Emma Blooms At Last

Read Emma Blooms At Last Online

Authors: Naomi King

PRAISE FOR THE NOVELS OF NAOMI KING

Amanda Weds a Good Man

“The glaring difference between Amanda's and Wyman's bishops shows how the word of God can be manipulated, and Wyman's support of Amanda . . . is a shining example of a husband fulfilling his marriage vows. The busy social life they share with family and friends is a sweet counterpoint to the serious nature of their personal and spiritual dilemma.”

—
RT Book Reviews

Rosemary Opens Her Heart

“Frustration and sorrow make King's characters three-dimensional and believable. Readers of Janette Oke and Beverly Lewis will enjoy the latest in King's Amish series.”

—
Library Journal

“The very talented Naomi King instantly pulls you into the lives and loves in this small Amish community. . . . King has an amazing talent for developing realistic characters that have to grapple with life issues and through faith find workable solutions for themselves and others.”

—Fresh Fiction

“A superbly written, engaging Amish novel that will tug at your heartstrings. . . . King does a fine job of continuing to create that small-town feel.”

—The Book Connection

“Fascinating. . . . Thank you, Naomi King, for another wonderful read.”

—Jacob's Beloved's Books

Abby Finds Her Calling

“What distinguishes this from many other Amish romances is how it shows that forbearance and forgiveness take a good deal of work, and the Amish, like everybody else, gossip, bicker, and sometimes have less than ideal family lives. . . . King has created enough open-ended characters to entice the reader back to Cedar Creek for more.”

—
Publishers Weekly

“A new contemporary series, Home at Cedar Creek, from a talented author who writes from her heart. The story line's been around for decades, but King freshens it up and brings new life to it.”

—
RT Book Reviews


Abby Finds Her Calling
is a heartwarming story, beautifully told, of forgiveness, redemption, and the healing power of love in its many forms: love between individuals, family love, love within a community, and God's love. This story touched my heart.”

—JoAnn Grote, author of “Image of Love” from
A Prairie Christmas Collection

“Naomi King writes with a heartwarming honesty that will stay with the reader long after the last page.”

—Emma Miller, author of
Rebecca's Christmas

”A fresh new voice enters the world of Amish fiction with Naomi King's
Abby Finds Her Calling
. King's lyrical style shines in a tender tale of how love and forgiveness heal broken hearts and restore a family and a community. With its Missouri setting, King offers us a knowing look into a different Amish settlement. Readers will look forward to more Cedar Creek stories.”

—Marta Perry, author of the Pleasant Valley series

“Extremely well written and a pure joy to read.”

—Review from Here

“A beautiful story of faith, family, and forgiveness. King has developed a cast of interesting and engaging characters whose lives you can't help but care about.”

—The Book Connection

O
THER
B
OOKS
BY
N
AOMI
K
ING

Abby Finds Her Calling:
Home at Cedar Creek, Book One

Rosemary Opens Her Heart:
Home at Cedar Creek, Book Two

Amanda Weds a Good Man:
One Big Happy Family, Book One

New American Library

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 375 Hudson Street,

New York, New York 10014

USA | Canada | UK | Ireland | Australia | New Zealand | India | South Africa | China

penguin.com

A Penguin Random House Company

First published by New American Library,

a division of Penguin Group (USA) LLC

Copyright © Charlotte Hubbard, 2014

Penguin 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 to continue to publish books for every reader.

REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGIS
TRADA

LIBRARY OF CON
GRESS CATALOGING-IN-
PUBLICATION DATA:

King, Naomi, 1953–

Emma blooms at last / Naomi King.

pages cm.—(One big happy family; book 2)

ISBN 978-1-101-60843-2

1. Amish—Fiction. 2. Families—Fiction. 3. Man-woman relationships— Fiction. 4. Domestic fiction. I. Title.

PS3613.A277E47 2014

813'.6—dc23 2014018068

PU
BLISHER'S NOTE

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.

Version_1

Contents

Praise

Other Books by Naomi King

Title page

Copyright page

Dedication

Acknowledgments

Epigraph

 

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

 

About the Author

For Johnny Lynn, my lifelong friend,
who—like Emma—had to wait awhile for the right man
to come along and bless her
life!

Acknowledgments

Once again, Lord, You've brought the right ideas just when I needed them, and stood by me as I wrote this book despite many, many distractions. Thanks!

My continuous gratitude goes to Jim Smith of Step Back in Time Tours in Jamesport, Missouri—the largest Old Order Amish settlement west of the Mississippi River. Your research assistance is invaluable, and I treasure your friendship, too!

Special thanks to Joe and Mose Burkholder and to Mary Graber in Jamesport for opening your hearts to me.

Evan Marshall, I so appreciate your guidance and support as I make the most of my writing career. Ellen Edwards, thank you again for your attention to the details that make my books so much better!

Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness.

—Isaiah
41:10

Chapter One

T
his is what a Monday morning should look like,
Amanda mused. Her kitchen was thrumming with activity as her family finished breakfast—and everyone appeared happily intent on getting where they needed to go next. In the six weeks since she'd married Wyman Brubaker they'd known some rough moments, yet it seemed their eight kids and the four adults had finally figured out a morning routine that worked. Today they'd all been dressed and ready to eat on time, without any squabbling or drama. It was a minor miracle.

“What a wonderful-gut meal,” Wyman said as he rose from his place at the head of the table. “The haystack casserole had all my favorite things in it. Lots of sausage and onions and green peppers.”

“And cheese!” five-year-old Simon piped up. “So much cheese. The hash browns were really gooey and really, really gut.”

“What are you three fellows doing this morning?” Wyman
asked. He tousled Simon's dark hair, looking from Eddie to Jerome. “Did I hear you say we might have baby mules by the end of the day?”

“That's my best guess,” Jerome replied as he, too, stood up. “Eddie and Simon are going with me to get some feed supplement. Let's hit the road, boys, so we'll be back in time. We want to help the mares, if they need us, and I want to start our imprint training so those foals will know us and trust us from the moment they're born.”

“I'm outta here!” Simon sprang from his chair and shot through the kitchen door, letting it slam behind him.

Eddie, his fifteen-year-old brother, headed toward the jackets and hats that hung on wall pegs. “Well, there's the speed of light and the speed of sound—and the speed of Simon,” he remarked as he grabbed his youngest brother's coat along with his own. “At this rate, we'll be to Cedar Creek and back before those mares can turn twice in their stalls.”

“Enthusiasm is a gut thing,” Jerome replied as he came over to hug Amanda. “Anything you need from the mercantile, Aunt? Maybe a big bag of raisins for my favorite kind of pie?”

Amanda laughed as her twenty-four-year-old nephew wagged his eyebrows at her. The money from Jerome's mule business had seen her through some tight times after her first husband had died, leaving her to raise three young daughters. Now that she'd remarried, Jerome was taking to Wyman's boys with a sense of fun and responsibility that was another big help to her. “Bring whatever you think will taste gut,” she replied.

“Raisin-filled cookies,” Wyman hinted wistfully. “And with that luscious thought, I'll head to the barn. Reece Weaver's supposed to call me with a progress report on my new grain elevator.”

Amanda felt a rush of goose bumps when Wyman smiled at her. With his dark hair and a thick, silky beard framing his face,
he was such a handsome man—and a wonderful provider for her and their children. “Jemima and I plan to get some baking done today to stay ahead of you fellows with your bottomless stomachs,” she said. “So it can't hurt to sweet-talk the cooks.”

“I'm going to kiss this cook instead,” Wyman murmured. He quickly brushed her lips with his, and then waved Eddie and Jerome out the door ahead of him. “You ladies have a gut rest of your morning. Oh—and you, too, Pete!” he teased as he playfully clapped his middle son on the back. “See you and Lizzie after school.”

As the three fellows left the kitchen, Amanda joined Pete and Lizzie at the counter, where they were closing the lids of their coolers. “Denki to you both for packing your lunches,” she said as she slung an arm around each of them. “You've really smoothed out my morning, doing that.”

“It's the easiest way to get exactly what we want to eat,” Lizzie pointed out. She elbowed her new brother. “Pete made
three
ham sandwiches.”

“I sure didn't want any of your stinky tuna salad,” Pete insisted. “The barn cats will probably follow us to school yowling for your lunch.” Then he sighed. “Another week. Another five days of Teacher Dorcas.”

Amanda frowned. “You don't like the teacher here at your new school?”

Pete shrugged. “I don't think she likes
me
much. She finds ways to point out that I'm not as far along in math and spelling as the rest of the eighth graders.”

“She's not really picking on
you
, Pete,” Lizzie remarked. “She thinks that the boys in general are lagging behind the girls.”

“Give Teacher Dorcas a little more time,” Amanda suggested, squeezing his shoulder. “It's always an adjustment, getting used to a new teacher after you've been in a different school for so long.”

As the two thirteen-year-olds donned their winter coats and hats, Amanda noted that they resembled each other enough to be twins, even though Pete was a Brubaker and her Lizzie was a Lambright. “Make it a gut day,” she said as they started out the door, “and we'll see you this afternoon.”

“Bye, Mamma,” Lizzie replied, while Pete gave her a wave.

As Amanda turned back toward the long kitchen table, she was pleased to see that Vera, Wyman's eldest, had been putting away the breakfast leftovers while the four-year-old twins, Cora and Dora, had scraped and stacked everyone's plates. “Well, now that it's just us girls, the real work can get done!” Amanda teased as she lifted Alice Ann from the wooden high chair.

“I a helper!” the toddler crowed. “Me—Alice Ann!”

Amanda felt a surge of love as the little blonde hugged her. “Jah, and it's gut to hear you talking, too, punkin,” she murmured. Wyman's Alice Ann, three years old, had been traumatized when her mother was killed in a hay-baling accident, and because she'd begun to speak only recently, every word sounded especially sweet.

“We're going to work on the laundry,” Vera joined in. At seventeen, she was tall and slender—and she'd become well versed in running a household after her mother had died. “Alice Ann's going to help me sort the clothes by colors, and then hand me the clothespins when we hang everything out to dry.”

“A never-ending job, the laundry,” Amanda remarked as she lowered the toddler to the floor. “And while you start the dough for the bread and piecrusts, Jemima, the twins and I will fetch the morning's eggs.”

Her mother-in-law from her first marriage nodded as she ran hot dishwater into the sink. “Better you than me. These cold November mornings make my legs ache, so I'm happy to stay inside.”

“Then can we bake cookies, Mamma?” Dora asked eagerly. “Chocolate chip ones?”

“And butterscotch brownies?
Please?
” Cora chimed in. “We don't
like
—”

“Dat's raisin cookies,” her twin finished the sentence with a grimace.

Amanda laughed, hugging her look-alike daughters. How could she refuse them when they brightened her days—and had already started calling Wyman their dat? They were just at the age to wear their hair twisted into rolls and tucked into buns . . . growing up so fast. “If you think you can do all the measuring—”

“Jah, we can!” they said together.

“We'll make your goodies after we redd up your room and Simon's,” Amanda replied. “So let's get out to the henhouse. The sooner we finish our work, the sooner we can play.”

As her girls scurried ahead of her to the low-slung building that was adjoined to the barn, Amanda felt a deep sense of satisfaction. A few weeks ago, her mornings at the Brubaker place had been chaotic and stressful, but when Wyman had decided they would move to her farm in Bloomingdale, everything had fallen into place as though God had intended for them to be there all along. She marveled at how the first light of this fine autumn morning made everything sparkle. Out in the garden, the last of the pumpkins were ready to be picked and made into the filling for holiday pies. The maple and sweet gum trees glistened with bursts of red, orange, and gold to form a glorious backdrop behind the white gambrel-roofed barn. As the horses and mules in the corral whickered at the twins, Amanda couldn't help but smile. Her life was so good now . . .

*   *   *

W
yman paused in the unlit barn, watching the wall phone's red message light blink. Had Reece called while he'd been outside seeing Jerome and the boys off? Or had someone else left a message? What with Jerome running his mule-breeding business here, it
might be a good idea to get a new message machine that allowed callers to leave their voice mails for specific businesses and family members.

But then, some districts' bishops spoke out against such an updated message system, saying it allowed for keeping secrets. In a lot of Amish towns, two or three families had shared a phone shanty alongside the road for generations.
You've gotten used to the phone being in your elevator office rather than in another fellow's barn,
Wyman realized.
This is just one more minor adjustment—like learning a new phone number after having the same one all your life.

Wyman pushed the
PLAY
button. If the message was for Jerome, he would jot the phone number or the caller's name on the pad of paper Amanda kept on the wooden bench beneath the phone. “You have one new message,” the voice on the recorder announced.

“Jah, Wyman, this is Reece Weaver, and we've gotta talk about some more up-front money,” the contractor said in a voice that rang around the barn's rafters. “Started digging your foundation, and we're gonna have to blast through solid bedrock, which jacks the price
waaay
up from what I quoted you last week. Got some issues with EPA and OSHA regulations that'll cost a lot more, too, so that seven hundred thousand we figured on won't nearly cover building your elevator now. Better gimme a call real quick-like.”
Click.

Wyman's heart thudded. He'd left Reece's written estimate in the house—not that it would answer any of the questions spinning in his mind. Wouldn't a commercial contractor know about environmental and safety regulations—and the possibility of hitting bedrock—before he'd written up his estimate? And why on earth had Reece gone into detail about money, when anyone in the family might have been listening, instead of waiting for him to
call back? As Wyman glanced around the shadowy barn, he was relieved that only the horses and mules had heard the contractor's message. The seven hundred thousand dollars he'd spoken of—money from the sale of the Brubaker family farm as well as from the Clearwater elevator's bank account—was all he could spend on a new facility. He'd kept money back to see his family of twelve through the coming year until his Bloomingdale elevator was bringing in some money . . . but Reece's strident words made it clear that he intended to demand a significant price increase.

Wyman pressed the number pads on the phone, hoping he and Reece could settle this matter immediately rather than playing telephone tag. After assuring Amanda that he could support her, her mother-in-law, Jemima, and their blended family of eight kids, he did
not
want any more details about money left on the phone, where she might hear them and start to worry. Finally, on the fourth ring, someone picked up.

“Jah, Weaver Construction Company,” a woman answered.

“Wyman Brubaker here, and I need to speak with Reece about—”

“He's out on a job. I'll take your message.”

Wyman frowned. More than likely this was Reece's wife, because the company had been a small family-owned business since Reece's dat had started it more than thirty years ago. “He just called me not five minutes ago, asking me to call right back,” Wyman replied. “I'd rather not discuss the details of my elevator with—”

“Oh. You're
that
Wyman Brubaker,” the woman interrupted. “I'll page him, and he'll call you back as soon as he can.”
Click.

And what did she mean by snipping and snapping at him that way, as though he were an inconvenience rather than a customer? Wyman's stomach tightened around his breakfast as he hung up. There was nothing to do but wait for Reece to call back, even as
every passing moment allowed him to think of things that didn't set right about this situation—

The phone rang and he grabbed it. “Jah? This is Wyman.”

“Reece Weaver. So you see where I'm coming from, far as your job costing more?” he demanded. “How about if I stop by, say, around noon? Another hundred thousand should cover the blasting and the—”

“A hundred thousand dollars?”
Wyman closed his eyes and curled in around the phone, hoping his voice hadn't carried outside the barn. It took him a moment to corral his stampeding thoughts. “I don't understand why you didn't know—
before
you started digging—about that bedrock, and why you didn't call me—
before
you started digging—about maybe changing the location of the elevator,” he said in a low voice. “That's a huge difference from the price you quoted in your estimate.”

“Jah, well, the excavation crew I use is only available this week, before they go to jobs with other contractors,” Reece replied hastily. “Can't get them again until the middle of January, see, so I didn't think you'd want to wait that long.”

The middle of January?
Nobody poured concrete then, so his facility would be delayed by months if he waited that long. Wyman drew in a deep breath, trying to compose himself. “It seems to me that bedrock would be the ideal foundation for an elevator anyway,” he said. “It's not like I need a basement—or even a crawl space—under the silos or the office building.”

“Yeah, but see, the new EPA regulations are making us do a lotta things different these days,” the contractor replied. “Nothing's as easy as it was when Pop put up your elevator in Clearwater. That was about twenty years ago, after all.”

Wyman blinked. Norbert Weaver's friendly, reliable service had been the main reason he and his partner, Ray Fisher, had wanted Weaver Construction to build their new facility, but it
seemed that some of the family's values had died with the company's founder. Wyman heard the hum of equipment in the background. Could it be that Reece was pushing for more money because he had several big projects going on at once? The founder's son had acted quite accommodating and professional last week when they'd discussed the plans for this new elevator . . . and Wyman realized that because he, too, was feeling pressured, he wasn't handling these details well over the phone.

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