Read Secrets of Harmony Grove Online
Authors: Mindy Starns Clark
Tags: #Amish, #Christian, #Suspense, #Single Women, #Lancaster County (Pa.), #General, #Christian Fiction, #Mystery Fiction, #Bed and Breakfast Accommodations, #Fiction, #Religious
Suddenly, I spotted movement from the corner of my eye, beyond the rows of beech trees on the other side of the gate. Rip saw it too, and before I had even gasped, his gun was up, pointed and cocked, and he had taken cover behind a nearby tree.
Seeing what was happening, Mike and Charlie drew their guns as well, Mike moving toward me in one fluid motion and pulling me with him behind another tree. It wasn’t wide enough for both of us, so rather than leaving him exposed, I silently moved on to the next tree and crouched down, watching to see what would happen. By that point, we had all managed to take cover except for the technician, who had simply hit the dirt at the base of the gate and lay still.
Seeing the man trapped there, exposed and without cover, Mike whispered sharply for all of us to turn off our flashlights. The figure was beyond the reach of our beams anyway, so we did as he said. Once my eyes adjusted
to the new darkness, I was relieved to see that the technician, dressed all in black, nearly disappeared from view.
No one fired. No one even spoke. Instead we all simply waited and watched, frozen, peering through the night at what had emerged from the shadows and seemed to hover there in the distance at the crest of the hill. Clad in a long, white flowing gown, the slim, diaphanous figure moved silently beyond the trees through the mist. Holding my breath, I tried to understand what I was seeing. I just hoped, more than anything, that it was an actual person and not what it really looked like.
A ghost.
After a moment the figure in the distance moved downward into the hollow, disappearing from view. Waiting to see if it would emerge, I began to wonder if by thinking it was a ghost that I was doing the exact thing Mike said people tended to do, see what the eyes were expecting to see rather than what really was.
Human or not, there was no doubt that someone or something was out there.
“I’m going in,” Rip whispered, and he began to move quietly in that direction, around the side of the closed gate and into the beech trees, zigzagging from tree to tree for cover.
If I’d had one of my guns with me, I would have gone too—not because I’m foolhardy or especially brave, but simply because the thought of being proactive was far less frightening to me than staying put and waiting to see what would happen next. Charlie whispered he was going in as well, but before he got very far a light suddenly appeared in the distance, in almost the same exact spot where the figure had first emerged. Moving along eerily in the silence, the light reached the crest of the hill and paused for a long moment, but rather than following along down into the hollow, it seemed to change course and come toward us instead. Hovering just a few feet off the ground, the yellowish glow dimmed and brightened as it floated closer.
The light finally came to a stop about fifteen feet beyond the gate. We waited, guns drawn and ready, my heart pounding furiously in my chest.
“Who goes there!” Rip suddenly demanded from his hiding place up ahead. The beam of his flashlight burst to life from among the beech trees, illuminating the path where the light was hovering.
We all flipped ours back on as well and pointed them toward the same spot, beams meeting in the center like spokes to an axle. What our illumination revealed wasn’t some otherworldly creature. It was simply a man, holding a lantern.
“I am Jonah Coblentz,” the man called. “Is everything all right?”
“Jonah!” I cried, relief flooding my veins. “It’s me! Sienna! Your cousin Sienna!”
Even as the men were already lowering their weapons, I called out to them that it was okay and not to shoot. Making my way toward Jonah—around the gate, through the trees, and back onto the path as quickly as possible—all I could think of was how grateful I was that these officers of the law had had the presence of mind not to shoot too soon.
“Sienna!” Jonah exclaimed as I reached him. “What are you doing out here?”
“At the moment I’m thanking the Lord you didn’t get shot!”
I threw my arms around him and held on tight. He tried to hug me in return, but with a lantern in one hand and a rifle in the other, it was a little awkward.
Releasing our embrace, I stepped back and looked at his familiar face. Though I hadn’t seen my cousin for almost a year, not since a visit last Christmas, in the lamplight he looked exactly the same, and I told him so.
“Except maybe the beard is another inch longer,” I added. Like all Amish men, he had stopped shaving everything but his upper lip the day he got married. That had been eight or nine years ago, and every time I saw him he looked more and more like his father.
In the midst of our little reunion, Mike came around the gate and joined us, asking Jonah if someone else had been with him.
“
Jah
, that is my wife, Liesl.”
Pointing my flashlight toward the place where the white figure had
disappeared, I saw that it was back again, much closer now and peeking out from behind a tree. It really
was
Liesl, and though she waved at me enthusiastically, she neither spoke nor came any closer.
“What’s wrong with her? Is she okay?”
Jonah chuckled.
“Jah
, she is fine, just embarrassed. We were already in bed when the police came knocking, and we were so concerned about the animals that we rushed right out to check on everything without stopping to think.”
Looking again at my cousin’s wife, I suddenly realized what he was saying. Though her nightgown was extremely modest, her hair was down. Her long, lovely, never-been-cut hair was loose on her shoulders and hanging free. To her mind, she might as well have been out here stark naked. The only time Amish women ever let their hair down was in the privacy of the bedroom with their husbands.
That also explained why I hadn’t recognized what I was seeing earlier. Had she been wearing the apron and cape she wore in the daytime, no doubt I would have spotted that telltale Amish silhouette, remembered that beyond the beech trees lay their farm, and figured out that it was her. Instead, a figure in a white gown had no context, and my mind had gone to “ghost.”
As Mike and Jonah briefly conversed, I thought about running over and giving Liesl a hug, but I wasn’t sure if that would only embarrass her further. To be safe, I simply waved in return and stayed where I was. After Mike crossed back to the other side of the gate to help the technician, Jonah and I chatted, me explaining what I was doing with the police, him telling me how sorry he was to hear about Troy, not to mention Floyd and Nina.
“I am relieved to say that the animals are all fine,” he told me. “There were no signs of any wild beasts at all. Now we are on our way to Emory’s. Liesl wants to check on him and make sure he is okay.”
“I should have thought to check on him myself,” I admitted, “or at the very least called my father about all of this by now.”
When Grandpa Abe died, the responsibility of his mentally disabled son had fallen to my father. Unsure about what to do, my dad had had his older brother Emory tested for competency, and we all had been relieved to hear that he could live alone as long as he had daily part-time help. Nina,
a home health worker who lived across the street and had been a longtime family friend, had easily filled the bill. Just to make sure things were working out with the new arrangement, my father had begun coming out to see Emory more often. Things had floated along smoothly ever since—or at least until my mother had become so sick. Now my father had almost no time or energy to spare for his brother. I didn’t even want to think about what might happen if poor Nina ended up not pulling through.
“You haven’t told your family yet?” Jonah asked, his eyebrows disappearing under the rim of his hat.
“My mother isn’t doing very well,” I explained. “She had one of her treatments again this morning.”
“Ah. Then your father has enough on his hands already,” Jonah replied. “Do not worry, Sienna. Liesl and I and will take care of Emory. Even if Nina didn’t come today at all, I am sure that is not a problem for him. He makes out okay. My bigger concern is how he reacted when the police came knocking on his door tonight. He is terrified of men in uniform, you know.”
I put a hand to my mouth, now feeling even worse.
“Oh, dear. I didn’t know.”
“It is okay. Liesl and I have a key to his medication box. There are pills we are allowed to give him if he gets too upset. Do not give it another thought; we will take care of it.”
“Thank you, Jonah. We’ll talk tomorrow, okay?”
I could tell that Mike and his men had finished with the gate and were waiting for me, so I gave Jonah a hug and thanked him again for being such a huge help. He insisted that no thanks were necessary. Emory was family, and this was just what families do.
“You two be careful out here,” I said as we parted. In reply, Jonah held up his rifle and said he had things covered.
As I made my way back through the trees, I thought about that. An Amish man with a gun? Perhaps later I would ask him about it. It was my understanding that the Amish were never willing to bear arms, not for any reason. I realized there was so much about my own family heritage I didn’t know or understand. Once my grandfather left the faith, he also left all that part of himself behind.
Mike explained that it didn’t look as if Troy had been at the German Gate after all, so we pressed onward, checking first the Corn Gate and then the Peace Gate. In the end we had to conclude that whatever latch he had opened during our phone conversation, it wasn’t any of the four in the grove.
Feeling overwhelmingly disappointed as we crossed back to the B and B, I realized that our entire jaunt had served only one good purpose evidence-wise—that of finding the holes that had recently been dug. I was feeling hopeless and every bit as confused as before when Mike’s radio crackled to life and we heard at least one interesting bit of news: One of the cops who was an avid hunter had found some very unusual animal scat among some trees not far from the pool area. The scat had been overlooked by everyone before because of its appearance. I wasn’t interested in hearing the details, but it sounded as though it included a piece of fruit so large and nearly undigested that an untrained eye might not realize it had passed through an animal at all.
“Do you recognize what kind of creature it came from?” Mike said into the radio.
“Negative. It’s not like anything I’ve ever seen before. I can tell you what it
didn’t
come from.” He then went on to list every animal, large and small, that we had been considering thus far. When he was finished, Mike asked the man what he thought their next animal-tracking move should be.
“Once it’s daylight, we can check for prints in the mud alongside the stream in the grove,” the man’s voice said. “The ground should be softer and wetter there, so if there really has been a wild animal around, that’ll be our best chance for finding any tracks.” He added that it was also probably time to call in the game commission.
Radio chatter continued all the way back to the B and B, with the officers who had made the rounds knocking on doors finally reporting in. I was only half listening, but I smiled when I heard one of them say that the Amish couple around the corner seemed more interested in the safety of their livestock than themselves. I knew they were talking about Jonah and Liesl, who took excellent care of all of their animals.
From another report, we learned that Burl Newton, the former chicken
farmer who lived directly behind me, hadn’t been home when they knocked on his door. But police had continued moving down Burl’s road, notifying other neighbors, and when they came across a backyard party in progress several houses down, they ran into Burl there and were able to talk to him.