Amish Country Threats
Page 1
She was standing much too close.
Where was his self-discipline? Distance. He needed distance between him and Lilah.
She was also a woman in danger.
“Here, help me lift that big board on the other side of the tree.”
Lilah strode to the other end of the rough wooden plank. Some of the tension bled from his shoulders as the space between them grew wider, allowing him to breathe freely. Together, they heaved the large slab of wood and carried it sideways to a clear spot on the grass.
“Danke. Just a few more and we should be all set to go. Easy peasy.”
He smiled as a discreet snicker met his ear. Easy peasy was a favorite phrase of one of his clients. He’d latched on to several phrases during his time as an Englischer.
Lilah straightened, half turned, ready to go back for another board. The grass in front of her feet exploded. A familiar acrid odor rose in the air.
Gunpowder.
Someone was shooting at them.
“Get down!”
Dana R. Lynn grew up in Illinois. She met her husband at a wedding and told her parents she’d met the man she was going to marry. Nineteen months later, they were married. Today, they live in rural Pennsylvania with their three children and a variety of animals. In addition to writing, she works as a teacher for the deaf and hard of hearing and is active in her church.
Books by Dana R. Lynn
Love Inspired Suspense
Amish Country Justice
Plain Target
Plain Retribution
Amish Christmas Abduction
Amish Country Ambush
Amish Christmas Emergency
Guarding the Amish Midwife
Hidden in Amish Country
Plain Refuge
Deadly Amish Reunion
Amish Country Threats
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com.
Amish Country Threats
Dana R. Lynn
Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.
—Matthew 11:28–30
To my children. I am blessed to be your mother.
Acknowledgments
There are so many people I want to thank!
Brad, I love you! This has been a crazy time, glad you’re here with me. And thanks for all your knowledge about firefighters and EMTs! You were a great help!
Amy and Dee, my BFFs. I don’t know how I’d survive without you and our coffee dates!
Lee Tobin McClain and Rachel Dylan, this journey has been so much better with you two! I love you guys and thanks for all the sympathy.
To my writing friends, there are too many of you to name, but I appreciate your wisdom and support.
To my street team, you ladies are awesome and I love you!
To Tina, my editor, and Tamela, my agent, thanks for your support and guidance.
Most important, to my Lord Jesus Christ, I pray that my words bring You glory. I am humbled to be Your child.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Epilogue
Dear Reader
Excerpt from Alaskan Mountain Attack by Sarah Varland
ONE
“Lilah!” Lilah Schwartz jerked awake at her brother Jacob’s hoarse bellow. She tumbled from her bed and coughed as heavy, acrid smoke filled the air and coated her throat and nostrils.
Keep close to the floor. Crawling to the door, she ignored the splinter embedding itself in her palm. She struggled to breathe in as little as possible. Her bedroom was on the second floor. Even on her hands and knees, the air was thick with black smoke. Her eyes watered, stinging. Her airways shrank so small it felt like she was trying to breathe through a straw.
She reached the stairs and spun so she could crawl backward down the stairs. Lilah descended as quickly as she could without falling. Her limbs trembled, making movement awkward. Her lungs burned. She opened her mouth wide, gasping for air, but there was only smoke.
Gagging, she continued down the steps.
Jacob charged up the steps and grabbed her, hoisting her in his arms. His breathing was harsh and rasping in her ear. His arms shook as he carried her outside. The moment they hit the fresh summer air, she dragged in a deep lungful of oxygen. Jacob wobbled, then dropped to his knees, letting Lilah roll out of his arms and onto the dew-moistened grass. The sun was barely rising over the horizon. When he collapsed next to her, Hannah, his wife, ran over and begged him to get up. Despite her advanced pregnancy, she grabbed at her husband’s arms and tugged.
Jacob opened his eyes and put a hand to Hannah’s cheek, catching her tears. “I love you.”
When she sobbed, he turned to Lilah. The glassy look in his eyes terrified her. She reached out and clutched his hand. Vaguely, she was aware of the neighbors hovering around them. Someone yelled that an ambulance was on the way. The men were working on halting the spread of the fire.
It didn’t surprise her. Most of the people living in the eastern part of Holmes County, Ohio, were Amish. She’d lived in Sutter Springs, a borough tucked up against the thriving town of Berlin, Ohio, all her life. These people had known her and Jacob since they were born. They tended to help each other whenever the need arose.
Lilah kept all her focus on Jacob. He was all she had left since they’d lost their parents in a buggy accident six years earlier. Jacob had become father and brother to her. She couldn’t lose him.
“Lilah,” he rasped, his face ashen. “Not an accident. Buried. Go to office. It’s there—”
He stopped, choking.
“What’s in there? What am I looking for?”
Why was he thinking about his work now, when he needed to save his breath?
The ambulance arrived. Lilah watched them load Jacob into the vehicle. As the door closed, she held Hannah in her arms as her sister-in-law sobbed. She didn’t realize it would be the last time she ever saw her brother.
Three days later, Lilah held her tears at bay as she sat stoically in the buggy, riding behind the simple pine casket holding the body of her older brother, the man who’d died saving her. How would she survive without him? He was all she had. Jacob had been the only constant in her life since their parents had died.
And now he was gone, too.
She sniffed, blinking to clear her blurred vision. No one knew how the fire had started. All the evidence had burned up with the large farmhouse. The place she’d lived her entire life was nothing more than rubble and ash. She and Hannah had left Sutter Springs and moved in with Hannah’s mamm and daed. She appreciated the quiet of the small district but still missed her home. Twenty-nine years ago, her daed had built the haus for his new bride on the outskirts of Berlin, Ohio, a place known for its growing tourism. Growing up, her family had been far enough away to enjoy their privacy, but still had the option of hopping into their buggy and heading into Berlin and enjoying a day of visiting a
nd shopping.
She sighed as she considered her new life. While Ben and Waneta Hostetler had been warm and considerate, Lilah had noted a new coldness in the way her sister-in-law treated her.
Maybe it was fear for the boppli. Although they didn’t talk about such things, it was obvious to her that Hannah would soon give birth. It would have been Jacob’s first boppli. New tears threatened at the thought.
Her eyes slid to where Hannah sat beside her, holding the reins. Lilah had offered to drive, to allow Hannah a brief rest. The look she got in return could have frozen her where she sat. They hadn’t spoken since.
Lilah didn’t even have the distraction of school. For the past two years, she had taught at the Amish Elementary School in her district, but school had let out for the summer. Never had she missed the chaos and business of teaching as she did now.
The procession of mourners entered the cemetery. It was a fairly large cemetery as far as Amish cemeteries went. The back part of it was reserved for their Mennonite neighbors. All the graves looked the same. Plain wooden grave markers, with no distinction between them. Not even names. The plain markers were deliberately made so they would fade and become weathered.
It was the Amish way of showing that life on earth was passing.
It hurt her heart to think about it.
Hannah pulled on the reins, halting the buggy. Lilah wiped her eyes and scrambled off the seat. When she turned to assist her sister-in-law, Hannah ignored her outstretched hand and climbed down by herself.
Silently, the two women moved to the gravesite. They stood together. Yet Lilah had never felt more alone.
Lilah swallowed the large lump blocking her airway when the casket was lowered into the ground. Within minutes, it was over.
Hannah turned without a word and stumbled back to the buggy. Lilah followed. This time, she didn’t offer her help, knowing it would be refused. She got back into the buggy and rode to Hannah’s parents’ haus with her.
At the haus, the neighbors kindly greeted Hannah and Lilah, offering their sympathy and telling stories about Jacob’s life. The Amish tended to be practical regarding death. It happened to them all. Soft laughter rippled from across the room. Lilah stiffened.
She knew the women weren’t being unkind. It was normal for mourners to visit and socialize at these times. Her bruised emotions were overly sensitive. Pivoting so they couldn’t see her emotions, she noticed a man standing alone in the corner. That was odd. He held himself still, legs braced slightly, hands clasped in front of him. It was similar to the stance of the Englisch soldiers she’d seen on posters in town. She blinked. His one hand looked slightly different. It took her a moment to realize it was a prosthetic arm.
His head turned and his brown eyes snagged hers for a moment before he looked away. She flushed. What was wrong with her? It was rude to stare, and he had caught her.
She needed some air. She grabbed her black bonnet from its peg on the wall and pulled it over her kapp. Walking briskly outside, she moved off the porch to breathe in the warm summer air to soothe herself and calm her racing heart.
“Lilah.”
Lilah spun, her hand at her heart. She hadn’t heard Hannah approach.
“Hannah, geht es dir gut?” Her sister-in-law appeared pale and wan. Not surprising, given the circumstances.
Hannah waved away her inquiry about how she was feeling with impatience. “I’m gut. Nothing wrong with me except that my ehemann is dead.” Lilah cringed at Hannah’s harsh words. “I wanted to talk with you.”
She didn’t like the tone in Hannah’s voice. Ice dripped from each word.
“Jah, can I help you?” Lilah clenched her hands into fists, hiding them in the folds of her black mourning dress to mask her distress.
“I’m sorry. I can’t have you here anymore. I need you to find somewhere else to live.”
“Your parents—”
“My parents have nothing to do with this. I’m the one asking you to leave.”
Lilah stared at her. “Where would I go? You and Jacob were my only family.”
Hannah shrugged, her eyes red from tears but steady. “I don’t care. You can leave with one of the guests here. Anyone. I don’t care who. I know what happened wasn’t your fault, but my husband is dead because of you. If he hadn’t gone back for you, Jacob would still be alive. I don’t know if I can forgive you for that.”
Shock burrowed into her. Lilah and Hannah had never been close, but they’d gotten along. The excitement of the coming boppli had seemed to draw them closer. Lilah had hoped they’d become sisters of the heart.
Now that hope was ashes at her feet. She couldn’t blame Hannah. In fact, she agreed with her. If she had heard Jacob when he had first called out for her, she could have escaped without his help. He’d still be alive today.
Her heart was heavy in her chest. She heard her brother’s voice. Heard him telling her something was in his office. And that it wasn’t an accident. What had he meant? Hannah started to turn away from her.
“Wait.” She reached out to touch Hannah’s arm. The other girl shrugged off her hand but stopped. Lilah dropped her hand, clenching her fists as she struggled to control the anguish swirling around inside her. She forced herself to continue speaking. “I need to grab something from the barn at my family’s farm.”
Hannah shrugged. “Take the buggy. It’s early. You have time.”
With a soft swish of her dress, Hannah turned and went back inside, leaving Lilah hollow and more alone than she’d ever felt. More alone than after Mamm and Daed had died.
Her feet took her to where the buggies were all parked, her mind hazy with shock. Where could she stay?
“I’m sorry about your brother.” A deep voice behind her made her jump.
It was the man she’d noticed inside. The one she’d been staring at. His hair was blonder in the sun than it had appeared inside. The sympathy in his deep brown eyes nearly undid her composure.
She swallowed around the lump swelling inside her throat. “Danke.”
“Do you need help?”
She shook her head. “Nee. Danke.” She had to pause to steady herself. “I have to go find something.”
A sudden flurry of activity near the barn caught their attention. When they looked, nothing was there. Probably animals, she decided. She turned back and found he was still watching her.
“I won’t keep you, then. I wanted to tell you Jacob was a gut man.”
“Jah. He was.” Her eyes followed him. “How did you know him?”
He stopped and turned back to her. “I was one of his clients. More than that. He was a friend.”
A lump swelled in her throat. “He’d wanted me to find something. At our haus. That’s where I’m going,” she said.
Why was she telling a stranger this? Lilah had always been a very private person. Something about this man, though, made her feel she could trust him with this burden. Ridiculous! She tightened her lips around the words hovering on her tongue. She couldn’t confide in someone she didn’t know, regardless of who he was to her brother.
He frowned, his gaze searching her face. He must have decided she wasn’t going to say more. Nodding briefly, he turned and strode away. She should have asked for his name.
Rehitching the buggy, Lilah climbed up and grabbed the reins, directing the mare out onto the road. As she looked back, the haus vanished from sight. Unable to contain them any longer, she released the tears that had been dammed inside.
The journey from the Hostetler haus to where Lilah had lived with her brother and his wife took just under an hour. If Hannah had given her more notice, she could have hired a driver and made the trip in half that time. Pulling into the yard where her haus had stood less than a week ago, Lilah sucked in a deep breath to fortify herself. It didn’t help. Weakness still sank in, making her legs wobble as she stepped dow
n from the buggy.
Forcing herself to look away from the ruins of her haus, she strode into the small brown wooden shed connected to the barn, where Jacob had run his farrier business. Two steps inside the barn, she halted, her jaw dropping in shock.
Jacob had always been neat to the point of being obsessed. When she’d been in this office the day he’d died, he’d been in the middle of repairing the old cupboard on the back wall. She remembered there being a chain lock on it.
A chill slid up her spine, seeing it thrown to the ground, hacked open and splintered by some sort of tool. Looking around, she saw the maul leaning against the wall. That definitely didn’t belong in here.
What was that noise?
Lilah held her breath as she heard footsteps out in the barn. Someone else was here. No one had reason to be here.
Her eyes flew to the shattered cupboard on the ground. Whoever was here had wanted something. Maybe even enough to kill for it.
She couldn’t stay.
Carefully, she inched her way out of the office. The footsteps were close. Ducking into a stall, she waited. The steps entered the office.
This may be her only hope.
Running, she made it outside and climbed into the buggy. Flicking the reins, she ordered the startled mare to run.
A gunshot ripped into the back of the buggy.
She couldn’t take the buggy back to her sister-in-law’s family. She’d already brought enough grief to Hannah. Another shot rang out.
Followed by the revving of a motor.
She knew she couldn’t make it to safety in a buggy. Not on this paved road. Rounding a corner onto a narrow dirt path, she jumped down, then raced into the woods. The path was close enough to where she’d lived, hopefully someone would find the buggy and recognize it. Most of their friends and acquaintances knew where Hannah’s family lived.
Lilah took off into the woods, running as fast as she could. Branches smacked into her face. She couldn’t afford to slow down. Her right side burned. She wasn’t used to this kind of exertion. Holding her hand to her side as if she could force the needle-sharp pangs away, she ran.