Love Inspired November 2013 #2 (12 page)

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Authors: Emma Miller,Renee Andrews,Virginia Carmichael

BOOK: Love Inspired November 2013 #2
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“Both well,” he said with a smile. “Heard you were cleaning for Preacher Caleb.”

She poured coffee and served the men, quickly clearing away the last of the dinner and bringing sugar and milk and a tray of cookies. “I'll leave you to your business,” she said and went back into the other room.

“Usually she doesn't stay this late,” Caleb explained. “Her ride will be here any minute.”

“She's half sister to John Hartman's wife, isn't she?”

Caleb nodded. He didn't want to be rude, but he was curious as to what urgent business he might have with these men from another church district so important as to bring them out on a snowy night. But these Amish were no different from those men he'd known in Idaho. No business could be contracted until small talk was out of the way. First, the weather, the price of hay and the scarcity of reasonable farm land had to be discussed, chewed over and commented on at length.

Finally, just when Caleb had nearly lost patience and was ready to come right out and ask why they were there, Thomas got to the point. “What do you know about the Reapers?” he asked.

“Reapers?” Caleb had no idea what he was talking about.

“You know about the Gleaners,” Samson said. “The young people's church group?”

“Of course.” One of his jobs was to meet with them twice a month and approve projects, frolics and community outreach. “Charley Byler and his wife are the sponsors. Surely, the Gleaners haven't done anything—”

“Ne,”
Thomas replied. “The Gleaners have always been a responsible group. We find no fault with them. It's this new group, the Reapers.”

“Teenagers from three of our local districts gathering. Yours included. I've had a report from the Delaware State Police of underage drinking of alcohol,” Samson said. “Boys are sneaking out at night and attending parties with Englishers. The policemen told me that they broke up a bonfire in a field near Black Bottom. They caught some of the English kids, but the Amish boys ran into the woods.”

“There's no
Rumspringa
in Kent County,” Ray said. “We don't allow it. Too dangerous. We need your support to settle this behavior before someone is hurt.”

“I agree, but why come to me?” Caleb asked. “I have only the one child, and you saw her. She's not even old enough for school.”

“We would have asked Reuben for help.” Samson leaned forward on his elbows on the table. He wore long johns under his shirt, and the wrists were worn thin from wear. “He's been successful with wayward teenagers before, but Reuben's laid up with that broken leg. You're the other preacher for Seven Poplars. We were hoping you'd step in.”

Caleb rose to pour another cup of coffee. His was still half full, but he needed the excuse to gather his thoughts. Bad enough that he'd been thrust into the position of preacher to his own district, a job he doubted he was up to. But this? If he failed to influence the boys and change their dangerous behavior, he'd disappoint his congregation and maybe shame their district in front of the others. “I'm not sure I'm the right man for this,” he said hesitantly.

“I'd do it myself, but I'm too old,” Thomas said. “The teens feel no connection to most of our elders. And Samson, here, he—”

“My boy Joe is one of the ringleaders of this bunch,” Samson admitted. “I've tried talking to him, tried punishment, but Joe is eighteen and feeling his oats. It would break his mother's heart if he was arrested or got hurt in this nonsense.”

Caleb looked at Ray. “You, Ray?”

Ray shook his head. “I was pretty wild when I was their age, and they all know it. My Paul said as much to me. He said they weren't doing anything wrong, but they are. The world is a temptation our kids aren't equipped to face. First it will be drugs, then who knows what? You've heard what goes on in Kansas with some of the young people? Drinking alcohol and worse.”

Caleb nodded. “I have, and it troubles me. To think that children raised in the faith could stray so far.”

“Amen to that,” Ray agreed. “It's why we've come, why we ask you to meet with these kids, try to convince them that they are on the path to real trouble.”

“You say some of our teenagers are involved?” Caleb asked. “Do you have names to give me?”

“Only three I know for sure,” Thomas answered. “Vernon and Elmer Beachy and their cousin, Irwin Beachy. He lives with the schoolteacher, Hannah Yoder.”

Chapter Twelve

“I
rwin?” Rebecca said to Caleb. “I've heard rumors about these Reapers, but I had no idea that Irwin was involved. Mam will have him cleaning the stables until he's twenty-one!” It was all Rebecca had been able to do to remain out of sight in the parlor until the visitors were gone. But she'd heard every word the men exchanged.

“It's a bad business.” Caleb glanced in the direction of the parlor.

“It's all right,” Rebecca assured him, knowing he was concerned Amelia might overhear them. “She's playing with her doll on the rug near the fireplace where it's warm.” The parlor and that section of the house were heated with a new pellet stove that stood on a tile platform in a fireplace. There was a child-protection screen to keep Amelia from falling against it and getting burned.

Caleb glanced up at the clock and then out the window. “Grace is late.”

“I know.” Snow was still falling, but there was no wind, and it didn't appear to Rebecca that a storm was brewing. “She's usually on time. Something must have delayed her.” She began to take the dirty coffee mugs to the sink.

“Leave them,” Caleb said, taking a seat at the kitchen table. “I can do that later.”

She slipped into the chair across from him. “So, what are you going to do about the boys? It
is
just boys, isn't it? They didn't say any of our girls were involved, did they?”

Caleb's brow furrowed and he rubbed his fingertips along his scarred cheek. “
Ne,
no Amish girls, but some English. Maybe Charley would have some ideas of what to say to our kids.”

She thought for a moment before she spoke. “You know I love Charley. He's been like a brother to me since he and Miriam married, but I'd trust your judgment before I would his—on something like this. Charley is...” She sought the right word. “Innocent. He's really like a big kid himself. I think you're a better choice in this situation. You'll find a way to guide these boys back to the right path.”

Caleb folded his arms and looked at her. “You think I'm up to it?”

“I know you are,” she answered.

He nodded. For once, the rigid mask slipped, and Rebecca could see the man behind it: the Caleb who wasn't bearing the weight of the world on his shoulders. “It's good you think so,” he said. “I have doubts about myself, doubts about being chosen as a preacher for our church. I failed my family once, when it mattered, and I guess I'm always afraid that...”

“You didn't fail.” She extended her hand across the table, and Caleb's lean, scarred fingers closed around hers. What was strange was that she barely felt the scars. Instead, she felt the strength. “What happened with your wife. You tried to save her, but bad things happen sometimes.” She pressed her lips together. “I think trying to do the right thing now is what God wants of us.”

He squeezed her hand and then released it, leaving her with a sense of loss. She could still feel the power and the warmth of his grip, and she wanted it again. “Caleb...”

Once, when she was small, when the family was just getting ready for dinner, Mam had asked her to keep an eye on Susanna. But she and her sisters were playing tag, and she forgot. When she remembered to look for Susanna, she found that she'd chased a duck out onto the frozen pond. Only, it was March, and the ice wasn't solid.

Ruth had run for Dat, but Rebecca had been afraid that the ice would crack and Susanna would fall in and drown. Instead of getting a clothes pole like Ruth had told her, she'd crept out on the pond. By the time she got to Susanna, ice had splintered under her weight in long thin cracks like spiderwebs.

Rebecca had been terrified, trying not to cry, and all the while, Susanna was laughing and pointing at the pretty patterns in the ice. Rebecca had gotten hold of her sister's hand and together they had crawled, inch by inch, back toward the bank.

“Stay where you are!” Leah had screamed. “Wait for Dat! Stay there!”

But, some inner voice had warned her that she had to keep moving. If they stopped, they'd sink into that deep, cold water. They'd reached solid land safely, but she had never forgotten the terrifying sensation of ice bending beneath her feet. She felt like that now, with Caleb, afraid to remain where she was and terrified to move forward.

“I
know
you can do this,” she told him firmly.

He stood and began to pace the linoleum floor. “It seems you have more faith in me than I do.” He paused near the doorway and glanced back at her. “How does a young woman gain so much confidence about a man she hardly knows?”

She leaned forward. “You weren't the only one surprised when you were chosen as our new preacher. Everyone was. You were new to Seven Poplars. No one really knew what you were like. And you were a widower who hadn't remarried. I've never heard of a preacher who didn't have a wife when he was called.”

“And?”

“I'm just a woman, but I try to follow the teachings of the church. I read my Bible and I pray every day, but I'm not wise. All I know is that God chose you. And if He believes in you, Caleb, why shouldn't I?”

A smiled softened the curves of his lips. “It sounds so simple when you say it, Rebecca. Sensible.” He chuckled. “I hope you're right—”

The sound of a car horn outside brought Rebecca to her feet. “That must be Grace.” She reached for her cloak and the heavy mittens Mam had insisted she wear when she walked over this morning. “It will be all right,” she told him.

He held her gaze for a long moment, then turned away. “Amelia! Rebecca's leaving. Come say good night.”

“I'll see you tomorrow.” Rebecca's feet felt heavy. She didn't want to leave, but she knew she had to. Her hand still tingled where Caleb had touched her and her chest felt tight. Was this what it felt like to love a man?
Love?
She shivered, but it was a shiver of excitement, not fear. She knew that it was too late to go back. Coming here, being part of Caleb and Amelia's household had become more than a job.

Amelia came running for a hug and Rebecca bent to embrace her.

“Thank you,” Caleb said.

“I didn't do anything,” she answered breathlessly as they walked to the back door and she opened it.

“You did,” he insisted, swinging Amelia up into his arms. He opened the back door for Rebecca. “More than you'll ever know. I just want you to know I appreciate it.”

The driver's door opened and Grace stepped out of the SUV. “Sorry,” she called. “I was held up on Route 1. A chicken truck jackknifed and both lanes were closed. There were chickens everywhere.”

“How terrible.” Rebecca hurried out of the house, closing the door behind her, putting distance between her and Caleb. “Was anyone injured?”

Grace shook her head. “I don't think so. It was just the truck, no other vehicles. It must have been the slippery road.”

Big snowflakes coated the SUV, the ground, the house and buildings and Grace's mane of curly red hair, covered only by a tiny lace prayer cap. Rebecca hugged her.

Grace was dressed in a jean skirt, a sweater topped by a leather coat and boots to her knees. “Johanna will have our heads for delaying her supper,” she said. “I hope she hasn't worried.”

Rebecca went around to the passenger's door and got in. The heater was running, and the automobile was toasty warm. “Wait until you hear what I just found out about Irwin,” she said. “He is in so much in trouble.”

“He's not the only one.” Grace pointed. “At the crossroads, I had to slam on my brakes and swerve to keep from hitting that old buggy that Elmer Beachy's been driving—the one decked out in red-and-green Christmas lights.”

“What?” Rebecca stared at her. “Are you sure it was Elmer?”

“Certain. He had a bunch of other boys in there with him. Some of them were hanging out the back door, yelling and waving, acting stupid. I wondered what Lydia was thinking, letting them take a horse and buggy out on a night like this.”

“What direction were they going?”

“They turned on to Thompson's dirt lane, the one that runs along the edge of his property line. I don't know where they were going. It's not likely the kids would be having a bonfire tonight, in this weather, is it?”

“Did you see Irwin with them?”

Grace shook her head as she turned the key in the ignition. “No, but I wouldn't have recognized Elmer if it wasn't for the Christmas lights and his horse. It was a paint. Almost every Amish man in this county drives a bay. Elmer's horse is brown and white. Plus he was wearing that beat-up cowboy hat of his.” She put the SUV in Reverse. “I talked to John. He swung by and picked up 'Kota after work, so if Johanna's invitation is still open—”

“Stop!” Rebecca exclaimed. “Stop the car.”

Grace applied the brakes. “What's wrong?” She squinted. “Chickens in the driveway?”


Ne,
worse. A lot worse.” Rebecca unfastened her seat belt. “There's something Caleb and I have to do right away. Can you take Amelia to Johanna's?”

“Sure, but why?”

“I'll explain later,” she said getting out of the car. “But if those Beachy boys are up to no good and Irwin is with them, I've got to try to stop it.”

“How much trouble could they cause on a private dirt road?”

“You'd be surprised.”

* * *

“I can't believe I let you talk me into this,” Caleb said. “How are we ever going to find that buggy? It's been a good twenty minutes since Grace saw the boys at the crossroads.” He slapped the reins over his horse's back and guided the animal down the blacktop.

There were few cars and trucks on the road. It was still snowing, and Rebecca hadn't seen a single Amish person since they'd left Caleb's house. She sat up straight on the cushioned buggy seat, very conscious of Caleb only inches away. Being unchaperoned with him on a woods road at night was definitely stretching the rules, but the members of the Seven Poplars church district were sensible. If she and Caleb could show they'd been on an errand of supervision—keeping Amish kids out of trouble—the breach would be forgiven.

“We might be able to catch up with them if they took the Thompson lane,” she explained. The Thompsons were Englishers. “They may not know that there's a new gate on the far side of the woods. The owners just put it up this week. Mam heard at Spence's that Thompson's nephew had reported someone breaking into his uncle's abandoned farmhouse. The police advised him to put up a locked gate to keep people from driving back to the farm. They rent out the land to a farmer, but no one has lived in the house for twenty years. It doesn't even have electricity anymore.”

“What makes you think Elmer Beachy and our boys would break into that house?” The lazy, fat snowflakes had given way to smaller flakes that were now coming down as if they had no intention of stopping until the snow lay six inches deep. The temperature had dropped in the past hour, and Rebecca was glad of the thick wool blanket that Caleb had brought from the house and insisted that she tuck around her lap and legs.

“You're new to Kent County, so there's no way you'd know. About five years ago, some English teenagers were using the farmhouse as a place to hold parties. They got pretty wild and even started a fire in the fireplace. Some parents caught on and called the authorities before someone was hurt or the house burned down. So it wouldn't surprise me if the same kids who were now having bonfire parties decided to use the old Thompson place. There are no neighbors, and the house is in the deep woods and has a really long lane. No one would hear them back there.”

“You better be right, Rebecca. If you're wrong, I've sent my daughter to your sister's house to spend the night and compromised both our reputations to take a long, cold buggy ride in the snow.”

“I'm afraid I am right. Think about it. Isn't it suspicious that the Beachy brothers are out on such a bad night? There isn't a singing, and neither of them are old enough to be walking out with girls.” She paused long enough to draw in a quick breath and went on. “Besides, Grace said there was a buggy full of boys. Mam was just saying that Irwin was going to bed awfully early lately, but he still looks red eyed and tired in the morning. She was going to buy him some vitamins.”

“So he could be sneaking out with his cousins?”

“Turn here.” Rebecca pointed to an opening in a grove of cedar trees. “It's an old logging road and it can get muddy in wet weather, but the ground will be frozen solid tonight.”

Caleb guided the horse off the paved road. “I don't see any tracks, Amish or English.”

Rebecca shook her head. “Trust me, Caleb. I grew up here. There's a tangle of lanes and dirt roads that run for miles through woodland and back pastures. My sisters and I used to ride ponies back here when we were young, and before that, we went cutting wood and looking for wild bees with my
dat.
Most of the trails are grown over, but we can still squeeze through.” She spoke with more confidence than she felt. “If they're headed for the Thompson house, we can still get there ahead of them.”

The lane had deep ruts, and they couldn't see more than a few yards ahead of the horse, but once they were sheltered by the old growth forest, it was easier driving. Ten minutes stretched like thirty, and Rebecca was beginning to fear that she'd made a terrible mistake when the horse snorted and perked up its ears.

“Listen,” Rebecca said. “Do you hear that?”

Caleb reined in the horse. Without the soft thud of the animal's hooves and the creak of the buggy, Rebecca could clearly hear music up ahead. Loud, thumping music!

“Not hymns, for certain,” Caleb remarked.

“Hurry,” she urged. “This lane meets up with another one just beyond the trees. The house will be on the left in a clearing, and our kids should be driving from the right.”

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