Gathering the Threads
Page 1
BOOKS BY CINDY WOODSMALL
THE AMISH OF SUMMER GROVE SERIES
Ties That Bind
Fraying at the Edge
Gathering the Threads
SISTERS OF THE QUILT SERIES
When the Heart Cries
When the Morning Comes
When the Soul Mends
ADA’S HOUSE SERIES
The Hope of Refuge
The Bridge of Peace
The Harvest of Grace
AMISH VINES AND ORCHARDS SERIES
A Season for Tending
The Winnowing Season
For Every Season
Seasons of Tomorrow
NOVELLAS
The Sound of Sleigh Bells
The Christmas Singing
The Dawn of Christmas
The Scent of Cherry Blossoms
Amish Christmas at North Star
The Angel of Forest Hill
NONFICTION
Plain Wisdom: An Invitation into an Amish Home and the Hearts of Two Women
GATHERING THE THREADS
Scripture quotations or paraphrases are taken from the King James Version or the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
The characters and events in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to actual persons or events is coincidental.
Trade Paperback ISBN 9781601427038
Ebook ISBN 9781601427045
Copyright © 2017 by Cindy Woodsmall
Cover design and photography by Kelly L. Howard
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Published in the United States by WaterBrook, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
WATERBROOK® and its deer colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Woodsmall, Cindy, author.
Title: Gathering the threads / Cindy Woodsmall.
Description: First Edition. | New York : WaterBrook, 2017. | Series: The Amish of Summer Grove ; book 3
Identifiers: LCCN 2017019622| ISBN 9781601427038 (paperback) | ISBN 9781601427045 (electronic)
Subjects: | BISAC: FICTION / Romance / Contemporary. | FICTION / Christian / Romance. | GSAFD: Christian fiction.
Classification: LCC PS3623.O678 G38 2017 | DDC 813/.6—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017019622
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Contents
Cover
Books by Cindy Woodsmall
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
The Amish of Summer Grove Series
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Thirty-eight
Chapter Thirty-nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-one
Chapter Forty-two
Chapter Forty-three
Chapter Forty-four
Epilogue
Glossary
Main Characters
Acknowledgments
To Carol Bartley
with extreme gratitude,
fervent trust,
deep honor,
and an abiding hope for our future.
I’m indebted to you for editing every book I’ve written.
The story so far…
Ties That Bind begins at an Amish birthing center, where a single, Englisch college student, Brandi Nash, gives birth to her daughter as a fire engulfs the building. A few minutes later an Amish woman, Lovina Brenneman, gives birth to twins, a girl and a boy. The midwife and Lovina’s husband, Isaac, struggle to get the women and three babies to safety.
Chapter 2 moves forward twenty years, and Ariana Brenneman is trying to buy an abandoned café so she can help support her parents and siblings. She and her twin brother, Abram, have been working and saving for years to purchase it. As time is running out, Ariana’s one-time friend Quill Schlabach offers to help her raise money by holding a benefit, but Ariana wants nothing to do with him. Five years ago he broke her heart when he left Summer Grove in the middle of the night, taking with him Frieda, Ariana’s closest friend. Although Ariana has moved on and is seeing Rudy, a young man she cares for deeply, she resents how Quill and Frieda deceived and betrayed her.
Quill tries to win Ariana’s trust, knowing that if she will act on his ideas, she will raise the money she needs. Although Quill continues to conceal why he left with Frieda, he longs for healing between Ariana and himself. But his main purpose for being in Summer Grove is to help an unhappy, disillusioned family—Ariana’s eldest sister, Salome, and her family—leave the Amish.
Ariana lets down her guard and trusts Quill’s guidance. Although Rudy has reservations, he backs her as she, Quill, and Abram hold a benefit, which raises the needed money.
While Ariana and Abram are focused on the café, their brother Mark sees a musical production in a nearby city and is struck by how much one performer looks like Salome. When Mark tells their Mamm, she seems concerned.
Lovina and Isaac ask Quill to investigate the background of this young woman, Skylar Nash. Quill obtains enough information to validate that she is probably Isaac and Lovina’s biological daughter, which would mean Ariana is Brandi’s daughter. Quill contacts Skylar’s parents, Brandi Nash and Nicholas Jenkins, and a DNA test confirms that Skylar is not related to Brandi or Nicholas, and it also reveals that Skylar has drugs in her system.
Lovina struggles with the knowledge that her biological daughter seems so lost, and Nicholas, an atheist, is appalled that his daughter has been raised in an insulated religious society. When he learns that the midwife suspected the two girls might have been accidentally switched at birth and never did anything about it, he threatens to sue her unless Ariana spends a year with him and Brandi, cut off from the Amish community. And Nicholas gives Skylar a choice—time in rehab or time with her biological family—or he will cut off all financial support.
When Ariana learns that she’s not a Brenneman and that Quill helped uncover the truth, she once again feels betrayed by him and asks him never to contact her again. Ariana leaves Summer Grove with Brandi and Nicholas to spend a year with them. And Quill picks up Skylar, confiscates the drugs she tries to hide, and drives
her to the Brennemans’ home.
Fraying at the Edge begins one day after Ariana meets her biological parents and leaves with them to live in their Englisch world. Brandi and Nicholas are married to other people, and the story opens with Ariana at Nicholas’s home as her parents argue bitterly. She has three stepsiblings—two teen boys, who live with her dad, and one teen girl, who lives with her mom, Brandi.
Before she can adjust to the outside world and the loneliness of leaving her family and boyfriend, Rudy, behind, Nicholas gives her lists of things she must accomplish. His list includes removing her prayer Kapp, getting a new hairstyle, dressing Englisch, learning to drive, and being tutored in college-type courses on religion, history, and science. Nicholas appears determined to scrub the Amish ways from her mind and heart before she returns to Summer Grove.
Ariana’s mom, Brandi, seems free spirited and easygoing, but despite that, she staunchly and loudly stands up to Nicholas. Ariana’s parents’ anger and contradictory expectations drain and confuse her in ways she’s never experienced, and she feels herself coming undone.
During Ariana’s time of exile from Summer Grove, Nicholas allows her to have contact with only one person from her past: Quill Schlabach. Since Quill left the Amish as a teen and never returned to join the faith, Nicholas believes he could be a helpful influence in opening Ariana’s mind and heart to better ways of living than in the Amish society.
But Quill’s singular desire is to help Ariana navigate this temporary upheaval and return to her beloved people and the Old Ways. Unfortunately, even though Ariana needs a friend in this strange setting, she refuses to reach out to Quill because twice he’s hidden the truth from her and ripped her life apart.
Nicholas’s expectations of Ariana and the pressure to adjust increase, and then Ariana learns that she is the result of an adulterous affair and that her parents were never married to each other. Desperate to talk to someone who understands her and the Old Ways, she finally calls Quill. Their encounter, which takes place at a bar, is far from smooth, but he gets her back to Nicholas’s home safely.
Quill talks to Nicholas privately and makes him see that in his efforts to strip Ariana’s mind of the Old Ways and religion, he is ripping her apart. Nicholas’s viewpoint begins to change. His goal is still to broaden Ariana’s mind, but his methods become gentler, and he begins to see the true Ariana—not a brainwashed girl, but a unique, fascinating, strong woman who is trying to do right by everyone.
After much angst and a few heated arguments, Ariana forms a bond with Nicholas, Brandi, her husband, Gabe, and his daughter, Cameron. Ariana develops a real thirst for knowledge because of Nicholas’s influence. And her time with Quill becomes healing, helpful, and sometimes fun. He helps her get her feet under her, view God as bigger than she’d ever imagined possible, and learn when and how to stand up for herself.
With Ariana gone, her Mamm and Daed are struggling with guilt and fear for both girls—Ariana and Skylar—and all the changes to the family dynamics are taking a toll.
Abram, Susie, and Martha—three of the Brenneman siblings—work hard to get Ariana’s new café on its feet. They want it to be a success when she returns, but they know nothing about running a café, and none of them can cook the items Ariana listed on the menu before she left.
Skylar is used to a comfy Englisch lifestyle, and her Amish dad, Isaac, quickly confronts her idle ways with the Amish work ethic and the need for accountability and contributing to the family. When pushed to help the family, she chooses to work at the café, knowing that is her best opportunity to see her forbidden boyfriend and get drugs from him.
Because Skylar knows a lot more about how to make a café appealing than Ariana’s siblings do, she talks them into spending money Ariana set aside to pay the mortgage on the café in order to buy expensive coffee machines and a generator. But inside the Brenneman home, Skylar struggles with the endless lack of money and creature comforts. Without warning, Skylar’s boyfriend stops bringing drugs to the café for her, and she has a physical and emotional crisis.
The Brennemans meet the challenges with Skylar, and she gets clean. Because of her Amish parents’ tough love, she begins to bond with them and her siblings. But at the same time, she and Jax, a friend of Abram’s and a former marine, have trouble navigating their emotions for each other. They are drawn to each other but are also distrustful of each other. Jax has good cause to hate drug use and distrust users, but he and Skylar manage a truce for the sake of the café and its workers.
Cilla Yoder, a friend of Abram’s who works at the cafe, has dealt with cystic fibrosis throughout her life. When he witnesses one of her spells, he realizes she needs a better doctor. Jax, Skylar, Susie, and Martha work together to help Abram find one and pay for the medical expenses by dipping into the café’s money.
Gradually Ariana develops a new understanding of God and every adult’s right to stand against authority, including a father’s. She uses this knowledge to talk Nicholas into letting her return to Summer Grove early.
Nicholas and Brandi set up a meeting with Skylar. They come to the café after hours and invite her to return home. Now that she’s clean, they’re willing to pay for her tuition and other perks again. Skylar shares her hurt and anger that they dumped her on the Brennemans and took off with Ariana without even looking back, and she refuses to leave Summer Grove.
Ariana has longed to return to her faith, family, and her cherished Rudy, but after she’s pulled her hair into a bun and put on her Amish clothing, she stares into the mirror and feels unsure about who she really is. When Nicholas drives her home and she gets out of his car, she’s thrilled to embrace her Amish family, but before the evening is finished, she feels a strong need to get away for several days to think.
For a list of main characters in the Amish of Summer Grove series, see the Main Characters list at the end of the book.
Summer Grove, Pennsylvania
Ariana’s head roared with voices, those in the kitchen around her and others from far away, even from hundreds of years in the past. Voices of real people she’d talked to or had heard preach or teach, as well as the voices from the many books Nicholas had asked her to read. The voices grouped in clans, their murmurings growing fervent, insisting precisely what she needed to believe, who she needed to be, and why she needed to march to the beat of their drum.
Ariana needed to know herself well enough to pick a tribe she agreed with and shut down the rest with her own reasoning. But she couldn’t parse what she believed, and they hounded without mercy.
Marred flatware jangled endlessly as her nine siblings, five of her fourteen nieces and nephews, her Mamm and Daed, and Skylar sat around the table in rickety chairs. The mid-January wind pushed against the house and seemed to come right through the walls.
An old galvanized bucket sat in the sink because the water pipe to the kitchen was broken again. If the pipes to the sink in the mudroom hadn’t been working, getting breakfast on the table would’ve been a lot more work.
Rickety furniture, cold winds seeping in, and broken pipes didn’t bother her. Money and work could easily fix those things. What nagged at her was much deeper. She was finally in the very home she’d pined for while away, and yet only a fragment of herself seemed to be here.
Her Daed worked really hard, but his income was too small for a family this size. Ariana couldn’t remember a time when she didn’t long to make life better for them. That was why she and Abram had spent years working to buy the café. She had been convinced it would bring in enough money to make life easier for Mamm and Daed.
The voices in her head grew louder. One group said money was evil and poverty was God’s will, that it made people rely on Him more. Another group shouted louder than the first, saying that lack was from the Enemy. Still more voices said that being poor was due to a lack of education. A dozen more camps vied to be heard, and Ariana was powerless to sort them out.
“Ariana.” Mamm pointed at her plate, sounding baf
fled, maybe even alarmed. “Is this not your favorite breakfast anymore?”
A stack of pancakes stared back at Ariana. Her stomach churned. “It is. Denki, Mamm.” She used the edge of her fork to cut into the pancakes.
“You’re not yourself.” Susie passed her a plate of bacon. “That’s more plain to see than your poorly pinned-up hair under your lopsided prayer Kapp.”
Her bun was messy and her head covering was pinned askew? She should at least adjust the Kapp, but she simply nodded. “I’m a little out of sorts. That’s all.”
She didn’t feel just a little out of sorts. She longed to scream at the voices in her head to shut up.
Salome smiled. “Anyone who’d been through what you have would be feeling strange. I imagine you feel as if you’ve been through the blades of a hay baler.”
That depiction had a decent amount of accuracy, but to be more precise, her brain felt as if it had been rubbed with poison oak, and it screamed in discomfort, begging to be soothed with a poultice of clay, apple cider vinegar, and peppermint.
“A hay baler?” Daed smiled at her. “You’ll be right as rain soon enough. A little time here at home with us and your Rudy, and you’ll feel like yourself again. I guarantee it.” He took a bite of food. “Forget what’s behind you. Only look ahead.”
“He’s right.” Mamm drew her mug toward her lips. “There’s much to look forward to.” She peered over her mug, smiling. “Your wedding for one.”