A Secret Identity (The Amish Farm Trilogy 2)
Page 1
GAYLE ROPER
HARVEST HOUSE PUBLISHERS
EUGENE, OREGON
Some Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. Some are from the King James Version of the Bible.
Cover by Dugan Design Group, Bloomington, Minnesota
Author photo on backcover by Ken Rada Photography
Published in association with the Books & Such Literary Agency, 52 Mission Circle, Suite 122, PMB 170, Santa Rosa, CA 95409-5370, www.booksandsuch.biz.
A SECRET IDENTITY
Copyright © 1998 by Gayle Roper
Published 2010 by Harvest House Publishers
Eugene, Oregon 97402
www.harvesthousepublishers.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Roper, Gayle G.
[Document]
A secret identity / Gayle Roper.
p. cm.
Originally published as: The document. Sisters, Or. : Palisades, 1998.
ISBN 978-0-7369-2587-7 (pbk.)
1. Amish—Fiction. 2. Adopted children—Fiction. 3. Manic-depressive persons—Fiction. 4. Penn-sylvania—Fiction. 5. Christian fiction. I. Title.
PS3568.O68D63 2010
813’.54—dc22
2009047460
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—electronic, mechanical, digital, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
Printed in the United States of America
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 / DP-SK / 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
With affection for
Bob and Linda
Rick and Eileen
Barb and Doug
Glenn and Pam
and all the other parents
involved with us in
the adventure of adoption.
BIEMSDERFER FAMILY TREE
God sets the lonely in families…
PSALM 68:6
Contents
Biemsderfer Family Tree
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Epilogue
Discussion Questions
A Note to Readers
About the Author
Coming January 1, 2011 Book 3 in The Amish Farm Trilogy
And be sure to read the first book in The Amish Farm Trilogy
More fine Amish fiction from Harvest House Publishers…
AmishReader.com
Chapter 1
When I look back on the three-month period that effectively and thoroughly changed the course of my life, I sometimes wonder which event had the greatest impact. Was it the finding of Pop’s papers? Perhaps it was the terrible and vengeful things that happened as a result of following to its logical conclusion what I found in those papers? Or was it meeting Todd?
Maybe the best answer is all of the above, though it could be argued that without Pop’s papers, without “The Document,” nothing of import would have happened.
I sat on my bed in the Horse and Buggy Motel in Bird-in-Hand, Pennsylvania, and stared out the dirty picture window at the real horse and buggy standing on the other side of the street. A woman wearing a white head covering and a light-blue dress that reached halfway to her ankles stood by the chestnut horse, stroking its neck as she talked to some tourists clustered around her. I could tell they were tourists by their shorts and T-shirts and hair. Even someone as ignorant of the subtleties of Lancaster County life as I was knew the purple-and-red hair of one of the grumpy-looking teenage girls wasn’t Amish.
My long-haired calico cat, Rainbow, sat beside me as straight as any well-trained poodle waiting for a treat, watching the scene out the window intently. Usually she had all the spine of a noodle, collapsing in a boneless pile wherever she was. Now she blinked thoughtfully as the tourists climbed into the buggy and the woman followed. In a moment the buggy rolled onto Route 340, the horse’s front legs prancing high like a trotter pulling a sulky around a racetrack.
Was the driver an Amish lady? Did Amish ladies give buggy rides to tourists? Somehow I doubted it since even I knew that as a people the Amishsically kept to themselves. As I watched the buggy disappear, I thought again about how little I knew about this most interesting and obvious subculture in Pennsylvania.
I reached out and stroked Rainbow on the white spot under her chin. “I guess I need to do some quick research and then some sightseeing if I’m going to be here for a while.”
Rainbow responded by yawning, marching across the bed, and curling up on the pillow. She had found today’s trip from our home in Silver Spring, Maryland, to be very tiring and unnerving in the extreme, and she’d spent the entire two-and-a-half-hour trip yelling for help. That’s exactly what her plaintive cries sounded like: “Elp! Elp!” in high soprano.
I left Rainbow to her dreams and walked to the motel office. Against one wall was a large rack of tourist brochures. I took one of everything. Several books on Amish life were displayed in a carousel, and I bought four. Hopefully the writers knew what they were talking about, and I’d get legitimate information, not touristy swill.
Back in the room I studied the brochures and found I could do everything from visiting an amusement park to enjoying outlet shopping, from touring a genuine Amish farm to eating seven sweets and seven sours, whatever they were. I could see a play at a Christian theater called Sight and Sound or hear a lecture at a reconstruction of the tabernacle of the Old Testament at the Mennonite Visitors Center. How in the world could I determine what was genuine and what was money-making fluff?
I gave the books I’d bought a more thorough once over and was encouraged by the academic letters after the authors’ names. I settled beside Rainbow and read for about an hour, and then I felt too antsy to stay in the room any longer. I left the brochures and books scattered across the bed and took myself for a blessedly silent drive.
I followed twisting, two-lane macadam roads wherever they led me, figuring I could always find my way back to 340 if I got lost. I rolled down the car windows and enjoyed the sweet, heady scent of wild honeysuckle, the clean aroma of newly mown grass, and the distinctive smell of a country staple: cow manure. I eyed the fields of alfalfa, tomatoes, and corn glowing golden in the slanting light of the evening sun. I found myself filled with expectancy and a warm sense of purpose, a somewhat surprising feeling considering the emotional jolt I’d recently received and the changes it had forced on me.
Maybe my inner glow was because I had chosen to make at least some of the changes myself instead of someone imposing them on me. I had resolved to come and search all on my own. Me, Miss Don’t-Rock-My-Boat. I’d come in spite of advice to the contrary from everyone, including the almost-family family lawyer and my brother, Ward. I squinted into the setting sun and felt almost happy for the first time in a long time.
I rounded a curve and was forced to slow suddenly and dramatically for a closed buggy, gray and fragile-looking, moving slowly ahead of me. As I inched along in its wake, I stared at the large, red reflective triangle on its lower back and the rectangular red reflectors placed at intervals up the sides and across the top of—what do
you call the back end of a buggy? It wasn’t a trunk like on a car or a hatch like on a van. It was more like a little wall, but that word seemed too substantial for the gray surface in front of me. Small battery-driven taillights blinked at me but gave no answer.
At the rate we were moving, I’d be back at the Horse and Buggy tomorrow morning. Did I dare take a risk and pass in spite of the solid yellow line and long, slow curve? Or did I have to trail along at one horsepower until the buggy turned into a farm lane somewhere?
As I worried over this quandary with more energy than it was worth, a car zipped up behind me, slowed momentarily, and then sped around both me and the buggy. Question answered. I hit the gas and followed. After all, he had a Pennsylvania license. He must know what he was doing.
I pulled back in my lane and ambled on, each bend in the road opening another vista of patchwork fields, farmhouses, barns, and silos. The overwhelming color was green: emerald, celadon, olive, lime, forest. Fields of burgeoning crops; copses of maples, beeches, and pines; lawns and gardens; and vines. I sighed. I’d never realized before how soothing green was.
I rounded another curve and once again hit the brakes, jarred out of my near stupor by the delightful sight before me. One thing for sure, we never saw anything like this in the congestion and traffic of Silver Spring.
A small Amish girl of eight or ten stood in the middle of the road, her small face screwed-up in concentration as she drove an ungainly herd of Holsteins across the road from the pasture to the barn. She waved a stick to encourage the beasts, but they seemed unaware of the goad or the child as they plodded slowly across the macadam to the safety and release of the barn and its milking machines.
The girl, her hair pulled back in a bun at the base of her neck like a little adult, ignored me and the two cars waiting from the opposite direction. One of the cows stepped out of line and started wandering toward me. The little girl calmly and authoritatively whapped her on the flank. The cow immediately fell back into place.
I looked left and saw for the first time the boy in black breeches and white shirt, his straw hat pushed back on his head, bare feet flying. He was shooing the cows along from behind by waving his arms and shouting at them. As the last milk cow passed out of the pasture and through the gate, he pulled it closed. Climbing the bottom rung, he carefully fastened a rope loop around the top rail of the gate and the adjoining fence. He jumped to the ground, raced into the road after his sister and herd, and turned to grin at me. I grinned back and waggled my fingers. He ducked his head shyly, ran through the gate into the farmyard, and pushed it shut behind him.
That night I dreamed of towheads in straw hats, buggies pulled by graceful horses, and barefoot little girls wielding big sticks. It was the soundest sleep I’d had since I’d found Pop’s papers.
I arrived at the office of Todd Reasoner, Esq., at 2:55 the next afternoon. I walked to the receptionist’s desk, noted her nameplate, and extended my hand.
“Hello, Mrs. Smiley. I’m Cara Bentley.”
I admit I’d gotten used to a certain response to my name. Those who knew Bentley Marts hopped to attention as if I had something to do with the stores’ success, and readers of romance novels frequently recognized my name too. Mrs. Smiley, however, turned her dour face toward me, and I felt as though I were not only tardy, which I wasn’t, but had brought in a significant helping of manure on my shoe.
“How do you do,” she said frostily, letting my hand hang suspended in space while her fingers remained on her computer keyboard. “Mr. Reasoner will be with you shortly. Please have a seat.” She tipped her head toward a pair of paisley-upholstered chairs against the far wall.
I took a seat, feeling I should sit at attention and wondering whether everyone who waited under the gimlet eye of Mrs. Smiley reacted the same way. To show she didn’t intimidate me—or at least to convince myself she didn’t—I boldly crossed one beige linen-clad knee over the other and straightened my beige silk shell. Still, I don’t think my shoulders had been thrown back so rigidly since inspection at Camp Sankanac when I was a kid.
Maybe she disapproved of slacks, but certainly mine were loose enough to be modest, and besides everyone wore slacks. Except the Amish. And the Mennonites. I’d seen more dresses in my two days in Bird-in-Hand than I’d seen in years. Then again, maybe Mrs. Smiley’s aversion was to beige. Or to me. Or to everyone.
Ignoring me, she bent over her work, her sensible blue dress buttoned to the neck, unrelieved by jewelry or scarf. I could see her low-heeled blue pumps under the desk were pressed neatly side-by-side. Her gray hair was carefully permed and sprayed. Wire-rimmed glasses hung around her neck on a chain. She suddenly grabbed them and pushed them onto her nose. She sniffed, set a folder of papers on her right, and began typing at terrifying speed.
Surprisingly, her fingers were beautifully manicured with hot pink nails. On the third pink fingernail of each hand were little white flowers with jeweled centers that sparkled as her hands danced over the keys, creating a beauty completely at odds with the sterility of the rest of her.
Like the writer I was, I began creating a persona for Mrs. Smiley that explained her hauteur and her nails. Somehow I knew she wouldn’t like me giving her a husband who had left her for a younger woman who wore hot-pink, low-necked tops and tight jeans instead of merely pink nails. Nor would she like my imagined pudgy professor who pursued her now, trying without success to find the hot pink part of her that allowed the nails.
She carefully ignored me for an eternity of five minutes, during which I had remade her by dying her hair a soft brown, having her wear lots of corals and roses, and transforming her into a lovely heroine overcoming a lifetime of sorrows and pain. Finally Mrs. Smiley rose, looked suspiciously at me, and beckoned. “Mr. Reasoner will see you now.”
I unfolded my legs and followed her to a door, where she paused and knocked softly. When she pushed open the door, she stepped aside for me. “Miss Cara Bentley,” she said for all the world as though she were announcing the queen. I tried to look regal.
Todd Reasoner rose, a smile of professional welcome on his handsome face. Maybe it was the last five minutes in Mrs. Smiley’s presence or the years of talking to little, brittle Mr. Havens, our family attorney, but I perked up at the sight of my new lawyer.
He glanced quickly at Mrs. Smiley, nodded absently, and said, “Thank you.” Her cheeks turned almost as pink as her nails as she bobbed her head in his direction. I watched in fascination.
She’s smitten, I thought. Who cares that he’s twenty or thirty years her junior. She thinks he’s wonderful. The son she never had? Or the man she’d always dreamed of? No wonder my pudgy professor didn’t appeal to her.
I looked at Todd Reasoner again and understood why she was so taken with him. It might have been the curly brown hair or the deep-brown eyes or the neatly tailored tan suit over a white shirt and tan tie with incredibly narrow, brown, diagonal stripes. Or it might have been the shoulders, broad enough for one of my heroines to swoon against quite effectively or the jaw so strongly hewn that I could cut my finger on it, were I ever fortunate enough to touch it.
He came from behind his desk as Mrs. Smiley withdrew and indicated a seat in a padded leather chair. “Miss Bentley,” he said politely as I took the proffered seat. He then retreated behind his desk to his own padded leather chair.
As he took his seat, I glanced around the room. On the wall were the obligatory diplomas, matted and framed, a BA from Ursinus College, and a JD from Dickinson Law School. I saw he was a member of the Pennsylvania Bar, the frame of this document a magnificent cherry with several gold stripes worked into the wood lest anyone miss its import.
A pair of what appeared to be original watercolors hung on the wall to my right, lovely renditions of Lancaster County without any of the cloying cuteness aimed at the tourist trade. Beneath the paintings were a sofa and two chairs. A beautiful quilt, a kaleidoscope of animals tumbling from an ark marooned on Mount Ararat, hung on the wall behi
nd Mr. Reasoner. A fern, a philodendron, and a hearty croton sat on a credenza under a window.
“How may I help you, Miss Bentley?” Todd Reasoner asked.
I turned my attention to him. Such a hardship. “I’m beginning an adoption search, Mr. Reasoner, and I need clarification on Pennsylvania laws concerning the accessibility of records.”
He nodded. “For yourself, I assume?”
“Well, sort of. I’m seeking the information for my curiosity, but the person whose records I’m seeking is my grandfather.”
He studied me a moment. “Are you seeking this information for him without his permission? Or can he no longer search himself?”
I felt the weight of missing Pop settle on my chest like a heavy stone, the pressure debilitating. I forced a breath. “He died recently.”
The lawyer dipped his head. “I’m sorry for your loss.”
“Thank you.” I studied my knees for a moment. “He was ninety-three when he died, and I’ve learned since his death that he was adopted. That we aren’t ‘blood’ Bentleys. That there’s a history we know nothing about.”
I reached into my purse and pulled out an envelope. I drew from it the Certificate of Adoption and passed it across the desk. I read from memory as Todd read for the first time.
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
In the Court of Common Pleas, No. 2, of Lancaster County in re: Adoption of Lehman Biemsderfer, June 1919. Be it remembered that I, Herman F. Walton, Prothonotary of the Courts of Common Pleas, No. 2, of Lancaster County, do hereby certify, that the following is the true and correct copy of the decree: