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LOVE AND DANGER COLLIDE IN THREE NEW AMISH NOVELLAS

FALL FROM GRACE by Marta Perry

When one of her students witnesses a crime, Sara Esch gets too close to the truth, and widower Caleb King must risk it all for the woman who’s taught him to love again.

DANGEROUS HOMECOMING by Diane Burke

Katie Lapp needs her childhood friend Joshua Miller more than ever when someone threatens her late husband’s farm. Can Joshua protect her…even if it endangers his heart?

RETURN TO WILLOW TRACE by Kit Wilkinson

A series of accidents has startled their Plain community…and leads Lydia Stoltz to Joseph Yoder, the man who once broke her heart. At every turn, it seems their shared past holds the key to their future.

Praise for Marta Perry

“Set within the Amish community, with a strong, sympathetic heroine at the center of a suspenseful plot, Perry’s story hooks you immediately.”

—RT Book Reviews on Home by Dark

“Perry’s strong writing, along with loads of suspense, will keep you turning the pages.”

—RT Book Reviews on Danger in Plain Sight

Praise for Diane Burke

“A fascinating story of hidden identities and forbidden love, creating a page-turning mystery.”

—RT Book Reviews on Double Identity

“Burke’s solid mystery has characters who are easy to empathize with.”

—RT Book Reviews on Midnight Caller

Praise for Kit Wilkinson

“This excellent story builds an intriguing mystery around a developing romance in the fascinating world of competitive steeplechase.”

—RT Book Reviews on Sabotage

“Plenty of action, a heartwarming love story and a good mystery make this a compelling read.”

—RT Book Reviews on Protector’s Honor

MARTA PERRY

A lifetime spent in rural Pennsylvania, where she still lives, and her own Pennsylvania Dutch roots led Marta Perry to write about the Plain People and their rich heritage in her current fiction series for Berkley Books and Harlequin HQN. Marta recently celebrated the publication of her fifty-first novel, with another eight books scheduled to be released over the next two years. The two-time RITA® Award finalist has more than six million copies of her books in print.

Marta is a member of RWA, ACFW, Novelists, Inc., and Pennwriters. When she’s not writing, she and her husband enjoy traveling, gardening and spending time with their six beautiful grandchildren.

DIANE BURKE,

an award-winning author, took first place in the inspirational category for a Daphne du Maurier Award for Excellence in Mystery and Suspense and has been a finalist for an ACFW Carol Award and a Laurel Wreath.

Diane lives on the east coast of Florida and, because of the glorious weather, beach and surf, feels as if she is on a permanent vacation. She has three sons, five grandchildren and three stepgrandchildren, who keep her on her toes and fill her life with love.

Her author page is www.amazon.com/author/dianeburke. She loves to hear from her readers and can be reached at diane@dianeburkeauthor.com.

KIT WILKINSON

is a former Ph.D. student who once wrote discussions on the medieval feminine voice. She now prefers weaving stories of romance and redemption. Her first inspirational manuscript won a prestigious RWA Golden Heart Award and her second has been nominated for an RT Reviewers’ Choice Award. You can visit with Kit at www.kitwilkinson.com or write to her at write@kitwilkinson.com.

Danger in Amish Country
Marta Perry
Diane Burke
Kit Wilkinson


www.millsandboon.co.uk

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Table of Contents

FALL FROM GRACE by Marta Perry

DANGEROUS HOMECOMING by Diane Burke

RETURN TO WILLOW TRACE by Kit Wilkinson

Fall From Grace

Marta Perry

This story is dedicated to my husband, as always.

But they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.

—Isaiah 40:31

Contents

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

DEAR READER

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

ONE

Sara Esch smiled as her young scholars burst out into the autumn sunshine at the end of another school day. Even the best of Amish students couldn’t help showing a bit of enthusiasm when freedom arrived at three o’clock each weekday afternoon, especially on Friday.

All except one, it seemed. Seven-year-old Rachel King hung back, her small face solemn, as if reluctant to leave her desk.

Sara tried not to let concern show in her expression as she approached the motherless child. Rachel had been in Sara’s one-room school for less than a month, since she and her father arrived in Beaver Creek, coming to Pennsylvania from Indiana. That meant Sara didn’t know Rachel as well as she did most of the kinner in her school.

Sara knelt next to the child and spoke softly, knowing her words would be masked by the chatter of the two eighth-grade girls whose turn it was to wash the chalkboards.

“Was ist letz, Rachel?” She asked the question in dialect. She always spoke Englisch in school, but the familiar tongue of home and family might put the child at ease. “What’s wrong?”

“Nothing.” Rachel’s round blue eyes grew rounder still, as if she was surprised that her teacher had noticed. “Nothing is wrong, Teacher Sara.”

Sara sat back on her heels, studying the small face. Rachel might have been any young Amish girl, with her blue eyes, rosy cheeks, and blond hair. Her plain blue dress and black apron were like those of every other little girl, too. But something was different about Rachel King, of that Sara was certain sure.

She took the child’s hands in hers. “You can tell me if anything is troubling you, Rachel. I want you to be happy here in Beaver Creek.”

Rachel’s lips trembled, as if she were on the verge of speech. Then she looked over Sara’s shoulder, and her expression lightened.

“Daed!” She ran to the man who filled the schoolhouse doorway.

So. Sara got slowly to her feet, mindful of Caleb King’s gaze on her. His arrival meant she wouldn’t hear anything more from Rachel today. But at least she could see that Rachel’s problem, whatever it was, wasn’t with her father. She would hate to have to deal with such an issue.

She took a step toward Caleb, smiling, and stopped when she encountered an icy glare. His face was set in severe lines above the warm chestnut of his beard, and Caleb’s gaze seemed an accusation. Her heart gave an uncomfortable thump.

Caleb patted his daughter’s head. “Go out and play on the swings. I need to talk to Teacher Sara.”

Sara caught a swift flare of panic in the child’s face at the prospect of going outside. She moved toward them.

“Perhaps Rachel could help with washing the boards,” she suggested. “We might step out onto the porch to talk.”

Caleb’s gray-blue eyes grew steely with annoyance, probably at her interference, but he nodded. He stepped back and held the door open like a command.

Sara pushed Rachel gently toward the chalkboard. “Lily and Lovina, you’ll like to have Rachel help you for a bit, ain’t so?”

Lily looked a tad mulish at the prospect, but gentle Lovina seemed to take the situation in and smiled, holding out her hand to the child.

“Ya, komm, Rachel.”

The little girl ran toward her happily enough. Satisfied, Sara stepped through the door, very aware of Caleb’s looming presence behind her. He had a complaint, it seemed.

The door clicked shut.

“What has happened at school to bring my child home so upset she could not even eat her supper?” Caleb didn’t give Sara time to turn around before he threw the words at her. “And to give her nightmares, as well? I don’t expect this at an Amish school.”

Stiffening at the implication she was at fault, Sara made an effort to keep her expression calm as she faced the man. “I noticed that Rachel seemed upset today. I was just trying to get her to tell me what was wrong when you came in.”

And whatever it is, I am not to blame, she added silently. Nothing was more important to her than her scholars—they were the only kinner she was ever likely to have.

“You didn’t scold her for anything yesterday?” Caleb didn’t look mollified. “Or let another child bully her?”

“Certainly not. Bullying is not tolerated in my classroom.” She took a deep breath, reminding herself not to let the man’s antagonism rouse her temper. Even teachers in Amish schools had to learn to deal with troublesome parents. “I am as puzzled as you are. Maybe together we can figure out how to handle this problem.”

She met his gaze steadily, and after what seemed a very long moment, she had the satisfaction of seeing some of his antagonism fade.

“Sorry. I didn’t mean... Ach, I was worried.”

Caleb seemed to realize belatedly that he still wore his black hat. He took it off, revealing hair the same chestnut as his beard. His face was lean and austere close-up, and there were fine lines around his cool eyes. He was a widower, so the rumors ran, his wife having died after a long illness. It was natural that he’d be protective of his only child. But not natural at all that he should immediately assume she was at fault.

Sara gathered her scattered wits to concentrate on the problem at hand. “I thought Rachel seemed a little reluctant to leave school yesterday. That’s why I made sure the Miller children walked along with her. She didn’t give you any idea of what was troubling her?”

Caleb shook his head, worry deepening the lines in his face. “When I heard her crying in the night, she sounded so afraid. The only thing she said made no sense. She said Der Alte would get her.”

“The Old Man?” Relief swept through Sara. “So that’s it.”

“What’s it?” Caleb demanded, his fists clenching. “Who is this old man who frightened my child?”

“Ach, it’s not real.” She put her hand on his arm in an automatic gesture of reassurance and felt taut muscle beneath the fabric of his coat. She pulled her hand away as if she’d touched something hot, realizing she was probably blushing. She’d treated him as she would one of her three brothers, but he was a stranger, despite being Amish.

“Komm.” She moved quickly off the schoolhouse porch, just as glad to turn her back on him. “I’ll show you.”

The schoolhouse sat in the fertile Beaver Creek Valley. Amish farms stretched out on either side, while in front of the schoolhouse the long lane led to the paved county road that entered the town of Beaver Creek a bit over a mile east.

Sara turned away from the road, heading across the playground behind the school. Here the ground sloped down to the creek for which the valley was named.

On the other side of the creek the wooded ridge went sharply upward, seeming to lean over the valley protectively. No year-round houses had been built there, but the ridge was dotted with hunting cabins that would be busy during deer season.

“Where are you going?” Caleb’s long strides kept up with hers. “Are you going to answer me about this old man? Does he live back here?”

“In a way.” She raised her arm to point. “See that rocky outcropping? Watch what happens when we move just a little farther.”

A few steps took them to the spot where the rocky cliff suddenly took on a different aspect, its sharp edges forming what a child’s imagination might see as the profile of an old man.

A quick glance at Caleb’s face showed that he understood. “Der Alte,” she said. “The kinner call it that. I forgot that you wouldn’t know.”

Caleb stared at the rocky profile, frowning. “Ya, I see. But I don’t understand what there is about it to frighten her so.”

“Nor I.” Her voice firmed. “But I mean to find out. If one of the older scholars has been telling scary stories to the young ones, that is not—” She broke off, her gaze arrested by something dark at the base of the cliff face. “Look there. That...that almost looks like—”

“A person.” Caleb finished for her. “Someone is lying there.”

* * *

Caleb’s thoughts fled to Rachel. But his little girl was safe enough in the schoolroom, and if someone was lying hurt across the creek, he must go help.

“Go back to the kinner,” he said shortly. “I’ll see what’s happened.” He didn’t take more than a few steps before realizing that Teacher Sara was right behind him. He swung around, exasperated. “I said—”

“If someone is hurt, it’s better we both go. Then one can stay with the injured person while the other runs for help.”

A look at her stubborn face told him arguing would do no good. Heaven preserve him from a headstrong woman. Not wasting his breath, he ran toward the creek.

“This way,” she said, panting a little. “Stepping-stones.”

He nodded and veered after her as she headed downstream. No doubt the teacher knew the area better than he did. If the man was injured badly enough to need a stretcher, she’d know the best way for emergency workers to get to him, as well as the closest telephone.

And if it was worse? He didn’t have a clear line of sight now, but that dark form had been ominously still. Well, he’d tried to protect Teacher Sara from going. If she saw something bad, it was her own fault.

She was already starting across the stream, jumping lightly from one flat stone to another. He followed, but when they reached the other side, he took the lead again, brushing through the undergrowth toward the base of the cliff.

They broke through into the pebbly scree at the bottom of the cliff. Any hope he’d had that the form was an animal or fallen log vanished.

Sara reached the man first. She dropped to her knees, her skirt pooling around her, and put her fingers on his neck. Caleb could tell her that she wouldn’t find a pulse. No one could still be alive when his head looked like that. The poor man didn’t have a chance.

Moving quickly to her, Caleb took Sara’s arm. “Komm,” he said, his voice gruff. “There’s nothing you can do.”

He helped her up, eyeing her face. If she was going to faint on him... But though her normally pink cheeks were dead white, Teacher Sara seemed to have herself in hand.

“Poor man,” she murmured, and he thought she was praying silently, as he was.

“Do you know him?” He drew her back a step or two, keeping his hand on her elbow in case she was unsteady on her feet.

Sara shook her head. “Englisch,” she said unnecessarily. If the man had been Amish, she’d certainly have known him. “He looks fairly young.” Her tone was pitying.

Young, ya. The fellow wore jeans and boots, like so many young Englischers. Dark hair, with a stubble of beard on his chin. He looked... Caleb sought for the right word. He looked tough. That was it. Like someone you might not want to get on the wrong side of.

But they couldn’t stand here wondering about him. “It doesn’t seem right to leave the poor man alone. If I stay with him, can you see to calling the police?” Amish usually tried to steer clear of entanglement with the law, but their duty was clear in this case.

“Ya.” Sara took a step back, away from the support of his hand. “There’s an Englisch house not far. They’ll have a phone. And then I’ll stay with the kinner.”

“My Rachel.” His gaze met Sara’s. “You don’t think she could have seen this?” He gestured toward the body, his mind rebelling at the thought of his little girl viewing anything so gruesome.

“No.” Sara seemed to push the idea away with both hands. “I don’t think... Surely he hasn’t been lying there since yesterday.”

“It’s possible.” He looked up at the cliff face above them. From this angle it just looked like a jumble of rocks. “If she was standing where we stood...” He stopped, looking at Teacher Sara accusingly. “You shouldn’t let the kinner go so far from the school.”

“It is the edge of the playground,” she said, a touch of anger like lightning in her green eyes. “The scholars are never out of my sight when they have recess.”

“Sorry,” he muttered.

He shouldn’t blame Teacher Sara, when the thing that troubled him was his own inability to get his child to confide in him. Rachel had been so distant and solemn since her mother’s death, as if all Rachel’s laughter had been buried with Barbara.

“I’ll go now,” Teacher Sara said, turning away stiffly.

He let his gaze linger on her slender figure until the undergrowth hid her from sight. No matter how long this took, he knew instinctively that she would stay with Rachel. She’d attempt to comfort his little girl.

But if Rachel really had seen this man lying dead... His thoughts stuttered to a halt as something even worse occurred to him. What if his little girl had seen the man fall?

TWO

“I’m not sure what else we can tell you, Chief O’Brian.” Sara tried not to think how odd it was to see the bulky, gray-haired township police chief sitting behind the teacher’s desk in the Amish schoolhouse. “Neither of us knows who the man was.”

She and Caleb were perched atop the first graders’ desks, which were, of course, the row closest to her desk. It was not exactly comfortable, but she kept her hands folded in her lap and her feet, in their sedate black shoes, together on the wide planks of the wooden floor.

Chief O’Brian, benevolent and grandfatherly, had guided the small police presence that covered both the village of Beaver Creek and the rural township since before Sara was born. He consulted the notes he’d been making and then looked up at her.

A girlish giggle floated in from the porch, distracting him. Lily and Lovina were teaching Rachel how to play jacks under the observant gaze of a young officer. Sara felt sure that the giggle, coming from Lily, was for the benefit of the policeman.

She’d chide the girl, but she was too relieved that they were well screened from the efforts under way across the creek, where the emergency crew was removing the body.

“Well, now.” Chief O’Brian returned to the subject at hand. “I think there’s just one thing that’s not quite clear to me, Teacher Sara. Why exactly were you and Mr. King out there looking at the ridge to begin with?”

She opened her mouth to answer, but Caleb beat her to it.

“My little girl was telling me something I couldn’t make heads or tails of about an old man,” he said. “When I picked her up after school today, I asked Teacher Sara about it. She showed me the way the rock outcropping looks like a face in profile.”

“Caleb and his daughter are new to Beaver Creek,” Sara said, although she suspected that the police chief, like the Amish bishop, knew all there was to know about newcomers. “You know how the kinner talk about that face they think they see in the rocks.” She turned to Caleb. “Chief O’Brian visits our school several times a year. He teaches the scholars how to be safe when they’re walking along the roads. And brings them candy canes at Christmas, ain’t so?”

Chief O’Brian’s lined face relaxed in a smile. “Visiting the schools is my favorite part of my job. Not like this situation.” He jerked his thumb in the direction of the ridge.

Caleb’s explanation had made it sound as if Rachel’s questions about the old man were mere curiosity. No doubt he was relieved that the chief had moved away from the topic.

“I’m sorry for the man’s family to be getting news like this,” she said. “Do you know who he was?”

“Not yet,” Chief O’Brian said. “So you folks were just looking over that way out of idle curiosity, is that it?”

Apparently he wasn’t ready to move away from the topic after all. Sara glanced at the poster above the chalkboard, which proclaimed Visitors are the sunshine in our day in cursive letters.

She could practically feel the intensity of Caleb’s will directed toward her. For whatever reason, he didn’t want her to say anything more about Rachel.

“I...I suppose so.” Sara tried to sound confident, but it went against her nature even to imply something that wasn’t true. She could feel her cheeks growing warm.

“I see.” Chief O’Brian looked from her to Caleb, and her flush deepened. Now he was thinking exactly the wrong thing, supposing she’d made an excuse to walk with Caleb. But to say anything more would just make things worse.

Fortunately, Chief O’Brian was distracted by a gesture from the officer on the porch. He rose, very authoritative in his gray uniform.

“Well, I guess I won’t be bothering you good folks any longer. Mr. King, I’m sure you want to be getting your little girl home. Sara, sorry for the disruption.”

Sara murmured something, she wasn’t sure what, just glad for the moment to see him leaving her classroom. He paused for a second on the porch to say something that made the girls giggle again, and then he and the young officer headed off toward the police car.

Sara swung to face Caleb. “Why didn’t you tell Chief O’Brian the truth about Rachel?”

Caleb’s strong-featured face tightened. “I didn’t lie to the man.”

“You told him only part of the truth,” she snapped, keeping her voice low so that the children on the porch couldn’t hear. “And you involved me in saying less than the truth, as well.”

Caleb had a remarkably stubborn jaw. “My child’s nightmares are not his business.”

“It might be important that Rachel was so upset last night about the Old Man. It might mean...” Sara let that thought trickle to a stop, afraid of where it was going.

“Ya.” His face was bleak. “It might mean that my Rachel saw something bad. And if so, it’s for me to deal with. Not you. And I’m certain sure not the police.”

He stalked out of the schoolhouse, leaving Sara with nothing at all to say.

* * *

The gentle clink of plates accompanied the evening routine of helping her mamm with the dishes. Sara, her hands in the warm, soapy water, found the chore comforting after the stresses of the day.

“I can finish up, Mamm, if you want.” Her mother looked a bit tired, but she wouldn’t want to hear Sara say so.

“No need.” Her mother polished a plate with her usual vigor. “I don’t mind. I remember when you girls used to make so much noise with washing dishes I had to get away.”

Sara smiled. True enough. When she and Trudy and Ruthie did the dishes, they’d chattered and laughed and argued the whole time. But now Trudy and Ruthie were married, as well as her two oldest brothers, and Trudy had twins on the way.

Funny. Sara, the oldest, had been the first one to plan a wedding, but Tommy Brand had managed to postpone it for one reason or another for nearly five years. And when he did get married, it was to someone else.

“I’m wonderful glad Caleb King was with you when you saw that poor man.” Mamm set a bowl on the shelf. “I wouldn’t like to think of you finding him all alone.”

Mamm didn’t like to think of her doing anything alone. She was still trying to marry off her maidal daughter.

“Ya, I’m glad he was there, too.” Sara kept her tone neutral. “Lily and Lovina had stayed after school to help, so they were there to watch his little girl.”

“They’re gut girls, even if that Lily is a bit flighty,” Mamm said. “So, Caleb is a fine-looking man, ain’t so? And I hear Josiah King is wonderful glad to have his nephew there to help out while he’s laid up. Maybe Caleb will even decide to stay, ya?”

“Stop matchmaking,” Sara said with mock severity. “I’m not looking for a husband.”

“Ya, but they’re nice to have, all the same.” Her mother’s eyes twinkled.

“And then who’d be here to help with the dishes?” Sara retorted, smiling. “If I—” She stopped at the sound of voices in the living room, where Daed had been settled in his favorite chair, reading The Budget, the Amish newspaper.

She exchanged glances with her mother. “That sounds like Chief O’Brian.”

“You’ll be wanted, then, ain’t so?” Mamm handed her a towel. “Dry your hands and hurry in.”

Sara touched her hair to be sure it went smoothly under her white organdy kapp and shook out the apron that matched her green dress. She reached the living room just as her daed called out for her.

“Chief O’Brian is here to talk about that poor man you found.” Daed pushed his glasses up on his nose, looking as if he wished anyone else had been the finder.

“Nothing to be alarmed about, Eli,” the chief said easily, maybe aware of Daed’s tendency to be upset about the Englisch world intruding on their lives. “I thought you’d want to be up-to-date about what was going on.”

“It’s kind of you,” Mamm said, a swift look at her husband reminding him to be hospitable. “You’ll have some coffee and maybe a piece of apple pie, ya?”

“That sounds fine, Emma.” Chief O’Brian’s expression relaxed, something that was the usual result of Mamm’s warm friendliness.

Sara gestured him to the sofa and took the rocking chair, waiting for him to begin and hoping it wouldn’t be questions about Caleb or Rachel.

“Well, we identified the man who died,” he said, setting his cap on his knees. “His name was Jase Kovatch.”

“Kovatch.” Daed pronounced the name carefully. “I can’t say as I know him.”

“No, don’t suppose you would. The police did, and that’s not exactly a recommendation,” Chief O’Brian said.

“He’d been in trouble, then?” Sara asked.

The chief nodded. “Minor stuff, mostly. Drunk driving, petty pilfering. No family that we can find, and I can’t see as anyone’s going to miss him much except maybe some of his drinking buddies.”

“That is a sad way to live.” Mamm set a mug of steaming coffee and a big wedge of apple pie topped with vanilla ice cream on the end table next to him.

“Sure is.” Chief O’Brian took a bite of pie and spoke thickly around it. “I just can’t figure out what he was doing up on the ridge to begin with.”

“Small-game season,” Daed said promptly. “Out after rabbits, maybe.”

The chief shook his head. “No gun,” he said succinctly.

Sara’s mind chased after reasons for the man to be out there and came up empty. This time of year, people went into the woods with shotguns, looking for small game. Bird-watchers and nature lovers were sensible enough not to wander through the woods during hunting season, especially not when deer season started next month. Then all the hunting cabins would be filled to bursting.

She realized the room had fallen silent. Chief O’Brian was looking at her.

“I can’t think of anything that would take the man up there,” she said, hoping she hadn’t missed a question.

“You haven’t seen him around? Noticed anyone maybe taking an interest in the school, for instance?”

“No.” She could only shake her head, perplexed. “Why?”

O’Brian shrugged. “I went up top today, along with a couple of men. We didn’t find anything unexpected. But I noticed one thing about that place.” He paused, looking grave. “It has the best view a person could have of your schoolhouse.”

His words sank in, and alarm ricocheted along Sara’s nerves. She didn’t need to look around the room to know that they were all thinking the same thing.

Everyone wanted to believe that their corner of the world was safe. Unfortunately, danger was not limited to the back alleys of big cities. Even innocent schoolchildren weren’t safe from evil in the world.

“Now, I don’t want you folks to get all upset about it,” Chief O’Brian said. “If this fellow... Well, he’s dead now. But I wouldn’t be doing my duty if I didn’t mention it, just in case.”

Sara nodded. “Danki, Chief O’Brian. If I see anything out of the ordinary, I’ll let you know right away.”

He seemed satisfied, turning back to his pie, but Sara couldn’t let go of it so easily.

Tomorrow was the semiannual auction held to support the school, and every Amish person in the area, as well as plenty of Englisch, would be on the school grounds for the event. Including, she hoped, Caleb King. She had to confront him about what he hadn’t told Chief O’Brian. She must make him understand that if Rachel had seen anything, she had to speak.

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