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The Yada Yada Prayer Group Gets Rolling
The Yada Yada Prayer Group Gets Rolling Read online
© 2007 by Neta Jackson.
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.
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Scripture quotations are taken from the following: THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.
The Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60819. All rights reserved.
The New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
The King James Version of the Bible. Public domain.
Selected song lyrics are taken from the following:
“I Go to the Rock” by Dottie Rambo, Copyright © 1977 John T. Benson Publishing Co. (ASCAP). All rights reserved.
“Knowing You” by Graham Kendrick, Copyright © 1993 Make Way Music, www.grahamkendrick.co.uk All rights reserved. International copyright secured. Used by permission.
This novel is a work of fiction. Any references to real events, businesses, organizations, and locales are intended only to give the fiction a sense of reality and authenticity.
Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ISBN 978-1-4185-3658-9 (eBook)
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Jackson, Neta.
The yada yada prayer group gets rolling / Neta Jackson.
p. cm.
ISBN-13: 978-1-59145-362-8 (softcover)
ISBN-10: 1-59145-362-3 (softcover)
1. Women--Illinois--Fiction. 2. Female friendship--Fiction. 3. Christian women--Fiction. 4. Chicago (Ill.)--Fiction. 5. Prayer groups--Fiction. I. Title.
PS3560.A2415Y3375 2007
813'.54--dc22
2007008333
07 08 09 10 11 RRD 7 6 5 4 3
To the Yada Yada Prayer Support Team . . .
Pam Sullivan
Karen Evans
Julia Pferdehirt
Janalee Croegaert
Cynthia Wilson
Sue Mitrovitch
Janelle Schneider
Becky Gansky
Jodee Vragel
Sherri Hopper
Dawn Ashby
who committed themselves to pray for the writing of every Yada Yada
novel, prayed me through writer’s block and family crises,
rejoiced with me when I met my deadlines,
and encouraged me with e-mail prayers—
even though a few of these precious sisters are readers I’ve never met!
And to Terry-Ann Wilson,
bookstore owner in Essex, Ontario,
who provided the name for . . . well, you’ll find out!
Contents
Prologue
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
Book Club Questions
Starting a Yada Yada Prayer Group
Prologue
A surge of energy flowed through the wire, a cocktail of adrenaline greedy for power. The Spark flexed, pushing at the cord that gripped its life force, holding it in, always holding it back, harnessing its urge to jump free, to feed, to grow . . .
“Girl! You be careful with that outlet. You got too many cords plugged in there.”
“Nah. It’s okay . . . look at that, will ya? The kids are gonna love those lights. Kinda skimpy though. We could use a few more strings.”
“I dunno. Looks okay to me. What else we gonna put on it?”
“The kids can make stuff—paper chains, snowflakes. String popcorn. That’s what I used to do as a kid.”
“Ha. You were never a kid. Bet you never made one of them paper snowflakes, neither.”
“You don’t know what you talkin’ about. Gimme a sheet of paper, I’ll show you. Scissors. We got scissors anywhere?”
Constrained, the Spark quit struggling and resigned itself to keeping the strings of Christmas lights lit on a meager diet of fifteen watts . . . Jolted awake, the Spark gulped air frantically. Zzzzzt. Zzzzzt.
“Ow!”
“Mikey! You know you ain’t s’posed to touch no electric cord.”
“I jus’ wanted ta turn the tree on. But it bited me!”
“Nuthin’ bit you, stupid.”
“Did too. Like that.”
“Ow! Let go! I’m gonna tell Mama, an’ she whip your butt good.”
“But you dint believe me. Had to show you.”
“You didn’t have ta show me nuthin’. ’Sides, your fingernails all dirty! What if you broke my skin, huh? You gonna give me rabies!”
The Spark laid back down. Hunger nibbled at its belly, but there was nothing to feed on. Might as well sleep . . .
ON. OFF. On. Off. On. Off . . .
The Spark had nearly given up its quest for bigger and better things.
“When we gonna take down this tree? It’s already past New Year’s. We always took our tree down New Year’s Day.”
“What? Ain’t you never heard of the Twelve Days of Christmas?”
“That’s just a song. One of them counting songs, sing it over an’ over till ya wanna puke.”
“Nah, nah, it’s for real. Christmas Day’s just the beginning. Some churches got stuff goin’ for weeks, before an’ after. Saint Lucy, or somebody, wears candles in her hair and gives out real homemade pastries. And Boxing Day—don’t know what that one is. Three Kings Day—that’s in January when we really s’posed to give gifts like the Wise Men brought to baby Jesus.”
“How do you know all this stuff?”
“Oh, I get around. Girl, just pour some more water in that bucket.”
“What for? Tree’s too dead. Ain’t drinkin’ up anymore. Next year when I’m outta here, I’m gonna get me one of them artificial trees. I’m tired of sweeping up all these needles.”
“Ha. We used ta leave ours up till all the needles fell off.”
“What? Your mama put up with that?”
“Nah. My grandma raised all six of us. And she didn’t see too good. Here . . . plug in the tree an’ dim the other lights. See? Still looks like we just put it up.”
The familiar jolt. The Spark licked hopefully . . . and
was rewarded. A small frayed piece of the cord. Just a taste. Sizzled on its tongue and disappeared.
“You smell somethin’? Somethin’ hot?”
“Ha. Hope so. Maybe the heat’s come back on.”
The Spark laid low, nibbling its way along the frayed cord. The more it nibbled, the more its hunger grew. Urgent now, it smoldered and smoked, pushing its way into the dark. And then . . . tinder.
Fragrant. Green. Dry.
The Spark consumed the fallen pine needles, its hunger glowing into a small flame. But there was more. More! With utter abandon, the Spark became a blaze, leaping and crackling and climbing the brittle branches. Feeding and fueling, the Spark flashed into a full bonfire. Glorious light! Nothing could stop it now!
Feeling its power, the Spark—fat and full, dancing and darting—leaped from the charred tree to the overstuffed furniture, consuming the frayed fabric and matted stuffing, licking its way up the walls and across the ceiling, finally embracing the whole room in a fiery feast—
“Fire! Fire! Everybody out!”
“Oh my God! Oh, please God!”
“Keep low! Keep low! Don’t take anything—just go! Go!”
“My baby! My baby! Where’s—? I gotta go back! Let me go!”
Screams. Cries. Coughing and gagging.
“Mama! Maaaamaaaaa!”
“I got you! I got you! Run!”
1
Stepping over Willie Wonka’s inert body sprawled on the floor, I groped in the shadows behind the Christmas tree for the electric cord, felt for the outlet, and plugged it in. Instantly, a glittering fairyland replaced the early morning gloom. Framed neatly by the bay window in the front room of our first-floor apartment, the six-foot fir tree we’d found at Poor Bob’s Tree Lot winked and twinkled its multicolored minilights like little blessings.
Shivering, I pulled Denny’s robe tighter around me and drank in the sight. If I had to choose between Christmas presents or a Christmas tree, I’d take the tree any day. Memories hung from every branch. Orange-juice-lid ornaments the kids made when they were in kindergarten bobbed nobly on the front branches. The ornaments we’d given both kids each year had multiplied until they actually filled up the tree. I smiled. That was a tradition I’d brought to our marriage from my family, who had carefully packed up my ornaments as a wedding present when I got married. As we would do when Josh and Amanda—
My smile faded. Ack! Didn’t want to go there. I dreaded the Christmas our tree would be denuded of our kids’ ornaments.
I heard the coffee gurgling its last gasps as the pot filled. Scurrying back to the kitchen as fast as the stiffness in my left leg would let me, I poured my first mug of the day and then settled into the recliner facing the glittering tree for a few quiet moments before our Saturday began. It had been a nice Christmas—nothing spectacular, but nice. Leslie Stuart, our upstairs neighbor and one of my Yada Yada sisters, had invited her parents to visit her for a few days—a Christmas miracle big enough to warrant a few angels singing, “Glory! Hallelujah!” if you asked me. We’d met the senior Stuarts briefly when they’d arrived at our shared two-flat on Christmas Eve, but we’d officially invited the three of them for supper tonight.
Which meant I had to get everything ready this morning, since Ruth and Ben Garfield had also asked us and the other Yada Yadas to their house for baby Isaac’s brit mila this afternoon.
“Brit mila? What’s that?” I’d blurted when Ruth called me the day before Christmas.
“Brit mila—the ritual circumcision ceremony. A newborn Jewish male is joined to the Jewish people on the eighth day. Read your Bible, Jodi.”
I had ignored the dig. “Don’t they do that in the hospital nowadays? With Josh—”
“Is your Josh Jewish? Didn’t think so. So, are you coming?”
“Wait a minute. The twins were born almost a month ago. What happened to the eighth day?”
A long pause. Not like Ruth, who usually filled up gaps in conversation like rainwater flowing into sidewalk cracks. I had immediately regretted my blunt question and started to apologize, but Ruth had just sighed. “Pediatrician said we had to wait. Preemies, you know. But . . .” Her voice had brightened. “All is well. Havah and Isaac came home from the hospital on their due date—last Saturday. So this Saturday is the ‘official’ eighth day. The eighth day of Hanukkah too. See? God is good.”
“All the time,” I’d agreed. “Sure, we’ll be there.”
Should have checked with my family first.
“Mo-om,” Amanda had wailed. “That’s gross! If they gotta do that circumcision thing, at least do it in private. Not with everybody gawking at that poor naked baby. He’ll be so embarrassed when he’s thirteen and we all say, ‘My, how you’ve grown! I was at your circumcision.’ ”
I had ignored her. Sixteen-year-olds are embarrassed by everything. But even Denny had blanched. “Uh, I dunno, Jodi. I’m kinda squeamish. What if I faint?”
Josh, however, was the only one with a real excuse. “Sorry, Mom. We’re doing a Christmas party at Manna House for the kids.”
Now it was Saturday. The Big Day for Ben and Ruth. I sipped the hot coffee, feeling its lingering warmth. The sky beyond the bay windows—more visible in winter through the bare tree branches lining our narrow street on Chicago’s north side—had begun to lighten. Well, God, I thought, this year is almost over, a new one about to begin. Didn’t I tell You I could use some “dull and boring” last year about this time? What happened, huh?
Huh. Fact was, it had been a tough year for the Yada Yada Prayer Group all the way around. Nonyameko’s husband, Mark, beaten up after that racist rally . . . Chanda finding out she had breast cancer . . . Florida’s boy arrested and locked up in the juvenile detention center . . . Avis’s daughter ending up at the Manna House shelter for abused and homeless women . . . Ruth—childless, on her third husband, and pushing fifty—discovering she was pregnant with twins . . . Josh, our firstborn, refusing to go to college and falling in love with an “older woman” . . .
Didn’t I walk with you every step of the way? The Voice in my spirit spoke gently but firmly. Have I brought you this far to leave you now?
“Yes, Lord, thank You,” I whispered. “And . . . I guess it’s a good thing You don’t show us everything that’s going to happen ahead of time.” Because if this coming year was anything like the last year and a half since I’d met the rest of the Yada Yadas at that Chicago Women’s Conference, change was in the wind.
Just then, Willie Wonka wheezed noisily to his feet and pushed his wet nose into my lap, rear end wiggling impatiently. Translated: I gotta go out—now.
Yeah, well. Some things never change.
BY THE TIME THE THREE OF US Baxters squeezed into the Garfields’ compact living room that afternoon, there wasn’t much room to sit. Amanda—as I’d suspected—wouldn’t dream of being left behind, though her face fell when she realized Delores and Ricardo Enriquez had left all the kids at home. Amanda never missed an opportunity to show up when Delores’s sixteen-year-old son José might be there.
I spied Ruth standing by the front window holding one of the twins; Delores, standing beside her, was patting the other twin over her shoulder. Had to be the boy. Even from across the room I could see the large red birthmark covering a third of the baby’s face. I winced, not yet used to such a conspicuous raspberry.
I quickly counted Yada Yada noses. Besides Ruth and Delores, I spied Hoshi Takahashi and Nonyameko Sisulu-Smith sitting on the couch—but not Nony’s husband, Mark, who was still recovering from his head injury. Yo-Yo Spencer, who’d been taken under the Garfields’ wing when she got out of prison after doing time for forgery, perched on the arm of the couch . . . was that it? Only five of us? Well, six, counting myself. Where was everybody?
But I only had time to give the couch sitters a quick wave before a bearded man wearing a prayer shawl began to chant a prayer. Voices immediately hushed all around the cramped living room. This must be the mohel, who, according
to Ruth, would perform the ceremony. “An expert he is, trained to do the circumcision with minimal discomfort,” she’d told us on the phone. Then she’d muttered, “He’d better be.”
After the prayer, the mohel called out, “Kvatter!”
Heads turned as Ruth nodded to Delores. “Delores Enriquez is kvatterin, the child’s godmother,” she announced with that stubborn tilt of her chin, daring anyone to disagree. My mouth dropped in delight, and I saw our Yada Yada sisters exchange astonished smiles as Delores, blushing up to her hair roots, tenderly cradled the little boy and made her way toward the other end of the room where she handed the baby to her husband, Ricardo.
“And Ricardo Enriquez is kvatter, the child’s godfather,” Ruth announced.
Again, little gasps of surprise and pleasure circled the room. Well, well, I thought. No one deserves it more than Delores; she stuck with Ruth through this pregnancy like white on rice. But Ricardo. That was a surprise—though, sure, it made sense to have husband and wife be the godparents. They were hardly Jewish, though.
As Ricardo took the baby, the mohel with the prayer shawl said, “Baruch haba,” while Ruth and several others responded, “May he who cometh be blessed.” And then the mohel offered another prayer, mentioning God’s covenant with Abraham, the sign of which was circumcision. “. . . and through Abraham’s seed, all nations will be blessed.” And we all said, “Amen.”
The mohel took the baby from Ricardo Enriquez and handed him to someone sitting in a straight-back chair. Craning my neck, I saw Ruth’s husband, Ben—a brand-new daddy at sixty-something—take his tiny son and place him on a large pillow on his lap. Ruth, coming up behind me, muttered in my ear, “Huh. Would Ben let anyone else hold his only son for his brit mila? Lucy would let Charlie Brown kick the football first.”
I had to stuff my fist against my mouth to keep from laughing.
“—Oh Lord, King of the universe,” the mohel was praying once again, “who has sanctified us with Thy commandments, and commanded us concerning the rite of circumcision.” And then there was murmuring and rustling. Backs closed in around Ben and the baby.
This is it! I thought, looking away. I steeled myself for—