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Authors: Miracle in New Hope

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BOOK: Kaki Warner
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Daniel braced himself, but Doc shoved between them. “Stop it, you two! I’ll handle this!” Doc turned to Daniel. “You couldn’t have heard her, Hobart. And she wasn’t at your place.”

“Yeah, she was, right there by the—”

“Hannah’s dead, son.”

Daniel froze, fists still up. “She’s what?”

“She died December last year.”

Daniel’s arms went limp. He took a step back.
Hannah? Dead?
He looked from one face to the other but saw the same certainty in each. Then he looked at the woman on the porch, and a terrible realization sent his mind into chaos.

She stared back at him with a look of pure horror, both hands clasped over her mouth. Tears ran down her cheeks. And suddenly it all fell into place—why she was so sad, why he had felt that odd connection.

He knew that anguish. He knew that pain. He had felt it himself when he’d stood over his son’s grave.

“No,” he said, his voice muffled by the roaring in his head. “She’s alive.” He had seen Hannah. Talked to her. “Hannah’s not dead. I swear it.”

With a cry, she whirled and stumbled into the house.

“Wait.” Desperate to explain, Daniel started toward her, wanting to tell her Hannah was alive and waiting for them to come get her.

Tom Jackson stepped forward to bar his way. “Get out of here, Hobart. You’ve done enough damage.”

Over Jackson’s shoulder, Daniel watched the door slam shut. Panic gripped him. “Please, ma’am,” he yelled. “If you’ll just hear me out.”

Doc nudged his arm. “Come on, son. Let’s go.”

“But she’s real, Doc,” he insisted, as much to himself as to the people staring at him. “I saw her.” He had to believe that was true. Otherwise, he would have to accept that he was as crazy as Tom Jackson said he was.

Harvey shoved the broken snowshoes into Daniel’s hands. “Take your dog and don’t come back.”

He wasn’t sure how he got to Doc’s place. But as the fog of confusion began to clear, he found himself sitting in the kitchen at the back of the clinic, a mug of coffee clutched in his bruised hands.

“She’s not dead,” he said for what must have been the tenth time. “I saw her. I talked to her.”

“Son.”

Daniel gave him a fierce look. “If what you say is true, then something happened to me under the snow. Something that makes no sense.”

“Head wounds are—”

“Tricky. I know. But Doc, my head is healed.” He shoved back the snow-dampened hair from his temple to show that the lump had gone down. “I don’t even have headaches anymore.” He let his hair fall back. “At least I didn’t until they pounded me. Everything is the same as it was before the slide.”

“Except for your insistence that Hannah Ellis is alive.”

Daniel pressed his lips tight and stared down into his mug. He knew himself better than Doc did. Surely, he would sense if something was wrong in his head.

“So tell me why you’re so sure she’s alive,” the old man prodded gently.

Reluctantly, Daniel told him all that had happened since he had first heard Hannah’s voice beneath the snow.

Doc listened without interruption, or even a show of surprise, which was disturbing. Was he that convinced his mind was impaired?

Yet, as Daniel put all that doubt and uncertainty into words and heard how strange it sounded, he had to admit that things had occurred that were beyond his understanding. “I don’t know what else to tell you, Doc. It happened exactly the way I’m telling you.” He gave a weak smile. “If she’s not real, then Hannah must be a ghost come to haunt me.”

Doc didn’t smile back. “Stranger things have happened.” Rising, he went to stir a pot of chili simmering on the stove.

Puzzled by that cryptic remark, Daniel leaned back in his chair, his mind retracing again all that had happened since the avalanche swept him under.

Hearing her voice under the snow—was that even possible?—especially with his bad ear? Then hearing her again by the woodshed and, later, inside the cabin. Her voice had been as distinct as if she had been standing right beside him. Yet there had been no one there.

Then seeing her by the woodshed. She had looked almost ghostly, standing there in the swirling snow—yet real, too, from her teary eyes all the way down to the scuffed, overlarge boots. How could he have made all that up?

He had spoken to her. She had answered. And even though they had been yards apart and her mouth had been covered by a scarf, he had heard her as plainly as if she had been only a foot away. Not since the explosion had he heard a voice that clearly.

And what about Roscoe? The hound seemed to know whenever she was around. How could he do that if she wasn’t even there?

But there were odd things he couldn’t ignore, inconsistencies that kept circling in his mind. Roscoe might have stayed by her side, but he never saw them touch. And when she disappeared, she didn’t leave behind a single track in the snow. There was no rational explanation for that.

Either Hannah was a ghost. Or an angel. Or a demon. Or he was insane.

He didn’t like any of those options. Determined to get to the bottom of it, he waited for Doc to refill their cups and then return the blackened coffeepot to the stove. “How did she die?” he asked, as the old man settled into the chair across from his.

“They’re not sure.” Seeing Daniel’s confusion, he explained. “They were traveling up from Santa Fe. Lacy and Hannah and her uncles—”

“Lacy?”

“Hannah’s mother. Her father, Pete, died just after they moved here two years ago. Cut his arm on a rusty nail. Week or so later, his jaw locked up, and two weeks after that, he was dead of severe muscle spasms. Nasty way to go. Hannah was probably four at the time and took it really hard. Like it was somehow her fault.” The old man must have realized he was wandering, and pulled himself back on track. “Anyway, last December, Lacy and Hannah and her uncles were coming back from Santa Fe when one of their wagon wheels lost a rim. Luckily, they made it to the trading post at Volker’s Crossing that night and were able to buy a new wheel the next morning. While her brothers put it on, Lacy and Hannah went into the store to pick up supplies. Hannah was right beside Lacy one minute, then gone the next.”

Daniel remembered the girl had mentioned a man. “Her mother didn’t notice anything? Anybody hanging around who might have taken her?”

Doc shook his head. “Probably just wandered off. Hannah was like that.”

Which Daniel knew too well. “So what’d they do?”

“Started looking. Even offered a reward. Lot of folks passing through that day, trying to get over the mountains before the big snows hit, and several pitched in to help. Checked the woods, the creek, all the outbuildings. Nothing. Tom even hired two Cheyenne trackers, but they came back empty-handed, too. After a week, the weather turned bad, so they gave up and came home. Lacy was a mess.”

And still is
, Daniel thought, remembering the look on her face. Some wounds never healed. Even now, he couldn’t hold a child in his arms without feeling an urge to weep. “What do you think happened to her?”

Doc shrugged. “Maybe she stumbled on a late-hibernating griz. Or wolves. Or fell down a ravine, or into a creek. This is hard country. And it was turning cold that day. She wouldn’t have lasted more than a few hours dressed the way she was. At least, I hope not.” Doc drained his mug and set it aside. “It’s taken her poor mother a year to get color back in her cheeks. Wouldn’t leave her house for months. And now . . . ”

He didn’t need to finish the sentence: And now Daniel had reopened that festering wound again.
Hell.
One more guilt weighting him down.

Doc checked Daniel’s new bruises and put that stinking salve on the worst of his scrapes and cuts, then offered him a cot in the sickroom for the night.

Daniel declined. He wanted to get home, even though leaving this late in the day meant he’d be traveling part of the way in the dark . . . or as dark as it got with a near-full moon reflecting off a snowy landscape.

Besides, Merlin had probably broken out again and was even now stomping all over the porch and kicking at the door. However, not to appear inhospitable, he did stay long enough to enjoy a bowl of chili and accept the loan of snowshoes since his were too busted to use. Before he left, he asked the older man one last question, something he had been puzzling over while he ate but hadn’t mentioned because it sounded so . . . crazy.

“Do you believe in ghosts, Doc?”

The old man gave it some thought. “I’ve never seen one, but I can’t discount it.”

“Not much of an answer.”

Doc shrugged. “I’ve seen a lot of strange things over the years, son. Wondrous, sometimes frightening, often unfathomable things. And although I’ve got no proof of it, I do believe if the body is able and the heart wants something bad enough, it’ll convince itself it can happen.” He gave Daniel a speculative look. “Like you wanting to believe Hannah is still alive.”

“Or Hannah
being
alive and wanting me to come find her.” Which made even less sense. If she wasn’t there, how had he seen her? Or talked to her? How could people communicate with only their thoughts?

“Maybe so.” Doc smiled and patted his shoulder. “Some might call such a thing a miracle. This would certainly be the season for one, don’t you think?”

***

“No good will come of this,” Tom said as he maneuvered their borrowed sleigh around a fallen branch that had broken under the weight of snow.

Lacy looked over at him, saw the belligerent thrust of his chin and the worry in his dark brown eyes. This argument had run continuously from the moment she had announced that morning that she was going to Daniel Hobart’s place to find out why he was so insistent that Hannah was still alive. No doubt Tom was right. The man was probably insane. But she needed to be sure. She needed to stop wishing and praying for the impossible, before it consumed her, leaving behind a broken shell that would take her months to put back together.

It had happened so many times over the last year. A thought, the mention of a blonde child who was about Hannah’s age, a stranger’s half-remembered recollection of a girl he had seen somewhere. Each time, she had been so sure she was finally close to finding her Hannah. And each time, the disappointment had ripped her open and left her bleeding in its wake.

Tom snapped the reins. “The man’s confused. Doc said so himself.”

“I know.” But there was something about Mr. Hobart. Something that seemed so sincere and honest. What if he truly did have news of Hannah?

“You can’t keep doing this to yourself, Lacy. As hard as it is for you—for all of us—you have to let Hannah go.”

“I know.” Poor Tom. He had been almost as devastated as she when Hannah went missing, and Harvey could still hardly speak his niece’s name without tearing up. “This will be the last time,” she assured her brother. “I promise.” She needed to look into Daniel Hobart’s eyes and ask him why he was so convinced her daughter was still alive. There had always been an odd connection there, ever since the man had come to the canyon right after Hannah had disappeared. Maybe he did know something. Or had seen something. She had no choice but to hear what he had to say.

Two snow-dusted buildings came into view. A small barn, with a big bay gelding watching over a gnawed paddock rail as they drove by, and a smaller log cabin where the road ended before a deep stand of firs.

It looked deserted. Barely a puff of smoke rose from the rock chimney. Yet it appeared well tended, and paths had been cleared from the house to the barn and woodshed near the trees. The snowshoes and shovel on the small covered porch indicated someone lived there, although not a single track broke the thin coating of snow that had fallen in the night.

“You’re certain this is the place?” Lacy asked.

“Last cabin on Wheeler Creek. This is it.”

They sat for a moment to see if Mr. Hobart noticed them and came outside. When he didn’t, Lacy started to rise. “I’ll go knock.”

“Not alone, you won’t.” Tom climbed down, tied the driving reins to a sturdy post rising out of the snow, then came to help Lacy down. “Let me do the talking.”

“Absolutely not. You’ll start something. And it’s my daughter.”

“But he—”

“I mean it, Tom. You’ll let me handle this, or you can stay out here with the horse.” As her oldest brother, Tom had always been overly protective of her. But this wasn’t about Tom, or her, or Daniel Hobart. It was about Hannah.

Putting a gloved hand on her brother’s arm, she looked up into his stern face. “Please, Tom. I need answers, not another fistfight.”

Reluctantly, he nodded. He even let her do the knocking. But when there was no response, he reached around her and gave the door a good pounding before stepping back into his position behind her.

From inside came the sound of a voice. Banging and cursing. Then, abruptly, the door flew open. “Damn it, Merlin, I told you—Jesus!”

Lacy gaped at the half-dressed man filling the doorway.

He gaped back, clearly expecting someone else. “I—it’s you,” he stammered.

“Yes. Lacy Ellis.” Struggling to keep her gaze on Mr. Hobart’s face, rather than his unclothed torso—no wonder her brothers had taken such a beating—she motioned vaguely back at her brother. “You remember Tom?”

He didn’t respond. Didn’t even look at her brother.

She let her hand drop back to her side and cleared her throat. “I’ve come to ask you a few questions, if I may.”

He continued to stare, his remarkable gray eyes fixed on her with such intensity that she doubted he was even aware of Tom, or the dog pushing past his leg to get out, or the fact that he was standing in the open doorway barefoot, shirtless, his trousers half-buttoned, and his hair sticking out every which way. Had the man never had a guest at his door? And who was Merlin?

“Aren’t you cold?” she asked after a moment.

With a start, Mr. Hobart looked down at his state of undress, then snapped back to life. “Damn—I mean, yes. Sorry. Come in—no, wait!”

The door slammed in her face, almost catching the tail of the hound as the dog broke for freedom. The animal gave her a sniff, Tom a glare, then bounded off the porch and trotted over to anoint the runner of their sleigh.

BOOK: Kaki Warner
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