Shelter in the Storm

Home > Other > Shelter in the Storm > Page 1
Shelter in the Storm Page 1

by Laurel Blount




  Praise for Shelter in the Storm

  “With lovely, evocative writing, Laurel Blount brings to life a tender story of two wounded hearts healing and finding lasting love in the wake of tragedy.”

  —Marta Perry, national bestselling author of A Springtime Heart

  “Laurel Blount’s Shelter in the Storm is the perfect mixture of sweet romance and family drama. Naomi is a fully fleshed[-out] character who will win your heart with her sincerity and wisdom as she and Joseph face an unthinkable tragedy. Their Amish world is as fascinating as their struggle to remain grounded in their faith. Readers will relate to their unflagging efforts to hold on through a season of storms. As Joseph’s father says, ‘When our world goes dark, then we must hold hard to the rope of our faith, and trust Gott to lead us out.’ This is the kind of hope-filled story that readers are hungry for.”

  —Dana Mentink, national bestselling author of Secrets Resurfaced

  “I couldn’t stop reading Shelter in the Storm. Laurel Blount mixes comforting, homey Amish romance with exciting suspense and cliffhanger chapter endings. Her characters are real and appealing, and I was rooting for them from start to finish. I’m so glad there will be more books in the Johns Mill series. It is off to a wonderful start!”

  —Lee Tobin McClain, USA Today bestselling author of Cottage at the Beach

  “Two very different worlds clash in this heartfelt story of faith, family, forgiveness, and love. Endearing characters warm the heart in this hopeful love story.”

  —Tina Radcliffe, author of Ready to Trust

  “This is a very good book. Laurel Blount’s Shelter in the Storm had me hooked from the first line. . . . This sweet, tragic story is touching and honest and beautiful. I highly recommend this book, and I can’t wait for the next book in the Johns Mill Amish series by the amazing Laurel Blount.”

  —Lenora Worth, New York Times bestselling author of Seeking Refuge

  A JOVE BOOK

  Published by Berkley

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  penguinrandomhouse.com

  Copyright © 2021 by Laurel Blount

  Penguin Random House supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to continue to publish books for every reader.

  A JOVE BOOK, BERKLEY, and the BERKLEY & B colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Ebook ISBN: 9780593200216

  First Edition: May 2021

  Book design by George Towne, adapted for ebook by Cora Wigen

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

  Cover art by Kris Keller

  Cover design by Sarah Oberrender

  pid_prh_5.7.0_c0_r0

  In memory of my beloved grandmother Helen Beasley Russell, who sheltered her own family through the storms of war, widowhood, poverty, illness, and loss. Her unflagging faith in her Lord, her grace, and her grit saw her through—and she did it all laughing and dressed to the nines.

  I have never seen her equal, and she inspires me even today.

  Oodles of love, Memama. Until we meet again.

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Praise for Shelter in the Storm

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  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

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Chapter One

  There would be no more gentle days.

  Joseph Hochstedler knew it the minute he stepped out of his parents’ Tennessee farmhouse into the predawn darkness. December had been showing on Mamm’s kitchen calendar for almost a week, but today was the first time he’d felt the bite of winter. And at twenty-six, he’d spent enough seasons working outside to sense that this sullen chill had hunkered down to stay.

  His mind on the weather, Joseph walked halfway across the side yard before he realized his mistake. Before him lay the stone dairy, his automatic destination every morning up until about a month ago. He stood for a few heartbeats, studying the silent building that until recently had loomed so large in all their lives.

  For six generations the habits of the Hochstedler men had been regulated by the unyielding discipline of twice-daily milkings. Dairy farming was regarded as one of the hardest ways for Amish men to earn a living, but that had never mattered to the Hochstedlers. They’d never been afraid of hard work.

  Ever since he’d been old enough to follow Daed outside in the early mornings, Joseph had considered himself a dairyman. He’d grown up with the baritone lowing of the cows, the smell of the barn, the rich tradition of hanging his own hat on the same worn peg his great-grandfather had used. Grossdaddi had done this from necessity because he could milk faster bareheaded, pressing his forehead close to the Jersey’s warm flank. Joseph’s father had been allowed to use surge milkers in the dairy, but he had trained Joseph and his brother Caleb to hang up their hats in the barn, just the same.

  Traditions died hard with the Hochstedlers.

  At least Grossdaddi hadn’t lived long enough to witness the death of the Hochstedler Dairy. Joseph was thankful for that.

  He exhaled, his breath fogging the sharp air. Then he turned toward the smaller wooden barn, already glowing with the light from Daed’s lanterns.

  “You’re almost too late.” Caleb, Joseph’s younger brother, sat hunched in a stall, milking their last remaining Jersey. Sure enough, the steel pail was almost full; each hissing stream of milk sent splashes over the sides. “With only Daisy to milk, the chores go fast. Wouldn’t you know? Not until I marry and leave home does Daed decide to sell the herd and take up the lazy life of a shopkeeper!”

  Their father barked a laugh from the feed room, where he was measuring scratch for Mamm’s hens. “No time for laziness here, cows or not. Plenty of hard work yet, building up the store business.”

  “From what I hear, you already have plenty customers coming by. That’s gut. A lot easier to spend your mornings adding up sales behind a shop counter instead of mucking out after two dozen cows, ain’t so, Joseph?”

 
Joseph didn’t answer. Keeping his back to his brother, he forked the morning’s ration of hay into the stalls of the family’s buggy horses. His favorite gelding nickered appreciatively, and Joseph paused to stroke Titus’s muscled neck.

  He’d found nothing easy about any of the mornings he’d spent working in his parents’ new store, selling jams and quilts and faceless dolls to Englischers. This particular morning, though, was turning into the hardest yet.

  Yesterday, Caleb and Rhoda had returned to Johns Mill after their monthlong wedding trip visiting family in Kentucky and Ohio. Joseph had braced himself for that, and he thought he’d been prepared. Then last night Caleb had pointed out there was more room at the Hochstedlers’ than with Rhoda’s folks, and he’d asked if they could stay on for a few weeks while they looked around for a place of their own.

  Joseph had caught the quick glance his parents had exchanged. They suspected, as he did, that Caleb’s request had little to do with space and more to do with his headstrong brother’s reluctance to live under the roof of the local bishop. Nonetheless, the request had been promptly granted. It was their way to take in family whenever needed, and Mamm was pleased to have the chance to spend more time with Caleb and her new daughter-in-law. The arrangement had been accepted matter-of-factly by everybody involved—except for Joseph.

  He’d said nothing, of course, although the prospect of living elbow-to-elbow with the happy couple chafed him. The idea of seeing Rhoda every day, passing her in the hallways, seeing her seated at the family table as his brother’s wife . . .

  That was pain he could have done without.

  Caleb started his new job on Samuel Christner’s construction crew this morning. Joseph had hoped for a break from his brother, but Caleb had risen early and headed to the barn for chores, as if nothing had changed.

  Joseph had lingered in the kitchen after Daed and Caleb had gone out. The less Joseph saw of his brother with that scruff of new-married beard on his face, the easier it would be to hold his tongue. That was exactly what he had to do, until his stubborn heart fell in line with the faith he’d been born and baptized into—a faith that required forgiveness, regardless of the offense. Seeing Caleb wreathed in smiles, shooting possessive glances at Rhoda as she moved quietly around the kitchen helping Mamm, was testing Joseph’s determination to its limit.

  Joseph leaned the pitchfork against the weathered wall with the other tools just as Caleb clanged the lid on the milk pail.

  “Are we about ready to head in for breakfast, Daed?” Caleb asked. “Rhoda’s frying up that venison sausage we brought from Melvin’s. Wait until you taste it!”

  “Ja,” their father answered. “I heard my brother was happy with his sausages this year.”

  “And that was the only thing he was happy about,” Caleb replied. “It is hard to believe Melvin’s your brother, Daed. Our onkel is the sourest man I have ever met.”

  Daed sighed. “Ach, well. He’s had his share of sorrows, has Melvin. To have only the one son and then to have him crippled in an accident, not just in body but in his mind as well . . . that would be a hard blow for any man to bear without bitterness.”

  “Henry needs a lot of looking after, for sure. Rhoda helped Nella all she could while we were there, and I pitched in with the dairy work. There was more work than hands to do it, even so.”

  “It’s hard for Nella and Melvin since their girls married into different districts,” Daed agreed.

  “I don’t blame the kossins for leaving. Oak Point is stricter than most. Rhoda was spoken to for wearing a dress in too light a color. Can you believe that? Rhoda’s never been in trouble in her life, and she was only a visitor there. It shamed her, and it made me mad.”

  “That does seem harsh. The both of you can count your blessings now you’re back home, ja? You can go on to the house, Caleb. You’d best get that milk in and get ready for work. Your bruder and I will finish up.”

  “I’ve time yet before my driver comes. Rhoda and I want to do our share of the work while we’re here.” Caleb darted a look in Joseph’s direction, but Joseph turned his head, focusing on the grain he was scooping into the horse’s bucket.

  Daed shooed his younger son away. “Right now, your share is to get that milk to your mamm for straining. If you don’t, Melvin’s sausage won’t be the only thing frying in the kitchen this morning. She’ll have your hindquarters up on the griddle, married man or not.”

  “She might at that.” Chuckling, Caleb picked up the milk pail and started for the house. Joseph’s glance strayed after his brother, then caught on the scene framed by the wide kitchen windows.

  Rhoda stood at Mamm’s stove, a spatula poised in her hand. His heart thudded hard at the sight of her. It always did, ever since the afternoon he’d come home from the fields and found Rhoda Lambright and his sister Emma frying cherry pies to sell at the annual horse auction.

  She’d worn a plum-colored dress that day, and her cheeks had matched it, flushed bright from the heat of the bubbling oil. Rhoda and Caleb’s twin, Emma, had been friends since their schooldays. Joseph had never paid much attention to her before, but when she’d glanced up at him, Joseph had suddenly realized that little Rhoda wasn’t so little anymore.

  And that she was the prettiest thing he’d seen in all his life.

  He’d set his heart on her in that moment, but she was only sixteen, barely old enough to think about courting. He was twenty-one, a bumbler when it came to talking with the girls, and the dairy was in its death throes. There was time enough, he’d figured. He’d wait for Rhoda to grow up some, wait until he had more than a pile of unpaid bills to offer a wife before he spoke.

  He’d waited too long, and his brother had spoken first. Nobody had seen that coming. Headstrong Caleb, the Hochstedler who’d had more trouble with the deacons than all the rest of them combined, had somehow won the heart of the bishop’s only daughter.

  It would have been funny, that, if things had been different.

  Joseph pulled his gaze away from the window. Rhoda was Caleb’s fraw now, and she would be until death parted them. Somehow Joseph had to find a way to think of her exactly as he did Emma and Miriam, as a sister. Nothing less and certainly nothing more.

  As impossible as that seemed right now, Joseph had a feeling it would be easier than coming to love Caleb as a brother again.

  “Chicken feed is mixed. Are you done with the horses?”

  Joseph jumped. Lost in his thoughts, he hadn’t noticed Daed standing beside him on the hard-packed earthen floor of the barn. His father was dressed in his chore clothes, so soiled that they were no good for regular wear. He smelled like all the mornings of Joseph’s memory—better mornings—of grain and manure, of horses and cows, and the warm sweetness of fresh milk.

  Joseph missed those days, but it was clear enough that his parents did not. Years of relentless work and financial strain had taken a heavy toll. As the dairy and other local farms failed, Elijah Hochstedler’s brothers and sisters had relocated to different communities, one by one, and each time, the lines in Daed’s face had deepened. Family, Elijah believed, was second only to Gott.

  At least he seemed happier now that the difficulty of closing the dairy was behind him. He appeared to like the store work well enough, and he enjoyed spending his days busy with Mamm, interacting with folks. Mamm was happier, too. Since the herd had been sold off, she looked ten years younger.

  It was gut for his parents, this change, and although Joseph would never be happy about the decision, he was thankful for that.

  It made what he needed to say easier.

  “Daed, I have been thinking. The store is running fine, and you’ve not much need of me here. Maybe I should go to Melvin’s for a while, help him with his dairying. If you think he’d be agreeable, that is.”

  His father shot him a measuring look. “I think my brother would jump at such a chance. I also t
hink he’d work you into the ground and give you little in return for your labor. And what of your woodworking? Don’t you have projects to finish that folks have put money down on?”

  “A few. I’ll get them done before I leave.”

  “How long would you plan to stay?”

  “I don’t know.” Until this pain ebbs off. Until I can look at my brother’s wife and not see only the woman I wanted for myself. “A good while, likely.”

  His father sighed. “Is it so bad here, then? That you’d go to such a place as your brother described? I’ll not stand in your way if you’re bound to leave, but we’ve other family. You could go to Pennsylvania, maybe, and help Norman with his grocery store, if you’re looking to spend time away.”

  “I’m no storekeeper, Daed. I’m a dairyman. You heard for yourself that Melvin needs the help.”

  “Ja, maybe that is true, but I don’t think it’s what’s driving this buggy. It is a hard thing for you, seeing your brother married to the girl you’d chosen for yourself. I am sorry for that, but you should not let it push you into making a rash decision.”

  Joseph glanced up sharply. He’d never spoken to Daed about his feelings for Rhoda. In their community, such things weren’t discussed until relationships were firmed up and headed for marriage. “You knew?”

  “Ja.” His father’s lips twitched above his salt-and-pepper beard. “I have eyes, son, and I was once a young man myself. I knew. Just as I know that you are struggling now to set aside your own feelings for the good of the family, like you did when it came time to sell the herd. Two such hard blows back-to-back are not so easy to bear, but you must keep trusting in the Lord. When our world goes dark, then we must hold hard to the rope of our faith, and trust Gott to lead us out. He is merciful and will bring the good out of our troubles, in His own time.”

  Joseph blew out a slow breath. “I am not seeing so much gut right now.”

  “That will get easier. In time I believe you will join the rest of the family in thanking Gott for the blessing of this marriage. I was worried about Caleb and so was your mamm. He was born muleheaded, and he only got more stubborn as he got older. Gott knows His business, Joseph. He knew it would take strong ties to keep such a heart here among us. Rhoda’s life is steeped in our faith. She and the kinder they will have together will steady Caleb’s faith as well. It is a gut match.”

 

‹ Prev