Hidden away at promise l.., p.1

Hidden Away at Promise Lodge, page 1

 

Hidden Away at Promise Lodge
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Hidden Away at Promise Lodge


  “THE THOUGHT OF RIDING A PARADE WAGON DOES SOUND LIKE A GLORIOUS WAY TO HAVE SOME FUN!”

  Mose stepped toward her, his heart hammering. When the rays of the setting sun glimmered on the gauzy back of her heart-shaped kapp, Sylvia glowed like an angel wearing a halo. Was that a sign that Mose should be paying her special respect? Or was it perhaps a subtle heavenly warning about the limited number of days this little woman had left?

  Mose inhaled deeply to fortify his nerves. “You—you want to ride with me when I p-put them through their—p-paces t-tomorrow morning?” he stammered. “I’ll b-be t-taking them out around eight.”

  The joy on Sylvia’s face made Mose want to grab her up and hug her—which would be as wildly inappropriate as his invitation to ride the parade wagon. He seemed to have lost all control over his thoughts, because he’d gotten the sense that Sylvia was somewhat older than he, and far too fragile for a man his size to handle. And he’d face a stern talking-to when Bishop Monroe found out that he’d offered Sylvia a ride with a client’s team.

  And yet, the fact that he’d made her so happy made him happy, too.

  Don’t miss any of Charlotte Hubbard’s Amish romances:

  A Mother’s Gift

  A Mother’s Love

  Seasons of the Heart series

  Summer of Secrets

  Autumn Winds

  Winter of Wishes

  An Amish Country Christmas

  Breath of Spring

  Harvest of Blessings

  The Christmas Cradle

  An Amish Christmas Quilt

  Promise Lodge series

  Promise Lodge

  Christmas at Promise Lodge

  Weddings at Promise Lodge

  New Beginnings at Promise Lodge

  Light Shines on Promise Lodge

  Family Gatherings at Promise Lodge

  Simple Gifts series

  A Simple Vow

  A Simple Wish

  A Simple Christmas

  The Maidels of Morning Star series

  Morning Star

  First Light in Morning Star

  Christmas Comes to Morning Star

  Love Blooms in Morning Star

  Published by Kensington Publishing Corp.

  Hidden Away at

  PROMISE LODGE

  Charlotte Hubbard

  ZEBRA BOOKS

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  Table of Contents

  “THE THOUGHT OF RIDING A PARADE WAGON DOES SOUND LIKE A GLORIOUS WAY TO HAVE SOME FUN!”

  Also by

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Teaser chapter

  ZEBRA BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2023 by Charlotte Hubbard

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.

  If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  Zebra and the Z logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  Bouquet Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  ISBN: 978-1-4201-5441-2

  ISBN-13: 978-1-4201-5441-2

  ISBN-13: 978-1-4201-5442-9 (eBook)

  Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you:

  For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened.

  —Matthew 7:7–8

  Acknowledgments

  Highest praise and thanks to God for this book—and this entire series!

  Thank you, thank you to my agent, Evan Marshall, for so many years and so many books! Special thanks, as well, to my editor, Alicia Condon, for making the writing and publishing process so enjoyable over the course of all these Amish stories! And a note of thanks to Vicki Harding for providing research assistance from the Old Order Amish of Jamesport, Missouri.

  A special nod to contest winner Karen Mercer, who agreed to share her name with a character in this story.

  For Neal and Vera. You are my sunshine!

  Chapter 1

  Karen Mercer set her suitcase on the ground and shut the hatchback of her brother’s car. “Thanks for the ride, Mike,” she called out. “See you next Sunday!”

  As he drove away, she smiled at her best friend, Andi Swann, who was tucking a stray lock of blond hair back into her heart-shaped kapp. “Well, here we are, following our dream of living Amish—not just reading the books, but walking the walk and talking the talk! For nearly a week!”

  “Look at how this place has changed since we went to church camp here,” Andi remarked as they stood at the entry to Promise Lodge. “This must be a new metal entryway sign, because I don’t remember it having sunflowers and wheat sheaves, do you? And this plot to the left was a mowed pasture for horseback riding. Now it’s planted in green beans and tomatoes—”

  “Probably to be sold at this produce stand,” Karen said, nodding toward the wooden structure at the roadside. “And look at all the houses! And there’s a tiny home with a dock on the far side of Rainbow Lake. How cool is that?”

  “The old timbered lodge and the cabins look just the same as I remember them,” Andi said wistfully. “Except the Amish here have obviously done a lot of painting—and that looks like a new roof. The summers we spent here as campers and counselors were some of the best times of my life.”

  “Yeah, they were.” Karen pointed toward a large white barn. “And look at those adorable black-and-white cows! Everything looks too neat and perfect to be real—”

  “But what about us?” Andi interrupted, her smile falling a notch. “Do we look authentic? We’re wearing these calf-length dresses we made and the kapps we ordered from a store in Lancaster County—and we’ve read hundreds of Amish novels—but what if they call us out as fakes? What if they make us confess in front of everybody at church and then—”

  “They can’t do that, silly!” Karen reminded her with a chuckle. “We’re only taking a little trip down memory lane while we live the Amish life instead of just reading about it. If we stick to our script and imitate the way these folks do things, we’ll be fine, right?”

  Andi sighed as though she wasn’t too sure about that. “But we made our phone reservation request and sent our money as though we were Plain, and the Amish think it’s a sin to lie. Maybe we should’ve—”

  “But we didn’t,” Karen pointed out quickly. Her pulse was pounding with anticipation as she picked up the old-fashioned suitcase she’d bought at a thrift store. “If we follow our plan, we won’t have any problems. We’re just a couple of Amish maidels who’ve come to Promise Lodge for a week to check it out because we read about it in The Budget newspaper—which we did. Let’s walk to the lodge before you get cold feet and back out on me.”

  Side by side the two of them strolled along the main dirt road, gazing at other changes that had been made since their days as teenage campers. “It must be quite a draw for these folks to have a bulk store now—and look at how many cars are in the parking lot there,” Andi remarked.

  Karen, however, was inhaling too deeply to reply. “I smell pie!” she whispered giddily. “And look way up on the hill—at that pasture where the sheep are grazing. What a picture that makes!”

  Andi nodded, focused on the rustic, timbered lodge building they were approaching. “That porch hasn’t changed a bit,” she murmured. “I still remember the night Denny Willoughby kissed me on that swing.”

  “Jah,” Karen said with her best Pennsylvania Dutch accent, “but we can’t be talking about past stuff like that. According to our story, we’ve never been to Promise Lodge, remember? Now get your act together, because once we walk inside, we become Annie Stoltzfus and Karen Yoder for the next seven days.”

  Andi—now Annie—smoothed the front of her deep green cape dress, nodding nervously as Karen reached for the doorknob. When they stepped into the lobby, they gazed upward with wistful smiles, taking in the grand old space that was two stories high with an elaborate chandelier made of deer antlers. Ahead of them, the double curved staircase took their memories up to the level where they’d bunked so many summers as kids.

  But it was the tantalizing aromas of sweet fruit, pastry, and spices that made them close their eyes in anticipation.

  “Camp food never smelled this good,” Andi whispered.

  Karen giggled. “And you can bet they don’t get their pie fillings from those big gallon cans, either. Shall we let them know we’re here?”

  As they passed through the huge dining room at the right, between the long wooden tables Karen remembered very well—because she’d secretly carved her initials on one of them—a wave of nostalgia washed over her. Everything seemed smaller than she remembered, yet it did her soul good to see the way these Amish had saved an abandoned church camp from rotting away and being overgrown by weeds. Voices coming from the kitchen made her pause to draw a fortifying breath.

  “Jah, hall-o!” she said as she and Andi peered into the kitchen from the doorway. “It’s Annie Stoltzfus and Karen Yoder, come to claim our rooms.”

  Two gray-haired ladies in flowery dresses and white aprons looked up from the pies they were making at the big counter in the center of the kitchen. Recalling that some of the folks living here were Mennonites, Karen gave them a little wave.

  “And here you are, bright and early,” the taller of the two said as she bustled toward them. “Welcome to Promise Lodge! I’m Beulah Kuhn—”

  “And I’m her sister, Ruby, who talked to you on the phone,” the other one said with a nod. “We’re glad you’re here, ladies. As you can see, we’re hip-deep in pie preparation, getting ready for a wedding on Thursday—and our assistant, who just came here to live at Promise Lodge about a month ago, is Sylvia Keim.”

  The woman seated on a high stool at the counter nodded shyly at them. Dressed in black, with eyes that seemed to fill her entire pale face, Sylvia seemed more like a fragile doll than a flesh-and-blood woman.

  Karen smiled at her, relieved that Ruby and Beulah were already striding through the dining room. She wasn’t sure how to converse with a woman who resembled an invalid—or perhaps a grieving widow—in her somber black clothing.

  “We’ll show you upstairs so you can choose your rooms and freshen up,” Beulah called over her shoulder as she clomped steadily up the stairs in her sturdy shoes.

  “You must’ve gotten an early start this morning,” Ruby put in, gesturing for Karen and Annie to precede her. “How far did you have to come? I don’t recall where you live—not a town I’d ever heard of when you told me over the phone.”

  Andi’s panicked expression prompted Karen to reply. “Cherrydale is south of here, along the Missouri River. It’s about a three-hour trip, but we didn’t want to miss a minute, so we had our driver come early!”

  Luckily, as they reached the second level a few steps behind Beulah, they didn’t have to fabricate any more fibs. It occurred to Karen that maybe Andi was right: maybe they’d made a big mistake, pretending to be Amish. But it was too late to back out.

  “Ruby and I have apartments in the back corner of the building,” Beulah was saying as she pointed down the open hallway to their left. “Our Sylvia lives right here in front of us, and beside her is Irene Wickey, who’s baking pies in that little white bakery you passed on your way up the private road.” She turned to point across the open hallway. “Our bride-to-be, Marlene Fisher, is in the front corner—at least until she gets hitched on Thursday—so you’ve got your pick of the other unoccupied rooms.”

  “If you want rooms next to each other, you might choose the ones directly across from us,” Ruby remarked. “You’ll have a nice view of the front lawn and Mattie Troyer’s garden plots, as well as the Helmuth family’s nursery over by the state highway.”

  As Karen nodded, pleasant memories nearly overwhelmed her again. This upper level had a railing all the way around the hallway, like a mezzanine, and she was gazing out over the lofty lobby area . . . where she and Andi had once been known to drop water balloons as other counselors passed beneath them.

  “That sounds very gut,” Andi managed, gesturing toward the neighboring rooms that overlooked the front porch. “It’s so nice and homey here.”

  Their hostesses nodded pleasantly. “We came to Promise Lodge because it’s one of the few places where unmarried Plain ladies are allowed to run businesses and live without answering to a man in their family,” Ruby remarked.

  “We hope you’ll want to join us,” Beulah said with a warm smile. “And now, if you’ll excuse us, we’ve got pies ready to come out of the oven.”

  “Come on down to the kitchen whenever you’re ready,” Ruby added as she followed her sister down the stairs. “If you missed out on breakfast, we can scare something up for you. Lunch will be pretty simple today, and we’ll eat around noonish.”

  Grasping the handle of her suitcase, Karen nodded at the sisters and started around the square-shaped hallway. Because she recalled how voices carried in the open area above the lobby, she kept quiet until they reached the center front rooms, where the doors stood open. She ducked into the first one, hauling Andi in behind her before quickly shutting the door.

  “I thought I was going to say something that would give us away at any second,” Andi whispered. Then she giggled. “But isn’t it fun to be back up here? And look out this window—”

  “Where I sneaked out after hours one night to crawl along the porch roof and shimmy down the corner support pillar to meet Ronnie Larson,” Karen recalled with a chuckle.

  “And when you slipped, you took half of that big trumpet vine with you,” Andi continued.

  “Yeah, and I landed in a big rose bush, too,” Karen said. “By the time the camp manager got done treating my scratches and reading me the riot act, I’d paid for my wicked ways. But here we are, back again. Wow. Just wow.”

  “Look at the wonderful quilt on this bed. And the furniture matches, like it was a set from somebody’s house. Much homier than in our camping days.”

  “We’ll each have a little bathroom, too. That’s an improvement over sharing one with the other girls in this hall.” Karen felt the tension in her shoulders relaxing as she gazed around the simple yet cozy room. “I’ll go next door and unpack, and then we can gather our thoughts again before we go downstairs. I’m hoping Beulah or Ruby will offer us a piece of that fresh pie!”

  * * *

  As Beulah placed the last of the hot fruit pies on cooling racks, her mind was abuzz with conflicting emotions. She waited until her sister had slid five more pies into the oven, however, before she voiced her concerns.

  “Are you gals ticking off the little discrepancies about our guests the way I am?” she asked quietly. She glanced up the back stairway to be sure their visitors weren’t coming down. “If you ask me, something’s fishy—”

  “Oh, those two are so fishy, we could whip up tuna salad to last us for weeks!” Ruby put in with a mirthless laugh.

  Sylvia nodded as she carefully cut slits in the top crusts of two more pies. “Every settlement sounds a bit different, far as how they say some of their words,” she said, “but even as far away as I was sitting, I didn’t think they sounded Deutch.”

  “Jah, my first clue was while Karen was on the phone a couple weeks ago, she called herself a may-del instead of a my-del,” Ruby put in. “And she pronounced Annie’s last name, Stoltzfus, ending with fuss instead of foos. Not to mention the zippers I saw in the backs of their dresses as we went upstairs just now.”

  “It was their kapps that first struck me,” Beulah said as she rolled out dough for three more pies. “I’m not Amish, but I’ve been under the impression that those heart-shaped, filmy kapps were mostly found in Pennsylvania, and these gals have told us they live in Cherrydale, Missouri.”

 

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