Lie Down in Green Pastures (32 page)

BOOK: Lie Down in Green Pastures
10.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"I know, but I'm not calling about those."

"What is it?" Mark asked.

He glanced across the room to where Traci was curled up on the couch reading a mystery. He owed her everything. She had saved him. She was the reason he was going to survive whatever came.

"You know, word on the street is that you're going to be back on active duty next month."

"That would be nice," Mark said. "Seriously, though, why did you call?"

"We've finished identifying about half of the bodies that were buried underneath that cabin up at Green Pastures," he said.

"And?" Mark asked.

"They are several members of the cult that followed that Matthew guy about twenty years ago. Men, women, children.It looks like a mass suicide."

"Great," Mark muttered.

"One of the kids that we have a positive identification on was a ten-year-old boy. We ran the DNA several times and matched it to a kidnapping from back then. Police suspected that the cult was behind that and several other kidnappings, but could never prove it. It's official; the missing boy was one of the bodies."

"Who is the boy?"

"Paul Dryer, Junior, son of Ruth and Paul Senior."

"That's impossible," Mark whispered. "You knew Paul. He was killed last week."

"That's why I wanted to call you, so you heard it from me first. I'm sorry about your partner. But whoever he was, he wasn't Paul Dryer."

 

 

Discussion Questions

 
  1. Everyone deals with death in different ways, finds different ways of healing. How do you lean on God when you experience times of mourning and do you allow those around you to help you during these times?
  2. Cindy does something incredibly dangerous when she goes to rescue Jeremiah and the kids. Have you ever risked your life to save someone else? How did it make you feel?
  3. The Bible says that no greater love hath a man than to lay down his life for a friend. How far have you gone to help a friend? Is there anyone you would lay down your life for?
  4. At the end of this book Cindy comes to have some sense of perspective about the death of her sister, which helps her to deal with her own life and circumstances.Is there anything you need to gain perspective on in your life?
  5. At the end of this book Cindy calls her brother, Kyle, to thank him for helping her even though he didn't know it. Is there anyone you should thank who might not realize how they have helped you?
  6. Is there someone you've been meaning to spend more time with but you just haven't gotten around to it, a family member, friend, or even God? What can you do this week to strengthen that relationship?
  7. Zac, one of the campers, tries to run away from home.Every year many kids attempt to run away from home.Do you know any kids who might need someone to talk to?
  8. Volunteer opportunities abound at churches. Is there anything you can do to help out? Have you ever volunteered to work at a camp or help out with teens in some other capacity?
  9. Mark goes too far and does something terrible in order to try and save people. Have you ever done the wrong thing for the right reason? How did you make amends?
  10. Several of the characters in this story feel or are trapped.Have you ever felt that you were backed into a corner with no way out? What did you do? How did God help you in this situation?

 

 

 

 

 

Want to learn more about author Debbie Viguié and check out other great fiction from Abingdon Press?

 

 

 

 

Sign up for our fiction newsletter at

www.AbingdonPress.com/fiction

to read interviews with your favorite authors, find tips for starting a reading group, and stay posted on what new titles are on the horizon. It's a place to connect with other fiction readers or post a comment about this book.

 

 

 

Be sure to visit Debbie Viguié online.

 

 

www.debbieviguie.com

What they're saying about...
Gone to Green, by Judy Christie
"...Refreshingly realistic religious fiction, this novel is unafraid to address the injustices of sexism, racism, and corruption as well as the spiritual devastation that often accompanies the loss of loved ones. Yet these darker narrative tones beautifully highlight the novel's message of friendship, community, and God's reassuring and transformative love."

Publishers Weekly
starred review
The Call of Zulina, by Kay Marshall Strom
"This compelling drama will challenge readers to remember slavery's brutal history, and its heroic characters will inspire them. Highly recommended."
— Library Journal
starred review
Surrender the Wind, by Rita Gerlach
"I am purely a romance reader, and yet you hooked me in with a war scene, of all things! I would have never believed it. You set the mood beautifully and have a clean, strong, lyrical way with words. You have done your research well enough to transport me back to the war-torn period of colonial times."
—Julie Lessman, author of
The Daughters of Boston
series
One Imperfect Christmas, by Myra Johnson
"Debut novelist Myra Johnson ushers us into the Christmas season with a fresh and exciting story that will give you a chuckle and a special warmth."
—DiAnn Mills, author of
Awaken My Heart
and
Breach of Trust
The Prayers of Agnes Sparrow, by Joyce Magnin
"Beware of
The Prayers of Agnes Sparrow.
Just when you have become fully enchanted by its marvelous quirky zaniness, you will suddenly be taken to your knees by its poignant truth-telling about what it means to be divinely human. I'm convinced that 'on our knees' is exactly where Joyce Magnin planned for us to land all along."
—Nancy Rue, co-author of
Healing Waters
(
Sullivan Crisp
Series) 2009 Novel of the Year
The Fence My Father Built, by Linda S. Clare
"...Linda Clare reminds us with her writing that is wise, funny, and heartbreaking, that what matters most in life are the people we love and the One who gave them to us."—
Gina Ochsner, Dark Horse Literary, winner of the Oregon Book Award and the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction
eye of the god, by Ariel Allison
"Filled with action on three continents,
eye of the god
is a riveting fast-paced thriller, but it is Abby—who, in spite of another letdown by a man, remains filled with hope—who makes Ariel Allison's tale a super read."—
Harriet Klausner
www.AbingdonPress.com/fiction

Other books

Spirited by Gede Parma
Secrets Unveiled by Mary Manners
Franklin Affair by Jim Lehrer
One-Hundred-Knuckled Fist by Dustin M. Hoffman
Snowdrops by A. D. Miller
No Tan Lines by Kate Angell
Grave Secret by Sierra Dean