Chapter 1
Stone Mill, Pennsylvania
January
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Rachel Mast slid out of the front seat of her Jeep as her fiancé opened the door, and surveyed the crowded high school parking lot with a sigh of relief. This was the opening day of Stone Mill's long anticipated Winter Frolic, and dozens of eager, smiling people, many in Plain dress, were making their way inside. A line of horses and black buggies stood along the side of the building while motor vehicles, some with out-of-state plates, filled more than two-thirds of the parking spaces while others waited bumper to bumper in the street, turn signals flashing.
“Careful. Watch your step,” Evan cautioned. “The snowplows did a pretty good job of cleaning up after the last snow, but it's still slippery in spots.”
“I can't believe it! People came out for the frolic.” Rachel could hardly contain her excitement. “I hoped they would, but with the storm coming in, I was afraid they might not.”
“I'll admit I never expected to see this many visitors.” Evan grinned down at her. “I should have had more faith in you, Rache.”
“It was a long shot,” she admitted. “Most towns only hold festivals in the summer for a reason.”
Hosting a big festival had been a risky proposition for the town, and much of her reputation rested on the outcome. Like so many rural communities, Stone Mill desperately needed any kind of financial boost it could get after years of national economic downturn. Rachel had been born here, which should have made her trustworthy. But she'd left her Amish upbringing and stayed away for fifteen years, going to college, then joining the corporate business world, which thinned the ties and made her suspect. Stone Mill was an isolated mountain community that held to old ways, familiar faces, and tried-and-true solutions.
Even after some of her previous successes, like the fair they held in the town square on Saturdays in the summer months, it had taken a lot of persuasion to convince the valley residents and business owners that hosting a weeklong craft show and celebration midwinter could be a success. Had the project flopped, she'd have had a difficult time getting people to listen to her next harebrained idea. Luckily, it didn't look to be a flop.
January was usually a slow season for her B&B, but Stone Mill House was booked all week with every room filled. The previous night, she'd seen that Wagler's Grocery, The George, Junior's Diner, and Russell's Hardware and Emporium were all crowded with out-of-towners. So, despite minor glitches in the festivities, the below-normal temperatures, and the threat of a snowstorm, the festival seemed headed in the right direction.
“Rachel! Evan!” A young woman dressed all in black, with both one eyebrow and one nostril pierced, shifted a box of books to one hip and waved. “Wait until you see our table! It looks awesome!”
Rachel waved back. “Is George here?” Ell owned the town's bookstore, but it had once belonged to her Uncle George.
“Are you kidding? I couldn't keep him away,” Ell called back.
“Need help with that box?” Evan asked.
“Got it!” Ell shifted the weight to both arms again. “Rachel, don't forget that you promised to help with story time for the kids. I need you at noon for an hour-long shift.”
“I'll be there.” Rachel returned her attention to Evan. “Be sure to keep an eye on Mary Aaron's strawberry jam, right? Because her mother insisted they were short one jar after the Christmas bazaar.”
Evan was wearing his state police winter uniform, which made him appear taller, broader of shoulder, and even more imposing than normal. He'd recently been promoted to detective but had volunteered to serve as security for the Winter Frolic's biggest day, free of charge. Rachel didn't really think that security was needed to guard the tables of whoopie pies and hand-crocheted hot mitts, but she'd learned by trial and error that city folks, visiting for the day, felt more at ease with a tall trooper keeping an eye on things.
“Just doing my civic duty,” he replied with a wink. “Serve and protect.”
She laughed and gave his arm a squeeze. For two years Evan had pursued her, and she'd finally agreed to marry him when he'd proposed again on New Year's Day. Somehow, making that decision had changed things between them. In a good way. “Would you mind giving a hand with traffic control, first?” she asked sweetly. “Before you start guarding the jam?”
As if on cue, brakes squealed and a car horn sounded from the street. “I'm on it,” he said. “See you later?”
“Absolutely,” she agreed. “I hope you brought a change of clothes. You promised me a sleigh ride, and I'm not letting you out of it. I'll get tickets.”
It hadn't taken much arm-twisting to get her father to agree to let her brother Moses polish up the two-horse sleigh and deck the team with bells so that he could offer old-fashioned Amish sleigh rides during the festival. As she'd suspected, there'd been so much interest that Moses and his wife, Ruth, were taking reservations, and they were attempting to locate a second sleigh and driver.
“Late lunch first and then the sleigh ride,” Evan bargained. “You know how I feel about horses.” He squeezed her gloved hand. “You're wearing it, aren't you?”
She laughed. “Of course I'm wearing it.” When she'd finally accepted Evan's marriage proposal, he'd slipped an antique diamond ring on her finger. “I haven't had it off since you gave it to me.”
“Good. This will be a chance to show it to everybody and let the whole town know you're taken.”
Inwardly, Rachel grimaced. Had she had her way, there wouldn't have been an engagement ring. The Amish didn't believe in jewelry, not even wedding rings. And while she was no longer Amish, she knew her family, especially her parents, wouldn't approve. Rings were considered
worldly,
and the Amish were a people set apart from the English world. Although she'd left the faith when she was seventeen, some steps were still hard for her. If she'd had her druthers, she would have settled for a simple wedding band and skipped the diamond altogether, but Evan didn't understand. He'd been so pleased with himself that she didn't have the heart to refuse to wear the engagement ring. And it
was
beautiful, and she loved him for being him. She sighed. Maybe the English world had changed her more than she wanted to admit. But not enough that she felt comfortable flaunting an expensive diamond in front of her Plain friends and neighbors.
As Rachel trudged across the parking lot to the sidewalk, she heard her name being called. She looked up to see an Amish couple standing halfway between the entrance to the school gym and the buggy parking. Since almost all of the Amish women dressed similarly in black dress bonnets, capes, and coats, it was often difficult to tell them apart from a distance, but there was no mistaking Naamah, with her husband, Bishop Abner. He was small and thin; she outweighed him by at least fifty pounds and stood a head taller. The smiling bishop made his way along the sidewalks, weighed down with split-oak baskets of canned goods, presumably to sell at the Plain Pickle and Jam stand her parents' Amish church community was sponsoring.
“Rachel!” Naamah called excitedly. “So many Englishers coming to our frolic.
Wunderbaar
.”
Naamah gave a quick hug to a small Amish woman going in the opposite direction, then hurried toward Rachel, her husband trailing three steps behind.
Swooping down on Rachel, Naamah enveloped her in an enthusiastic bear hug, and Rachel was instantly engulfed in the familiar scents of her childhoodâdamp wool, starch, and dried lavender. “So happy we are that the snow doesn't drive away our visitors,” Naamah bubbled. She had a merry voice and eyes that shone with the joy of life. “Lots of people here, it looks.”
“Yes,” Rachel agreed. “I was afraid the weather would keep tourists away. The road over the mountain into the valley can get slippery, but they must be braver than I thought.” She glanced back toward the woman Naamah had embraced. The smaller figure had turned back toward the buggies. “Was that Annie Herschberger?”
“
Ya,
poor Annie,” the bishop confirmed. “A difficult time for her and her family.”
Annie was a sister-in-law to Alvin and Verna Herschberger, the young couple who made the delicious goat cheeses that Rachel sold in her gift shop. She was also a friend of Rachel's Aunt Hannah, but Rachel didn't know her well.
She watched as Annie walked to one of the buggies and climbed inside.
“Is she leaving already?” Rachel asked.
“Just going back to fetch a pumpkin cake for the bake sale,” Naamah said. “She thought either my husband, Joab, or our Sammy had carried it into the school with her raisin bread and
krum kuchen,
but they can't find the cake.”
“I wondered where Sammy was,” Rachel remarked. A few months ago, Naamah's eighteen-year-old nephew Sammy Zook had come to stay with them. He was a big boy, strong and good-natured, but slow in mind and body. Naamah said that Sammy was full of fanciful tales and couldn't be trusted to give a straight answer if his life depended on it, but as far as Rachel could see, his presence was a great help around the farm to Naamah and Abner. Childless, the two had to perform alone the many tasks living simply demanded, such as chopping wood, building fences, milking and caring for the animals. It seemed a good solution for all three of them as the bishop was growing no younger and Sammy was obviously thriving under his aunt and uncle's loving care.
“
Ach,
Rachel.” Naamah shook her head sadly. “Poor Annie said she didn't want to come today, to maybe have people staring at them and whispering behind their back, but Abner insisted they shouldn't hide. If there was fault, it was Joab's, not hers. She has no reason to feel shame, and gossip soon grows cold when idle minds turn to new mischief.”
“I agree wholeheartedly,” Rachel said.
The bishop turned to Rachel and asked, in a low voice, “Did you have a chance to talk to Bill Billingsly yet?”
She shook her head. “He's been out of the office all week,
supposedly
. I've called three times and I've left messages. I think he's hiding because he's afraid of me.”
“I'm opposed to violence, of course, but it might be that he should be afraid of me as well.” Bishop Abner stroked his long beard. “I've been praying hard on the matter. Trying to temper my anger. I just can't imagine why that newspaperman would want to hurt good people like Annie and Joab.”
“
Ya,
they are both good people,” Rachel agreed. “And we need their contributions to the community. Mary Aaron said they were talking about selling the dairy farm and moving out to Wisconsin.”
“What a terrible loss that would be.” The bishop frowned for a moment but then turned back to her, forcing a smile. “Enough talk of the newspaperman. He's not worth our time to fret over. Congratulations on such a fine turnout. Clever, this idea of yours, Rachel. To bring tourists to our town in the cold of winter.” He looked at his wife with obvious affection. “But then, not even Englishers can resist my Naamah's rhubarb jam.”
“If any jars are left over next weekend, just drop them by the inn,” Rachel said. “You know what a big seller they are in the gift shop. I sold seventeen jars of Naamah's chowchow in December.”
“Maybe I should give up raising sheep and learn to make chowchow,” he replied. “I would, if I could talk my good wife into giving up her secret recipes.”
“No, because if I tell you, you'll hand them out to anyone who asks,” Naamah retorted. “I know you. You're a pushover.” She laughed again, her round cheeks and the tip of her snub of a nose glowing as red in the icy air as a pickled egg.
“How can I help it?” he teased. “Doesn't the good book tell us to be kind to our neighbors?”
“
Ya,
but it says nothing about giving away my grandmother's recipe for tomato mincemeat or chowchow.” Naamah's brown eyes sparkled with good humor beneath the rim of her black dress bonnet. “At the last school fair, I took six jars and Mathiah's Gertie and her sister Agnes brought a dozen exactly the same. They offered theirs cheaper and sold out before me.”
Bishop Abner's scraggly reddish-gray beard bobbed up and down as he chuckled again. “And all for the same good cause.” He shifted the heavy baskets and rested one in the snow. “Money for the schoolhouse addition, so what was the harm?”
“None, I suppose,” Naamah allowed. “But my
gross-mama
would not approve.”
“Let's get inside before we all freeze,” Rachel suggested. “Those baskets must weigh a ton.”
“I told him I could carry some,” Naamah fussed, “but he wouldn't hear of it. If the bishop had his way, I'd be spoiled rotten.”
“And who should I do it for if not my own wife?” He scooped up the basket of pickles and jam and followed Naamah toward the entrance to the school gymnasium.
Rachel trailed after them, thinking what a positive force Abner Chupp was for the community. He was bishop for her family's church and as dear to Rachel as his wife was. He might be diminutive in stature, but he loomed large in the valley both as an example of how an Amish man should live and as a kind and wise religious elder.
Some, even members of her own family, might openly show their disapproval of her choice to leave the faith and become part of the English world, but Bishop Abner never had. All he'd ever offered was friendship, understanding, and an open invitation to return to the Amish way of life. As for Naamah, Rachel adored her. Despite the good-humored bickering that went on between her and her husband, Rachel knew that the two were devoted to each other and never really disagreed.