by Dana R. Lynn
“I feel like I’m being watched.”
Abram’s face hardened. Kate knew he was planning on going after whoever it was. Without thinking, she grabbed his arm, letting the basket slide to the ground.
His gaze shot to her hand holding his arm, then back to her face.
“Think, Abram. He probably has a knife or a gun, if anyone’s there. What would you do?”
“I would give you time to escape.”
Her mouth fell open and she gaped at him. He’d risk his life so she could escape. Had he always been so noble?
“Abram, I’m the one with a gun hidden in my apron.”
His face froze. “You have a gun?”
“I’m a cop, remember?”
She saw the glint of sunlight striking steel.
“Get down!”
A gunshot cracked through the quiet. The taut clothesline snapped as the bullet ripped through it.
She never knew how it happened. One moment they were standing side by side, and the next Abram had pushed her down and was protecting her with his own body.
Dana R. Lynn grew up in Illinois. She met her husband at a wedding and told her parents she’d met the man she was going to marry. Nineteen months later, they were married. Today, they live in rural Pennsylvania with their three children and a variety of animals. In addition to writing, she works as a teacher for the deaf and hard of hearing and is active in her church.
Books by Dana R. Lynn
Love Inspired Suspense
Amish Country Justice
Plain Target
Plain Retribution
Amish Christmas Abduction
Amish Country Ambush
Amish Christmas Emergency
Guarding the Amish Midwife
Hidden in Amish Country
Plain Refuge
Deadly Amish Reunion
Amish Country Threats
Covert Amish Investigation
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com.
Covert Amish Investigation
Dana R. Lynn
For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.
—Jeremiah 29:11
To my editor, Tina James, and to my agent, Tamela Hancock Murray. I appreciate having you in my corner more than I can say. Thank you!
Contents
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
Epilogue
Dear Reader
Excerpt from High Stakes Escape by Elizabeth Goddard
ONE
“You want me to go where?” Officer Kate Bontrager blurted. She winced at the thread of panic twisting through her words. Her stomach warped itself into a knotted ball. She prayed she’d misheard her captain. But she knew she hadn’t.
Her partner, Sergeant Shane Pearson, shot her a questioning glance, but she kept her eyes glued to the woman sitting behind the desk. He had to be wondering what was going on, but she didn’t enlighten him. She liked Shane. He and his wife, Marnie, were like family. There were parts of her past, however, that she had never told anyone.
“You heard me.” Captain Sarah Murphy’s mouth straightened into a thin line. “You know I wouldn’t ask you to return to Sutter Springs unless it was important.”
The captain pushed a black-and-white picture across the wooden surface toward her officers. A young woman in her midtwenties stared back at them, her pretty face surrounded by a bonnet. She was wearing a simple unadorned dress. A typical Amish woman from the tiny community in Berlin County, Ohio.
Except this wasn’t an Amish woman.
“That’s Bailey St. Andrews!” As soon as the words rushed from Kate’s mouth, Shane frowned, confused. She shrugged. “Sorry. I was part of the team that responded to the 911 call when her ex-boyfriend tried to kill her.”
Bailey had been a wealthy socialite and the heiress to her father’s estate, which was worth millions. Her face had been plastered across magazines and young girls everywhere had longed to be in her shoes. All that counted for nothing when she had entered into an abusive relationship.
Her captain nodded. “Yes, and that’s why I need you, Kate. Bailey St. Andrews was placed in witness protection three years ago. Her testimony was crucial in shutting down a major crime ring and putting many of the players involved behind bars. Including her ex-boyfriend, Vincent Mayfield. Because of the scope of the crime ring run by her ex, and her own high profile, she was sent to an Amish community in Sutter Springs. No one else knows the Amish culture like you.” She leaned across the desk, her eyes boring into Kate’s. “No one knows Sutter Springs like you do. It’s a booming district, lots of tourist traffic. We need someone who can blend in.”
The pit in her stomach yawned wide open. She wasn’t going to be able to talk herself out of this. After all, she’d lived in that same Amish culture until Gary the Shark had entered her life and destroyed everything that was good and beautiful. He’d come close to destroying her, too.
The heavy feeling in Kate’s gut ramped up to a full-out cramp. She kept her posture ramrod straight with difficulty. She shook herself free of the memories to focus on her captain’s words.
“There’s been no contact with her for the past month,” the captain continued while Kate felt the walls around her sliding in closer. “When her handler went to check on her, she found that Beth Zook, Bailey’s name in the community, hadn’t shown up to work for a week and her house was a mess. Whether from someone searching it or from her resisting an attacker, we don’t know. There has also been more crime activity in the area. Drugs, a child was almost abducted. The US Marshals think someone is using the Amish community as a front. With all the tourists through the area, it’s a prime place for crime to go unnoticed.”
“What about Bailey’s ex-boyfriend?” Kate asked. That seemed to be the most logical question.
“Beth,” the chief corrected her. “You need to get used to referring to her as Beth.”
Kate nodded. It wouldn’t do to slip up and reveal the woman’s true identity. “Beth, then.”
She waited for the captain to answer her question.
“He’s still in jail.” Captain Murphy folded her hands on her desk. Her gaze was direct. The barest hint of sympathy lurked in her deep brown eyes. Did she know how hard this would be for Kate? “If someone in his crime ring has decided to take over and relocate, we’d like to know about it.”
“You think someone took her?”
The captain nodded. “We hope that’s the case. I would much rather find out that she was an innocent than that she was involved in the crime ring this whole time.”
So would she. “You said she had a job. What was it?”
“She’d been working as a housekeeper for the Amish-run bed-and-breakfast.”
Well. Housekeeper was about as far removed from her former socialite lifestyle as you could get.
Sutter Springs. How much had changed since she’d been there last? When she was growing up, the tourist businesses were just getting started. Englischers l
oved to come and see how the Plain folk lived. It was lucrative for the districts that decided to take part. Kate’s parents hadn’t approved, but since the bishop and most of the elders were on board, there was nothing more to be said.
Her parents hadn’t approved of many things. Including Kate. Nope, she wasn’t going there. She turned her thoughts back to what she recalled of Sutter Springs. Right outside Berlin, there had been a steady stream of visitors yearlong. Apparently, that was still the case.
Funny. She didn’t recall a bed-and-breakfast. But she’d been gone since she was sixteen. That was almost ten years ago. Did Abram still live there?
She wrenched her mind from thoughts of the boy she’d loved and left without a word.
“Kate,” Captain Murphy cut in. “You’re familiar with the Amish lifestyle. That means you’d be able blend in while Shane will be able to try to learn more from the non-Amish people in the area. Plus, you already know what Beth looks like. We can’t exactly flash a picture of her around. The bishop wants to keep this quiet. If anyone gets wind of the fact that we were hiding her there, she could be put into more danger—assuming she wasn’t involved in the first place. And that’s what we’re going with at the moment. Her handler will meet you in Sutter Springs to give you further information.”
Kate’s lungs tightened, desperate for air that seemed to have been sucked from the room. She wanted to refuse. Oh, how she wished she could say no! The idea of going back to that place was like standing on the edge of a black hole unable to avoid being sucked into it.
They spent a couple more minutes discussing their travel plans. The captain informed Kate she’d have the appropriate clothes for her disguise by the next day. Kate gave her a wooden nod. When they were dismissed, she left the office, her mind whirling in shock. She made it back to her desk on autopilot and sank into her chair.
She was really going to have go back there. What if she saw Gary the Shark? Or Abram Burkholder?
Kate squeezed her eyes shut against the image of a young man with wavy dark brown hair and eyes the color of the cappuccino she loved so much. In her memories, Abram Burkholder was always smiling or laughing. What would he say if he saw her? She swallowed. Maybe they wouldn’t cross paths. If he’d married, he could have moved on to a different district.
“You okay, kid? Looking a little green there.”
Her eyes swept up to find Shane hovering near her desk, his forehead creased in concern. Her first instinct was to deny it. But he was her partner. He deserved to know.
“I left that world for a reason, Shane. Something really bad happened to me, and when I lost my parents, I got out of there.”
His hand clamped on her shoulder for a moment. “Do you want me to talk with the captain, see if I can get you out of it?”
He would do it if she so much as nodded. She’d been fortunate to have an officer of his caliber take her under his wing and mentor her. He was still looking out for her, even though she was no longer a complete rookie.
For the barest millisecond, she was tempted to let him before her common sense reasserted itself. The captain had been correct. Her knowledge of the Amish and Sutter Springs would be an asset. “Thanks, Shane. I appreciate the thought, but I’m a cop. I’m not going to refuse to do an assignment to protect my feelings.”
Approval gleamed from his gaze. She’d done the right thing. But doing the right thing didn’t untie the knots in her stomach.
Two days later, on Wednesday, they were on their way to Sutter Springs. Kate’s hands had trembled the tiniest bit when Captain Murphy handed her two Amish dresses in different shades of pink and the pristine starched prayer kapp. She’d also shown Kate the white apron that had been altered to allow Kate to secretly carry her weapon and cell phone. Kate had accepted the items without a word, knowing if she said anything her voice would have cracked and given her away.
She hadn’t been able to convince herself to put the clothes on, though. Not yet. For now, she was dressed in jeans and a T-shirt. Her blue jean jacket had been flung across her bag in the back seat.
She stared out at the trees dotting the landscape beside the interstate. In a few weeks, the leaves would begin changing. She shivered. September thirteenth fell on a Monday this year. That was only five days away. It was the most dreaded day of the year. For her, anyway.
As they got closer to their destination, she straightened.
“Hold on, Shane. We’re getting really close to where Bailey—Beth—lived. Let’s stop there first and see if we can see anything. The captain gave me a key to her house.”
Once they were there, she’d change into one of the dresses. Distaste tasted like ashes on her tongue.
When Shane pulled into the drive, she directed him to pull all the way behind the house.
“We’ll use the back door.”
Kate stepped out of the vehicle. It was a little chilly. She opened the back door and grabbed her jacket and swung it on, taking a moment to scan the area. The house was set back from the road, large trees on either side of the gravel driveway. The lawn was overgrown by a few inches. Gauging by the otherwise pristine condition of the lawn, this was not the norm. Looking up at the structure, she noted without surprise that there were no curtains in the window. As far as she could see, nothing had been disturbed in the yard.
“You coming?” Shane called out.
She nodded and followed as he headed up to the house. Shane paused at the bottom of the steps.
“Back up.” He grabbed his service weapon from its holster and continued in a whisper, “The door’s open a hair.”
“The captain said Beth’s handler had been here and seen the house was a wreck.”
“Yeah, but they would have shut the door when they left.”
Nodding, Kate pulled her own gun out and moved back and to the side. From where she stood, a sliver of the wooden floor on the other side of the door was visible. She could see some debris on the floor. Narrowing her eyes, she leaned forward, trying to analyze what she was seeing. It looked like a black bonnet was on the floor. The kind Amish women wore over their prayer kapps when they left their house. Had Beth planned on leaving or was she taken?
The bottom step creaked when Shane stepped on it. When he placed his right foot on the next stair up, the only warning was a soft click before the porch exploded, sending Shane, Kate and splintered wood flying.
* * *
“Ah, Abram. Cumme.”
Abram Burkholder stepped into Bishop Melvin Hershberger’s haus, removing his hat and placing it on a peg near the door. He nodded his head respectfully to Edith Hershberger, the bishop’s frau. She smiled in response. Color seared his ears. Linda, the woman he’d almost married, was her cousin. There was no reproach on her face, though, so she probably didn’t know the story.
“Koffee, Abram? It’s fresh and hot.” She reached for a mug, her hand suspended as she waited for his response.
“Danke, nee.” He’d already had two cups today. One more cup and he’d never be able to sleep tonight. And he desperately needed to sleep.
The aroma of freshly baked bread and a hearty stew reminded Abram that it was nearly suppertime. Not that there was anything to hurry home for. His mamm would have supper ready. However, Abram worked with his father and brother in the family painting business. They’d tell her not to expect him.
And he had no wife. He’d courted Linda for six months. He’d even asked her to marry him. To his surprise, she’d turned him down flat.
You don’t love me, she’d accused him. Is there someone else you love?
He’d denied it, of course. He would never court a woman if he were seeing someone else.
She wasn’t all wrong, though. Mortified, he realized that his memories were still too full of Katie Bontrager, the girl he’d once believed he’d marry. Before she’d left without a word and broken his heart.
Abram followed the bishop into the large main room. Bishop Hershberger was a wiry man in his late thirties. He shut the door to the office and gestured for Abram to sit. Abram lowered himself into one of the sturdy wooden chairs and watched the bishop settle himself in the other chair. Abram waited for him to speak. Bishop Hershberger had asked him to stop by on his way home from his shop, so he’d hitched up his buggy and come, bone weary from the hectic day. One did not refuse the bishop’s personal request.
Bishop Hershberger considered him for a few moments before speaking. “Abram, it seems we have a problem.”
Abram raised his eyebrows. He didn’t have a clue what the bishop was referring to. He wracked his brain, trying to think of any infractions at his shop, but none came to mind. He was very careful to abide by all the rules.
The face of Katie Bontrager swam before his eyes before he shoved it away. She was out of his life. Her own choice, though he’d never known why. Nor was he likely to.
“Have I done something wrong?”
Bishop Hershberger waved his hand. “Nee. You have done nothing to be concerned about. I called you here about a more troubling matter. We have had a member disappear. Beth Zook. Are you familiar with her?”
“Ja, I know who she is, but I haven’t talked with her much. She’s a bit shy. She works at the Plain and Simple Bed and Breakfast, ain’t so?” He thought back. “Or she did. My onkel says she hasn’t shown up in a while.”
His onkel and aenti ran the B&B.
The bishop nodded. “Ja. What you don’t know, what no one knows, is that she was not raised Amish. She was placed here as part of the Englisch witness protection program.”
Abram stared at him. “An Englisch woman? In witness protection here? I would have thought that was against our rules.”
It was hard to wrap his mind around it. Yet, at the same time, it made sense. He’d met Beth on several occasions. While she’d said all the right things, her eyes had seemed haunted. He’d shrugged the feeling of wrongness away, but now he understood.