The Return (Amish Beginnings Series #3)

The Return (Amish Beginnings Series #3)

by Suzanne Woods Fisher
The Return (Amish Beginnings Series #3)

The Return (Amish Beginnings Series #3)

by Suzanne Woods Fisher

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Overview

Beautiful and winsome, Betsy Zook never questioned her family's rigid expectations, nor those of devoted Hans, but then she never had to. Not until the night when she's taken captive in a surprise Indian raid. During her captivity, Betsy faces brutality and hardship, but also unexpected kindness. She draws strength from native Caleb, who encourages her to find God in all circumstances. She finds herself torn between her pious upbringing and the intense new feelings this compelling man awakens within her.

Handsome and complex, Hans is greatly anguished by Betsy's captivity and turns to Tessa Bauer for comfort. Eagerly, Tessa responds, overlooking troubling signs of Hans's hunger for revenge. When Betsy is finally restored to the Amish, have things gone too far between Hans and Tessa?

Inspired by true events, this deeply layered novel gives a glimpse into the tumultuous days of prerevolutionary Pennsylvania through the eyes of two young, determined, and faith-filled women.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781493407262
Publisher: Baker Publishing Group
Publication date: 08/01/2017
Series: Amish Beginnings Series , #3
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 235,174
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Suzanne Woods Fisher is an award-winning, bestselling author of more than two dozen novels, including Anna's Crossing and The Newcomer in the Amish Beginnings series, The Bishop's Family series, and The Inn at Eagle Hill series, as well as nonfiction books about the Amish, including Amish Peace and The Heart of the Amish. She lives in California. Learn more at www.suzannewoodsfisher.com and follow Suzanne on Twitter @suzannewfisher.
Suzanne Woods Fisher is the bestselling author of The Letters, The Calling, the Lancaster County Secrets series, and the Stoney Ridge Seasons series, as well as nonfiction books about the Amish, including Amish Peace. She is also the coauthor of an Amish children's series, The Adventures of Lily Lapp. Suzanne is a Carol Award winner for The Search, a Carol Award finalist for The Choice, and a Christy Award finalist for The Waiting. She is also a columnist for Christian Post and Cooking & Such magazines. She lives in California. Learn more at www.suzannewoodsfisher.com and connect with Suzanne on Twitter @suzannewfisher.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Beacon Hollow Lancaster County, Pennsylvania April 20, 1763

Tessa Bauer stopped in her tracks when she heard the horse's huffing sound. Moving slowly, she hid behind a large tree and watched the stallion slide gracefully through the forest. It was the fifth time she'd seen the legendary horse. The phantom stallion, he was called. No one believed she'd actually ever seen him, no one except Felix, who believed everything she told him. He was sweet like that, her uncle Felix.

She'd grown up hearing all kinds of tales and rumors about this magnificent horse. The story had spun that he was a spirited Flemish stallion brought to Pennsylvania shortly after William Penn's arrival. The horse was meant for the Penn stables, but as the stallion was brought ashore, he managed to break loose and vanish into the deep wilderness. Over the years, rumors of sightings floated from Philadelphia to Lancaster Town, and greedy men would rally together to attempt a capture. All efforts proved futile, of course, because this was no ordinary horse and they were quite ordinary men.

And then five years ago, in late spring, a wild horse broke down Felix's pasture fence to mate with his broodmares just as they came into season. Felix was outraged at the intrusion and rebuilt the pasture into a near-fortress. Alas! Too late. The broodmares had been compromised.

Eleven months later, Felix was grinning ear to ear. There was no doubt in his mind, nor in Tessa's, that the newborn foals had been sired by the mighty and mysterious stallion.

Even at birth, the foals were enormous. As quickly as Felix could, before his mares went into season, he lowered the pasture railing and prayed the stallion would return.

And so he did. For the last five springs, in the cover of night, the stallion returned to Felix's broodmare pasture. Felix had never seen him, not once, not like Tessa. He had tried — once he had accompanied Tessa into the woods to look for him. To wait and watch, but he wasn't patient, her uncle Felix, and stallion hunting required patience. The first time Felix's stomach rumbled for dinner, he gave up and set out for home. But he was grateful to the Flemish stallion, or more likely its son or grandson — whichever one it was that paid calls on his beguiling broodmares. He prayed it would continue. He dubbed this new breed of horses the Conestoga horse, named for the valley the wild stallion roamed.

Tessa stilled. She heard crunching. Slowly, so slowly, she peeked her head around the tree and saw the stallion had discovered the carrots she had left him, dug out of a storage barrel from her family's root cellar.

Oh my. He was a stunning animal, truly breathtaking.

If she reached out a hand, she could touch him, stroke his glossy black coat. He must know she was close by. His ability to smell her, to sense her nearness ... he must know. Dare she try? She leaned forward, reaching a hand out, when suddenly an eagle let out a shriek overhead and the wild horse startled, then bolted. He stopped, turned, and looked at Tessa — right at her, as if he recognized her! — before he trotted away and disappeared into the dense woods.

Wait, just wait, until Tessa told Uncle Felix the news. Spring had come, the wild stallion had returned. And she had made some headway in drawing close to him, at least enough headway that he looked less as if he was preparing to bolt. That was an improvement from last year's brief and unsuccessful encounters.

She hurried through the woods to get home. In one large jump, her long legs crested the rushing creek that ribboned her family's farm. As she climbed up the creek bank, she felt a rare, fleeting moment of gratefulness to have inherited her father's height. Bairn Bauer stood six foot six inches, and Tessa, at age fifteen, was five foot ten inches tall and still growing. But the moment of gratitude faded as suddenly as it had come, just as it always did. She hated towering over others, especially men and boys.

As she passed the sheep's pond, she slowed to a stop and bent over to study her reflection in the still water. The face she saw there was disappointing. A high forehead, short nose, cheeks sprinkled with freckles, deep-set eyes, a too-wide mouth. So plain, so very plain. Too plain to attract a man's notice, especially a man like Hans, who had won her heart over, for he was her hero.

Hans Bauer was a foster brother to Tessa's father, Bairn, and to her uncle Felix. He had been raised from birth by Tessa's grandmother, Dorothea, and shared her interest in horses. He was the blacksmith for the church, as well as many farming neighbors, as his skills at the forge were unsurpassed. Best of all, he was slightly taller than Tessa and handsome — more handsome than any man in Pennsylvania bar none — with a chiseled face, snapping brown eyes, a splendid chin, and wavy auburn hair that fell to his shoulders. Handsome Hans. She knew that giving such significance to a person's physical beauty was the way of the world and not their way, not the way of the straight and narrow, but she couldn't help herself. Tessa could never remember a time when her heart wasn't utterly devoted to Hans.

Sadly, he hardly noticed her.

She looked again at her reflection in the sheep pond. So grave, so serious. Perhaps if she smiled more. Her mother often said that a woman's beauty rested in her smile. She practiced a few smiles and thought she looked rather ridiculous. She could hear her mother's voice as clearly as if she were seated beside her: "Tessa, beauty is of very small consequence compared with good principles, good feelings, and good understanding."

Tommyrot. Beauty was beauty.

She jumped to her feet and ran toward Beacon Hollow, her home. As soon as she reached the lane that led to the large stone house, she slowed. There was Faxon Gingerich, their Mennonite neighbor across the way, bearing down on her atop his plow horse. Faxon the Saxon, she called him, though not in shot of his hearing. Beside him was his son, Martin, whom Tessa considered to be a boy of low character. She hadn't seen Martin in months and months, which suited her nicely. They were nearly the same age; he was a year or two older, though she was always head and shoulders taller than him. Tessa's father, who disliked farming but loved carpentry, had hired Martin for the past few autumns to harvest the corn. The first year Martin was hired on, he started a vicious rumor that giants ran in Tessa's family, and given that she was a tiny bit sensitive about her height, she still hadn't forgiven him.

They halted their horses when they met up with her; she stood before them with her hands linked behind her back. Faxon the Saxon barely acknowledged her, but she expected as much. She was young, she was female, and she was not Mennonite. Three strikes, to his way of thinking. His gaze swept over the large yard, from the carpentry shop over to the sawmill down by the creek, seeking out evidence of her father's presence.

Martin sat awkwardly on his horse, his ill-fitting clothes dangling on him as if he hung on a hook. His pants were too short and his coatsleeves were too long. He wore no hat and his hair was unruly and wind-tossed, flying off in all directions. He was a rumpled mess. Rumpled Martin.

"Is he in the shop?" Faxon Gingerich said, not bothering to look at Tessa as he spoke.

"No. My father hasn't returned from the frontier yet," Tessa said. "My mother's expecting him back any day."

After bishop J acob Hertzler had been injured in a fall two years ago — the only Amish bishop in all the New World — her father had traveled by horseback to the frontier twice a year to act on his behalf: marrying, burying, baptizing. The trip usually took him two weeks, but he'd been gone for three.

Faxon's glance shifted to the stone house before resting on Tessa, the wind tugging at his beard. "Do you know which direction your father headed?"

"Up the Schuylkill River."

Faxon stared at her, his face settling into deep lines.

Tessa felt the first ominous tickle start up her spine. "Have you news? Has something happened?"

Faxon's bushy eyebrows promptly descended in a frown, no doubt thinking she didn't know her place. It was a common complaint fired at Tessa. Who did she think she was, asking bold questions of an elder?

Worried about her father, that's what she was. Tessa stared back at him, her head held high, erect. "Is my father in danger?" Tessa looked from Faxon the Saxon to rumpled Martin and caught their concern. Something had happened.

Faxon ignored her question. "Where's your mother?"

"She's gone to a neighbor's to take a meal. They had a new baby. You know how she loves babies." Everybody knew that, everybody except for Faxon the Saxon. He wouldn't know that about Anna Bauer because he wouldn't care. He did not hold much regard for any Amish person apart from Bairn Bauer, for whom he had a grudging admiration.

Faxon swung a leg over his horse to dismount. "Has he made progress on the wagon?"

"Some. It's not finished though."

He stood, feet planted, and she knew exactly what he wanted. To see the wagon. Faxon Gingerich had come to her father last summer with a request for him to build a better hauling wagon. Faxon made frequent trips to Philadelphia to sell and trade products and was fed up with wagon wheels stuck in mud. The provincial government was abysmally slow to cobble roads, so he had decided there must be a better design for a wagon. He just couldn't figure one out.

Tessa wasn't sure her father would want her to show the unfinished project, but she was proud of his ingenuity, and she could tell Faxon would not be dissuaded from seeing it. "I'll show it to you if you like. I'll try to explain the design."

Rumpled Martin jumped off his horse, and she was startled to see that they were now about the same height. He noticed that she had noticed and gave her a big goofy grin. Appalling.

She led the way to her father's carpentry shop in silence. Hand tools hung neatly along the walls, but most of the shop was taken up with the enormous wooden wagon, eighteen feet from stern to bow. She opened the door and held it for Faxon, enjoying the sight of seeing his bearded jaw drop so low it hit his chest. It was not a common sight to see Faxon the Saxon look nonplussed, and Tessa relished the moment. Savored it.

She inhaled the scent of wood shavings, linseed oil, and wax. Smells associated with her father. Worry circled her mind like bees around flowers. Where was he?

Faxon's gaze roamed slowly over the wagon; he peered into it, then below it. Its base sat on wooden blocks, as her father hadn't made wheels yet. "A rounded base? What could he be thinking?"

He had immediately honed in on the most noteworthy improvement that Tessa's father had made — the one that set it apart from all other wagons. "It's like the keel of a ship.

My father used to be a sailor. He said that the curved bottom would keep barrels and goods from shifting and tipping and rolling around."

"If he can pull that off, it will be a miracle," Faxon muttered. He and his awful son walked around the wagon, crawled under it, bent low to examine each part of it, murmuring to each other in maddeningly low voices.

"My father said this wagon will be able to haul as much as six tons of freight."

Faxon Gingerich shot up from a bent position so fast that his long, wiry beard bounced against his round belly. "How much?"

"Six tons. Assuming, of course, that you've plenty of horsepower to pull that kind of weight."

With that piece of information, everything changed. Faxon's countenance lightened, he continued inspecting the wagon but without the constant frown.

"It's not meant for people to ride in it," Tessa said. "Strictly a freight wagon. The teamster walks along the left side."

The frown was back. "No place for a teamster to sit?"

"There's a board for him to sit if he grows weary." Tessa bent down and slid out a wooden board.

"How many oxen would be needed to pull six tons of freight?"

"Quite a few. At least six."

Faxon's forehead puckered.

"Or horses could be used too."

"Not possible," Faxon said. "They're not strong enough.

Has to be oxen."

"My uncle Felix has bred a type of horse that can pull the kind of heavy freight that the Conestoga wagon can carry."

Now Faxon's bushy eyebrows shot up to his hairline. "The Conestoga wagon?"

"That's what my father calls it. To honor your valley. He said you gave him the idea for it. Credit goes to you."

Faxon the Saxon's chest puffed out and he very nearly smiled. It often puzzled Tessa how personal significance was needed for men to see things clearly. Their secret pride.

"Looks nearly finished to me. Just missing wheels."

"Wheels, yes, but there's still quite a bit of hardware to be made," Tessa said. "Plus pitch will be needed make the seams watertight. And my mother and Maria Müller will sew canvas cloth to cover the wagon bows, front to back."

Rumpled Martin regarded her thoughtfully. "You seem to know a lot about it."

Sarcasm. He may be taller now but he was just as rude.

She ignored him and spoke only to his father. "You can find out more about it after my father returns."

Faxon's pleased look instantly faded. He exchanged a look with rumpled Martin, whose misgiving showed plain on his face. A dark cloud descended in the carpentry shop. Something had happened along the frontier. "Tell me what's happened."

Faxon's face flattened and he went stone still for a full minute. "Trouble has come to our brethren in the north. There's been another Indian attack on families who settled along the Schuylkill River."

Tessa felt an unsettling weakness in the base of her stomach. These stories had become too common. "Did you recognize any names?"

"Just one. Zook. William and Martha Zook. The parents were found dead, the children were taken captive."

Tessa's heart started to pound. "Betsy Zook?"

"A girl said to be about your age. Smaller than you, though." His eyes skimmed her from head to toe. "Much, much shorter. Blonde hair."

Tessa gave a slight jerk of her chin. That's her, that's Betsy. The Zooks had immigrated to Berks County from Germany just about a year and a half ago. Tessa had met Betsy when the Amish churches gathered for spring and fall communion. Betsy was a beautiful girl, beloved by all, kind to the core. Tessa disliked her.

Betsy was everything Tessa wasn't. She was petite while Tessa was tall. She was curvy while Tessa was a table — flat with long thin arms and legs. She was perpetually kind while Tessa had touchy feelings.

But Tessa's dislike had nothing to do with Betsy. It had to do with Hans Bauer. From the moment they met, Hans fancied Betsy Zook.

A sick feeling roiled in Tessa's middle. So often, she had wished Betsy's family would just move away, go west. Go east. Go somewhere. She had even prayed for it! Especially so, after she learned that Hans had gone to visit Betsy, numerous times.

But she had never wished for Betsy to be a victim of an Indian attack, to be taken captive.

Faxon Gingerich swept a glance over the large stone house her father had built, strong and sturdy. "Your father did well to bring you all down here, so many years ago, although your grandfather wanted to stay north. The frontier has become a devil's playground."

Faxon and Martin walked back to the horses and mounted them.

"I will pray your father returns safely and soundly," Faxon said, before turning his horse around and starting down the lane.

"Don't worry, Tessa," rumpled Martin said. "I'm sure he'll be home soon." He gave her a reassuring smile before cantering off to join his father.

Until that moment, it had never occurred to Tessa that her father might not return at all.

*
Lancaster Town, Pennsylvania

The news of the Indian attacks had spread all over Lancaster Town. Felix Bauer had finished his business at the trading post, pleased that he had been able to trade his brother Hans's newly forged iron tools for a winter's pile of skins from Will Sock, a Conestoga Indian. He could use those skins to make harnesses for this new breed of horses. The size of that young colt in his pasture — sixteen hands? Seventeen? And still growing. It was a freak of nature.

And that put it right up Felix's alley. He was fascinated by anything and everything that jolted a person's staid expectations. Just last month, he'd found a three-legged bear hiding in a cave. Most folks would have turned tail and run, but not Felix Bauer. He set a trap, caught the three-legged bear, brought it to a frolic to show everyone because there was often doubt and speculation about his weird sightings, rumors to squelch that he was prone to exaggeration. Then he carried it, caged, in a wagon up into the mountains and let it go. Hans said he was crazy. He should've shot the three-legged bear for its pelt, but Felix saw it differently. He'd thought the bear'd had a hard enough life, and if it could survive on three legs, it deserved a chance to live.

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "The Return"
by .
Copyright © 2017 Suzanne Woods Fisher.
Excerpted by permission of Baker Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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