EIGHTEEN
K
atie cleared her throat, but the knot that had developed refused to budge. She talked around it. “Mrs. Banks, we have reason to believe that your Lucy is really Lucy Randall.”
The woman’s forehead creased. “Who’s that?”
“A young girl who was taken from her home fourteen years ago.”
“Taken.” Mrs. Banks gaped. “And you think—”
“Ma’am, I know this is hard to process, but we have evidence that Frank Miller kidnapped Lucy Randall and gave her to you.”
Jordan’s soft words filled the room.
“Evidence?” she whispered. “No. Oh, no, please...”
“Would you like to call your husband? There’s more.”
With a shaky hand, Mrs. Banks pulled a cell phone from her jeans pocket and dialed a number. “Bill, there’s a bit of an emergency at home. I need you to come.” She listened. “No. I’m not hurt. Just come and drive carefully. You don’t need to speed.” She hung up and looked at Katie, then Jordan. “What’s this evidence?”
Katie exchanged a glance with Jordan and decided to just be honest. “Frank’s been arrested for murder and attempted murder. We have someone who puts his unmarked car at the scene of the kidnapping, and he basically admitted to taking her.”
The woman’s face went a pale gray. Katie had to contain herself from demanding Mrs. Banks get on the phone and call Lucy and tell her to come home. First she had to help these people deal with this shock. Then she could see Lucy.
“Frank? Arrested?” She sounded dazed.
Katie bit her lip. The news was too much. She should have had Mrs. Banks call her husband right away. She slid over and took the woman’s hand. “We’ll wait for your husband to get here to finish this.”
She nodded and for the next twenty minutes, they sat. Just when Katie thought she couldn’t bear the silence a minute longer, the front door opened and Mr. Banks bolted into the house. “Linds? Where are you?”
“Here, Bill.” Mrs. Banks stood and her husband whirled. His salt-and-pepper hair was askew, as though he’d run his hands through it repeatedly on the drive home. “What is it? What’s wrong?”
“They think Lucy is—” She couldn’t say another word as sobs overtook her.
Bill Banks looked at Katie and Jordan. Katie introduced herself and began the story once more.
When she finished, the couple simply stared at her in shock.
“So you’re saying my birth family is still alive?” A soft voice from the dining room grabbed their attention. Katie jumped to her feet.
Mrs. Banks cried out. “How much did you hear?”
“All of it. Daddy called and said there was something wrong at home and he wasn’t sure what, but it sounded serious. I came right here. I heard you talking and didn’t want to interrupt and—” she spread her hands “—I heard everything.”
Katie stared at the young woman. A stranger and yet...familiar, too. “Lucy,” she whispered.
Lucy looked at her. “So I was kidnapped?” She stared at her parents. “You told me they were dead. That they all died.” She wrinkled her brow. “I remember them, you know. In snatches and bits and pieces, but I remember them.”
Mrs. Banks sobbed against her husband’s shoulder.
Katie sucked in a deep breath. “Lucy, what do you remember about that day?”
“He took me from the yard. He was very nice, but very firm. He was a police officer and told me I had to go with him. So I did.” She swiped a hand through her hair. “He became my uncle. Uncle Frank. I remember being sad and missing my family. My sister. Katie.” She whispered the name, and Katie bit back a sob.
“That’s me. I’m Katie,” she said softly.
Lucy’s brow rose and her eyes narrowed as horror entered them. “You’re my sister?”
“Yes.”
“I was kidnapped.”
Katie nodded. “And I’ve been looking for you ever since.”
Lucy’s gaze flew from Katie to Jordan to her parents and back to Katie. “I need to sit down.”
She slid to the sofa next to her mother, and Katie restrained herself from reaching out and touching the girl. Lucy hugged her mother, then crossed the room to her father and wrapped him in a tight hug. She looked at Katie. “I want to see your evidence. If what you say is true, I want to know beyond a shadow of a doubt.”
Katie nodded. It seemed to be all she could do.
Tears in her eyes, Lucy smiled, then moved to wrap Katie in a tight hug. “I’ve missed you.”
Katie let a sob slip out as she hugged her sister back. “And oh, how I’ve missed you.”
Lucy drew in a deep breath and looked at her parents. Katie followed her gaze. They looked shell-shocked. Katie knew what she had to do. She looked at her sister. “Take your time and reassure them, then call me.” She pulled a card from her pocket and slid it in her sister’s hand.
Lucy’s tears spilled over, but she simply nodded as Katie turned to leave.
Jordan slipped his hand over hers and gave her a squeeze. She squeezed back and made it out the door and into the car before she turned, wrapped her arms around his neck and cried her happiness into his shoulder.
And bless the man, he let her do it.
After about ten minutes, he started mopping her face with a tissue. “Come on, Katie, I’m going to need an oar to steer the car if you keep this up.”
She sniffed and sat away from him, taking the tissue and finishing the job. “I’m sorry, I’m just so happy and almost unwilling to believe it’s true. We found her.”
He handed her a bottle of water. She eyed it suspiciously. “How long has this been in here?”
He laughed. “Since last night. It won’t kill you, I promise.”
She took a swig and sighed. “I need to call my parents.”
“Yes.”
Katie took out her phone and dialed her parents’ number. Her mother answered on the second ring. “Hi, Mom. I’ve got some news for you.”
“News? What kind of news?”
“We found Lucy.”
EPILOGUE
K
atie looked around the dinner table. Christmas Day had arrived with snow flurries and cold temperatures, but inside her parents' warm house, Katie marveled at her mother's bright eyes and happy smile. She kept coming back to the sight of Lucy sitting between her birth parents, with the parents who'd raised her sitting across the table.
Jordan sat to her right. And wonder of wonders, his parents had agreed to join them. His father wasn't falling over himself to be pleasant to Katie, but at least he could be in the same room and not cast blame.
Jordan said his parents had spent many hours working out the fact that his mother had chosen to keep Neil's secret. They were going to counseling to deal with everything, including accepting that Katie didn't deserve Paul's blame. And he was beginning to see the light.
Katie just shook her head. Never in a million years would she have pictured this scene. And yet here they all were.
Tears threatened and she rose on the pretense of carrying some empty dishes into the kitchen.
Jordan followed her. She put the dishes into the sink and felt his hands fall on her shoulders. He turned her to face him. “All you all right?”
She looked up into his eyes and felt her heart kick into overdrive. “I'm more than all right. I don't have the words to describe how I feel right now. I feel overwhelmed with how everything worked out.” A tear slipped down her cheek and he brushed it away. “This isn't the normal ending to a kidnapping.” She blinked. “I really believed she was dead, Jordan.”
“I know. I did, too.”
“And I keep having trouble wrapping my mind around the fact that we found her.”
“I know.”
“You know how Lucy's other mother said that Lucy was her gift from God? Well, reuniting our family is another gift.”
“God's done some amazing work over the last few weeks. One of those things was keeping you alive to enjoy this moment.” He pulled her to him and buried his face in her neck. “I don't know what I would have done if you'd been killed.”
She pushed him back and cupped his cheeks with her palms. “I think I love you, Jordan.”
He blinked, then gave a laugh and grabbed her around the waist to lift her so they were nose to nose. “I know I love you, silly woman.”
He kissed her, a long, thorough kiss that left her breathless. She grinned. “I'm so thankful God sent me to Finding the Lost.”
“Will you marry me?”
She gaped. “Marry you?”
“What? Too soon?”
“No. Yes. Maybe. No.”
He grinned. “So which one do I pick?”
She laughed through her tears. “Yes.”
“Soon?”
“Soon.”
“Awesome.”
He planted another kiss on her lips, and she clung to the happiness and blessings God had chosen to bestow upon them.
She pulled back. “Not every day is going to be this wonderful, you know.”
“I know, but let's enjoy while it lasts.”
“I'm good with that.”
She kissed him again, knowing her future was bright and God's love was enough to get them through whatever came their way. God's unconditional love. A love she couldn't earn, but which was freely given.
A love she accepted with a grateful heart. A love she planned to pass down to her children and her children's children. Children. The thought made her weepy again. Oh, yeah, she wanted children. Jordan's children.
Jordan pulled back and kissed her nose. “Merry Christmas, Katie.”
“Merry Christmas, Jordan.”
* * * * *
Keep reading for an excerpt from FORCE BY NATURE by Dana Mentink.
Questions for Discussion
Dear Reader,
Thank you so much for joining me on this journey, not
just to find Lucy, but to discover the unconditional love of an amazing God and
His free gift of eternal life to those who would accept it. I’m so glad His love
is something I can’t earn. Why? Because I could never do enough to earn a love
like that. Having to earn God’s love is a setup for failure. Just like Katie
couldn’t earn her mother’s love, we can’t earn God’s. Katie had the choice to
accept her mother’s love in the end—or reject it—and she chose to accept it. As
a result, it set her free in an emotional sense. God’s love sets us free from
death. I pray you now have this love and have accepted His priceless gift.
Again, I hope you enjoyed the story and drew closer to God as a
result of reading it. I love to hear from my readers. Feel free to find me on
the internet at
www.lynetteeason.com
and sign up with my newsletter if you’d like to be notified of upcoming dates
for my books to be released. I’m also on Facebook at
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and Twitter
@lynetteeason
. God bless you and
until next time,