 5 Book rating. It's the way to go, to start the holiday season off early! The sights of Lancaster County in the snow and winter, the sounds of the horse and buggies and the music, all of it will touch your heart and transport you to the heart of the story! Another home run from Ms. Fisher and I can't wait for her new novels to be released! She is a seasoned Amish novelist and one who definitely knows how to keep her readers happy!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    In this touching tale of God's faithfulness and love two worlds are forever changed and lives are mended in unlikely ways.

    Jaime Fiztpatrick doesn't realize that what she considers a chance meeting in a doctor's office is actually an action of God's mighty hand. Struggling with the loss of her mother and the insecurities of a father who left her as an infant Jaime is in constant search of who she is. She is now in a struggling marriage and is trying to involve her long absentee father into her life.

    Mattie Reihl is overcome with grief. She feels the weight of being unable to have more children pulling her down. After her recent miscarriage she feels that there is no hope left and her life seems devoid of joy and peace. Struggling to maintain faith but also trying to control her life she feels her old self slipping further and further into a grey oblivion of desperate sadness.

    Little did these women know that God intended for them to help each other find the answers to their deepest questions and longings and to rediscover His love for them.
    When Jaime drives to the Reihl farm to return little Danny's whistle she finds herself trapped in a winter storm with her husband CJ.

    There the two families are thrown into a weekend that will forever change them. This is a sweet and amazing book.

    Thank you Revell for this review copy.

    Available September 2011 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Suzanne Woods Fisher is one of my favorite Amish novel authors—I’ve read so many of her books and I’m always impressed with her writing and story-telling. Each book has a deeper meaning without being “preachy”. Lancaster County Christmas is no exception.Almost all of us can relate to the “wordly”, fast paced life of the “Englisch” like Jaime and C.J. It seems like there’s never enough time for everything and we rush from place to place while thinking about a dozen things at a time. Do we ever take time to slow down and enjoy the simple things in life? Do we take the time to talk to God and really listen to him?The idea of the Amish lifestyle (sans the woodstove & washing clothes by hand!) has always intrigued me. What would it be like not to have the daily rush, all our electronic interruptions, and not to “keep up with the Jones’? And the conviction the Amish have is the essence of faith. Or as they say, “Emmanuel, God is with us.” Their belief in forgiveness and ultimate love is envious.Lancaster County Christmas would make a great read for the book club set. It comes with study questions and they will definitely make you think. Overall, the book is a nice feel-good read and you get a sense of calm and peace while reading it. I felt a sense of connection with the characters and was cheering for them at the end. Overall I give Lancaster County Christmas 5 stars. If you are looking for an easy, holiday book, this is the one.Available June 2011 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.I received this book free from Revell as part of their book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising."

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A Lancaster County Christmas - Suzanne Woods Fisher

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© 2011 by Suzanne Woods Fisher

Published by Revell

a division of Baker Publishing Group

P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

www.revellbooks.com

E-book edition created 2011

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

ISBN 978-1-4412-3416-2

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

Scripture used in this book, whether quoted or paraphrased by the characters, is taken from the King James Version of the Bible.

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Published in association with Joyce Hart of the Hartline Literary Agency, LLC.

To a very special woman,

a friend extraordinaire for nearly thirty years,

Nyna Dolby.

Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

Two Days before Christmas

Christmas Eve

Christmas Morning

Discussion Questions

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Other Books by Author

Back Ads

Two Days before Christmas

The first thin flakes of snow had begun to swirl. Mattie Riehl glanced out the buggy windshield and up at the troubling clouds during the trip into town for a doctor’s appointment. When they reached the parking lot, she hesitated before climbing out of the buggy. The sky is more ferocious looking than when we left home.

Solomon, her husband, reached his hands around her waist to help her down. We’ll be home in plenty of time before it hits.

Bet we’ll get fresh snow for Christmas! Danny nosedived over the front bench of the buggy and slipped out behind his mother. He lifted his small face to the sky, scanning it for snowflakes.

Looks like we might, Mattie said. She straightened her son’s glasses and turned to her husband. I still don’t think this appointment is necessary.

Sol paid her no mind. Well, we’re already here. The doctor thought it would be wise, Mattie. Just to be safe.

When she lifted her head, her eyes caught her husband’s gaze. A look of joy and suffering, woven together. That’s what these last few weeks have been like. Love and pain, joy and suffering. Sol bent down and tugged the felt brim hat on his son’s forehead, then gently steered Mattie into the doctor’s office.

Mattie and Danny sat down in the empty waiting room while Sol spoke to the receptionist. Mattie glanced around the room, amused. It was covered with English-style Christmas decorations. Gold garland draped the walls, Christmas cards were thumbtacked onto a bulging bulletin board, an artificial spruce tree sat in the corner, blinking its colored lights. The door opened and a young English girl swept in, nearly knocking down the wreath made of shiny gold and silver metal sleigh bells that practically engulfed the door. The girl steadied the wreath before she walked up to the desk to check in.

After Sol finished talking to the receptionist, he sat down next to Mattie. It’ll be a few minutes. The doctor’s running behind.

Danny walked around the room, examining the walls. Dad, where is that music coming from?

Sol pointed out the speakers in the ceiling. Mattie hadn’t even noticed the music until Danny mentioned it. Then she heard strange lyrics pour out: Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer. She and Sol exchanged a startled look.

Englische Schpieles, Sol murmured and shrugged his shoulders. English music.

The English girl, still talking to the receptionist, pulled off her hat and scarf. Hair the color of ripened peaches spilled around her shoulders.

Is that a Burberry scarf? the receptionist asked the girl.

What kind of a berry is a burr-berry? Danny asked Mattie, but she hushed him before he could ask another question. Once her son got going, nothing stopped him. He had more questions than there were answers.

Mattie overheard the English girl ask the receptionist if she could just pick something up and go.

No, no, the receptionist said. The doctor always likes to talk to his patients before he renews a prescription.

Why? the girl asked, her voice a little louder, exasperated. I just saw him six months ago.

The telephone rang and the receptionist turned her attention to it, grabbing the receiver as she pointed to a chair for the girl to sit in. Take a seat, she mouthed. He’ll be with you as soon as he can. She pointed to a basket of candy canes. Help yourself.

The girl picked out a candy cane, turned slowly around, and found an empty seat.

Mattie had it wrong. The English girl wasn’t a girl at all, but a woman. A woman with a very odd haircut. It was longer on one side than the other. Peculiar! Other than the cockeyed haircut, the woman was quite lovely, Mattie realized, with blue eyes that tilted at the corners and a soft, round face. But there was turmoil behind those eyes—as if the world were all at sea. Danny whispered a question to Sol and the woman startled, as if she had forgotten anyone else was in the room. She looked curiously at Mattie and Sol and Danny as she took in their Plain clothes—a look of puzzlement Mattie was long accustomed to. Then Danny left his father’s side to cross the room to the English woman. Mattie reached out to stop him, but Sol put a hand on her knee. Danny was known for wandering off, talking to strangers. Sol always said to let him be, that it was in his nature to be curious. Mattie used to be more agreeable, allowing Danny room to be adventurous, but over the last year or so, she could feel herself changing in a way she didn’t like and couldn’t help.

Danny sat down next to the woman and showed her a wooden whistle. The woman looked at the whistle politely, but seemed a little uncomfortable around a child, especially a Plain one. Danny didn’t seem to notice her discomfort, but then, that was Danny. He assumed everyone liked to talk to him. My dad made this for me. For my birthday. He looked up at her. Want to hear what it sounds like? It’s an owl whistle.

Danny, Sol said in a warning voice. You’re in a doctor’s office.

As soon as Danny mentioned the word owl, the English woman visibly relaxed. He won’t bother anyone, she said, her eyes glued to Danny’s whistle. It’s just us in the waiting room. I’d like to hear it.

Danny’s cheeks puffed with air as he blew out three short hoots. It’s a screech owl. Everybody thinks a screech owl should sound screechy, but it’s really a hoot sound. It’s the barn owl that sounds so screechy. He then imitated the ear-piercing sound of a barn owl. I found a baby barn owl with a broken wing. I feed it mice every day.

The woman fingered the wooden whistle. Must be nice to have an owl for a pet.

Oh, it’s not a pet, Danny said solemnly. Wild animals should never be pets. My dad helped me set the wing, and after it’s healed, we’re going to release it.

I’ve always admired owls, she said. I think I read somewhere that owls are the only birds that fly without making any sound.

That’s true! Danny said. And they’re not waterproof like other birds. They get soaking wet and weighed down by their soggy feathers so that they can’t fly. If an owl can’t dry off quickly, it can shiver with cold and die. He wrapped his arms around himself and started to shake, to show her how a wet, cold owl acted.

The woman burst out with a laugh. How old are you?

Six-and-a-half, Danny said, as if it were one word. He poked his spectacles higher up on his nose. How old are you?

Danny! Mattie said sharply.

A slow smile softened the woman’s features. It’s only fair. I asked him. He’s asking me. She turned to Danny. I’m twenty-five. And my name is Jaime. Jaime Fitzpatrick. She held out her hand to Danny.

He reached over and shook her hand. Danny Riehl.

Are birds your favorite animals? she asked.

He wrinkled his nose, a sign he was deep in thought. I haven’t decided yet.

I used to take pictures of rare birds, Jaime said to Danny. And once I photographed the migration flyway during the Audubon Christmas Count.

I know about that! Danny said. My cousin lives in Ohio and rides bicycles to count the birds. My cousin and his friends set records on how many birds they counted. He sat down next to her. What do you take pictures of now?

Jaime hesitated. I take pictures of people, mostly. I’ve been working at Sears Portrait Studio. Just down the street from here.

You don’t take pictures of birds anymore?

Not like I used to. But it’s my favorite thing—to take pictures of nature and wildlife. It’s not easy to do. Movement is a photographer’s greatest challenge, and birds are always on the move. But then you’ve got a trade-off—because natural light is so much better than artificial lighting.

Danny’s face scrunched up. If you like to be outside so much, then why would you work inside?

A strange expression crossed Jaime’s face. Well, the backdrops for the portraits can make it look like a person is outside. She glanced at her watch.

Danny, du hast genug sach Fraugt, Mattie said. Danny, you’ve asked enough questions.

The nurse opened the door and asked sternly, Did somebody let a wild bird loose in the waiting room? Her face broke into a mischievous grin as Danny’s eyes went round. "Why, lo and behold, it’s not a wild bird at all. It’s just a wild boy! She winked at Danny and he giggled. We’re ready for you now, Mrs. Riehl. She turned to Sol. Shouldn’t be a long appointment."

Danny and I will go outside, Sol told Mattie, giving her a look of reassurance.

We can play catch with snowballs! Danny said.

He ran to the door and opened it, letting in a blast of cold air. Then he turned and waved goodbye to the English woman. She tossed him the candy cane and he caught it in his mittened hands. He turned to Mattie, a silent request to eat it. She nodded, and he gave the English woman what Sol called his jack-o’-lantern grin. Four front teeth were missing.

As soon as the Amish woman disappeared into an exam room, the nurse returned to the waiting room and motioned to Jaime to follow her into the doctor’s office and step on the scale. She moved the weight until it finally balanced, whistling two notes: up, down. You’re sure inching your way up that scale!

Jaime studied her feet. Must be these shoes. Along with her new hobby of grief snacking.

I don’t think so, hon.

Jaime frowned at her, but the nurse was oblivious as she scribbled down the weight. "Five pounds is really not all that much."

The nurse snorted. No, but ten sure is, sugar.

Jaime winced. The funk she’d been in since her mother’s death last summer was taking its toll in more ways than just increasingly uncomfortable clothes.

As the nurse wrapped the blood pressure cuff around Jaime’s arm, she turned to face the instrument on the wall. Long blond hair swung around the perfect oval of the nurse’s face. Jaime poked an errant curl behind her ear and wondered how the nurse’s hair fell like that—sleek and smooth—unlike her own hair, which continued to defy the new straightening product she’d paid way too much for.

Born that way, she said, reading Jaime’s mind.

I figured, Jaime sighed. Her own hair was the curse of her existence, especially on a windy winter day when even industrial-strength styling gel couldn’t keep her hair settled down.

The nurse rolled up the cuff and stuffed it into the holder on the wall. Your hair is . . . unusual.

Okay. Now the nurse had sailed past mildly irritating and was flirting in the annoying zone.

You don’t see that color every day . . . unless it’s out of a bottle.

This nurse had a knack for poking Jaime’s raw spots: her blossoming weight, her unruly hair. What was next, her ever-so-absent father? Or better still, what about her fragile marriage? Well, it’s not, Jaime said, sounding a tad more defensive than she intended. At least her hair color added some flash to the rest of what she considered her very ordinary features. She’d always liked her eyes, though, and she liked to believe their slight tilt gave her a mysterious look. As a child she used to wear a scarf over the bottom half of her face as a veil and pretend she was a Moroccan spy.

So, doll, are you ready for Christmas?

Jaime never understood why people used diminutives in place of names. Hon, doll, sugar. Why didn’t the nurse just admit she couldn’t remember Jaime’s name? This year will be a little different. We’re not really celebrating. We’re going away for Christmas.

The nurse turned to leave. Christmas has a way of coming, wherever you might be. She snapped Jaime’s chart shut. Dr. Engel will be seeing you today. He’s on-call for the regular doctor.

Jaime’s head snapped up. What happened to Dr. Cramer?

Dr. Cramer is at his daughter’s preschool recital. Dr. Engel agreed to take over his office visits today, as a favor. She tilted her head. Dr. Engel will just be a moment. Or two.

The nurse hummed along with the tinny music piped in through the ceiling speaker: I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus. She smiled distractedly at Jaime as she reached for the door. The door was decorated as a giant gift—covered with shiny foil wrapping paper and taped with a big red bow. The bow came loose and fluttered to the floor. Blasted bow, she muttered as she picked it up and pressed the sticky side against the door. These decorations have been up since before Thanksgiving. I’ll be glad when Christmas is over and this place can go back to looking like a doctor’s office.

As the door closed behind the nurse, Jaime glanced at her wristwatch and weighed her options. She was frustrated with herself for leaving this errand to the last minute. She heard a gust of wind blow a tree limb against the building and walked over to the window to look at the ominous clouds.

She saw two black hats outside—the Amish father and his son gathering snow that had dusted the ground, packing it into balls, and pelting each other. The Amish boy’s snowballs weren’t packed hard enough and they splayed apart after release. Soon there was as much snow being flung through the air as rested on the ground. The sight made her laugh out loud. That little boy was so cute! Strawberry blond hair, thick blond lashes framing saucer-sized brown eyes, and freckles across his nose, like someone had sprinkled it with cinnamon. The nosepiece of his eyeglasses was wrapped with adhesive tape. And such round cheeks! He didn’t walk so much as he bounced; he didn’t talk so much as he bubbled over like a shaken-up can of soda. She wasn’t really one to notice children. C.J., her husband, was the one who noticed kids, in restaurants or at parks. But then, he was a teacher.

The little boy nailed his father square in the face with a snowball. Jaime’s gaze shifted to the father. She felt a pang of worry for the boy, fully expecting the father to start bellowing. Instead, she saw the father wipe snow dramatically off his face and laugh. Then he chased his son and grabbed him in a bear hug. That sight . . . it was so unexpected, so charming, she framed it in her mind like a photograph. If her mother were still here, she would’ve turned it into a Currier & Ives type of Christmas card, with such a caption as The best things to give your children aren’t things!

Tears pricked Jaime’s eyes. She had to stop doing that. Stop cobbling together imaginary conversations with her mother as if she were still alive. She wasn’t.

Jaime’s mother had worked as a writer for an inspirational greeting card company. She spent all day thinking up verses and phrases: An Easter card that read, No bunny loves you like Jesus! Or a pick-me-up card: Exercise daily! Walk with Jesus! These platitudes—always with exclamation points!—infused her mother’s everyday speech in a way that used to embarrass Jaime, especially around her friends.

No longer.

She leaned her forehead against the cold windowpane. A moment ago she had been laughing.

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