Read Alpine Zen : An Emma Lord Mystery (9780804177481) Online
Authors: Mary Daheim
After opening up the house, I headed for the patio. I got as far as the back door when I saw a book lying on the cement near the door.
I didn't recognize the cover. Picking it up, I noted the title:
Catholic Christianity: A Complete Catechism of Catholic Church Beliefs
. Puzzled, I realized a piece of paper was barely peeking out at the top of the cover. I carefully removed it and read the semilegible handwriting:
I borrowed this from your priest. I'm not conversant with Catholic doctrine. This book told me what I needed to know, so I'm telling you what you need to know. Yes, I once called myself J. C. Peace. I conducted the marriage ceremony between your husband and his first wife. I was not and never have been ordained nor have I had any other official capacity as a minister. If you need legal documentation, I can provide that. You don't have to contact me. I will know. Peace, Craig.
I gazed out into the forest that surrounded my tiny patch of the wider world. How often did Craig slip among the evergreens and vine maples and wild berry vines to glimpse the rest of us in what he considered our mundane, even crass routine? Maybe I should have resented that. Most people would consider it spying, voyeurism, even akin to Des Ellerbee's lurking. But I disagreed. It was more like having a guardian angel. Craig would laugh at that idea. I sensed he didn't consider himself religious, at least not by conventional standards. I recalled something about life not being about the destination, but the journey. A Zen belief, remembered from my brother talking about Thomas Merton's
The Seven Storey Mountain
. I'd tried to read it to please Ben, but it was too deep for me. Yet there are some things that are instinctive.
A sound made me turn around. I saw Milo coming toward me. I knew where I was going. Our journey had started sixteen years ago. The path we'd traveled, alone and together, had been marked with laughter and tears, anger and intimacy, business and pleasure, loss and love. The next step in my journey was to walk into my husband's arms. He met me halfway.
That's what makes a marriage.
To the memory of Martha Longbrake, who tirelessly gave of herself. We are forever indebted to her generous spirit.
B
Y
M
ARY
D
AHEIM
The Alpine Advocate
The Alpine Betrayal
The Alpine Christmas
The Alpine Decoy
The Alpine Escape
The Alpine Fury
The Alpine Gamble
The Alpine Hero
The Alpine Icon
The Alpine Journey
The Alpine Kindred
The Alpine Legacy
The Alpine Menace
The Alpine Nemesis
The Alpine Obituary
The Alpine Pursuit
The Alpine Quilt
The Alpine Recluse
The Alpine Scandal
The Alpine Traitor
The Alpine Uproar
The Alpine Vengeance
The Alpine Winter
The Alpine Xanadu
The Alpine Yeoman
The Alpine Zen
M
ARY
R
ICHARDSON
D
AHEIM
started spinning stories before she could spell. Daheim has been a journalist, an editor, a public relations consultant, and a freelance writer, but fiction was always her medium of choice. In 1982, she launched a career that is now distinguished by more than sixty novels. In 2000, she won the Literary Achievement Award from the Pacific Northwest Writers Association. In October 2008, she was inducted into the University of Washington's Communications Hall of Fame. Daheim lives in her hometown of Seattle and is a direct descendant of former residents of the real Alpine when it existed in the early part of the twentieth century, until it was abandoned in 1929. The Alpine/Emma Lord series has created interest in the site, which was named a Washington State ghost town in July 2011.