“The
Kellar’s are hosting an English country dance behind their barn in two weeks,”
said Mom one day in late October when I was 17. “How would you girls like to
go?”
"Really?"
Jen asked.
"You
and Dad are okay with it?"
Sure, my
parents had allowed us to learn English country dancing in P.E. But they had
always kept a careful eye on the proceedings to make sure it was solely aerobic
fun and no romance.
Mom
smiled. "We think you girls are old enough to behave appropriately. And it
will be with like-minded families."
“Who all’s
going?” Jen asked.
“The whole
homeschool group is invited. I know the Walker girls are going and the Sparks
and the Bakers—”
“And
Michael?” The words burst out before I could check myself. My face flushed.
“I think
Mrs. Anderson said he wasn’t working that weekend, so I would think so.”
Michael
had graduated that summer. Immediately he had started community college summer
classes and an internship with one of the men at his church. Jen and I hadn’t
seen much of him since graduation day five months ago.
I could
feel the adrenaline starting in my toes and spreading upwards. I felt
inexplicably giddy.
I looked
at Jen. She smiled.
“Yes, we
want to go!” we said.
I ran
outside and spun around and around in our small suburban backyard. I would have
run to the moon and back if I could have. I would have shouted and laughed out
loud, but I was afraid someone would hear me and get suspicious. I was going to
a English country dance, and the whole evening Michael would be there!
“Aren’t
you just a little too excited?” came a voice inside me.
“This is
Michael, we’re talking about,” I replied, all my emotions pouring into the
thought.
For the
five months of summer and early fall, I had been living on old memories.
Memories of the wave of his hair, the Greek god-like profile, the firm jaw, the
rare words exchanged. But for five years or more I had been living on
make-believe memories. Of him smiling down at me. Of him standing close to me
and tingles running up and down my spine. Of him choosing to come sit with me
on the park bench while I watched the others play. Of him running up to me as I
walked down a country road, of him peering into my face, seeming truly
interested in what I was thinking, and maybe, when I was very much losing the
battle of guarding my heart, I imagined him reaching out and—
But this
was real. I was really going to a country dance and Michael would really be
there.
I was 17.
He was 18. We weren’t children anymore. Things (like courtship and marriage)
could happen.
“What if Michael doesn’t show up?” came the
voice inside. “Will you still be able to enjoy yourself?”
I stopped
and chewed the inside of my lip. Enjoying the dance without Michael would be
hard. I would be disappointed. I really didn’t know if I could enjoy myself if Michael wasn’t there. He was the reason why I
wanted to go.
“Lord God,
I pray that Michael comes. I really want him to come.”
Again, the
tug-a-war of flesh and spirit.
“Lord,
please help me enjoy the dance if he doesn’t.”
I pushed
the thought aside and ran back into the house to work on math. The thought of math
always sobered up any romantic thoughts.
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