Read Miriam's Story: Part 2 Romance in Amish Country Online

Authors: Melanie Schmidt

Tags: #Religious Fiction

Miriam's Story: Part 2 Romance in Amish Country (8 page)

She saw the contrasting expressions on her brothers’ faces and realized instantly that Caleb hadn’t know until that moment that Miriam was expecting a child. She stepped away from Daniel to Caleb and laid a gentle hand on his arm. “Please believe in me, Caleb. I loved Jacob with all my heart, and a part of me always will. But I cannot go on alone. As much as I need all of you, I need Daniel even more.”

“Where will you live?” he asked after a moment, glaring at Daniel, clearly torn between his love for her and his loyalty to his brother’s memory.

“Wherever Miriam wants,” Daniel said.

Miriam reached back for his hand and squeezed it hard. “I once promised Rachel I would never take her grandchildren away.”

“Then if Shem and Rachel have no objections—or you, Caleb—we will live with them. It will be the best for everyone, but especially for your parents. Something tells me we are going to need that big sleeping loft in time.”

Abram snorted in amusement. Caleb narrowed his eyes, but the heat was gone from his glare.

“Will you trust me, Caleb?” Miriam asked in a soft voice. “Please?”

He looked down at her, and she saw him soften. He cupped her cheek in his palm then pulled her into an embrace. “You had best unsaddle your horse,” he growled softly at Daniel. “I have a feeling we will all be here for a while yet this evening.

Daniel nodded and turned to comply, slipping the saddle quickly from his horse’s back and dropping it on a waiting rack. By the time he turned back, Caleb had left the barn, but Abram waited with Miriam.

“Thank you,” he said to Miriam’s brother.

Abram smiled and held out his hand, and Daniel took it gratefully.

“Just do nothing to prove me wrong,” Abram said, the warning clear despite his smile.

Daniel glanced at Miriam and smiled.

“That will never happen.”

Chapter Nine

“Y
ou have a son!”

Hannah Stutzman, the midwife, held up the squalling infant, so Miriam could see him. tHannah laid him across Miriam’s belly while she cut the cord, and Miriam wept with happiness as she heard the lusty cry of her baby.

“He is a fine one,” Hannah said, taking him back long enough to wash him in the warm bath Rachel had waiting.

Miriam looked at Rachel and saw the older woman’s tears.

“We will call him ‘Jacob,’” Miriam whispered, and Rachel nodded mutely.

In another moment, Miriam cried out at a sharp, unexpected pain.

“You had better hold the babe,” Hannah said, handing little Jacob to Rachel and taking control of the situation. She looked under the apron to examine Miriam then smiled.

“Well, well, well,” she said. “It looks as though little Jacob was not alone in there!”

“What?”

Then it was happening again, and Miriam was once more drawn into the otherworld of life-affirming pain. Finally, with one last push, she felt the second babe slip from her womb.

“Ah, a little girl, this time!” Hannah said. “And is she not a beauty?”

Exhausted, Miriam could only stare in wonder. “Rachel,” she whispered.

She drifted off to sleep for a time, and when she awakened, she was back in bed, her gown clean, and her two babies—bathed and sweet-smelling—sleeping in the crooks of her arms. Rachel was lightly petting her arm, and her eyes were bright with happy tears.

“Daniel?” Miriam whispered.

“He is here,” Rachel assured her, stepping back to make room for the new father.

“Daniel…?”

“Miriam.” He stroked her hair as he took in the beautiful sight – one he’d feared he would never see – his wife and their newborn infants.

“There were two of them,” she said, her voice reflecting the wonder of the thing.

Daniel’s smile turned into a grin. “So I see. I told Caleb we would need that sleeping loft.”

“Are you happy?” she asked, wondering even as she did, how she could question that smile.

“I am very happy,” he told her, kissing her softly.

“I am glad,” she said. “I love you.”

She drifted off once more, so she did not hear his heart-felt reply.

Ruth's Story

Romance in Amish Country Part 3 - Ruth's Story

Ruth Miller has been blessed, even though her life didn’t exactly turn out the way she’d expected. She has lived through her nieces, Miriam and Naomi, and is content to have them married and having families of their own. Ruth is at peace, except for the shame of having been left by the man she loved twenty-five years before. Never married and resigned to her fate, Ruth takes pleasure in caring for her brother and her grand nieces and nephews.

Everything changes, though, when she comes face-to-face with her past and is forced to deal with the
repercussions. Will Ruth preserve her good reputation? Will she resolve the issues of the past? Will she struggle through conflict and find the very special path God has in store for her?

Curl up with part three of the Romance in Amish Country series and savor Ruth’s Story.

Click Here to Read Ruth's Story

SAVE BIG

THE COMPLETE 3 PART SERIES FOR 1 LOW PRICE

Also By Melanie Schmidt

A Perfect Love - Click Here to Read

 

Forgiving and Learning to Love - Click Here to Read

 

Loving and Letting Go - Click Here to Read

 

Save Big! Grab the 'A Perfect Love Box Set' Bundle With All 3 Stories For Less Than The Price of 2!

MORE

Word-of-mouth is crucial for any author to succeed. Only 1 in 500 ebook downloads leads to a review being left on average. That is only 0.2%! If you enjoyed the book,
please consider leaving a review at Amazon
, even if it is only a line or two; it would make all the difference and would be very much appreciated.

 

Enter Review

AMISH NEWSLETTER

Sign up for email alerts to get an automatic email when new Amish books are released
click here or go to http://eepurl.com/AY3J9
. Your email address willl never be shared and you can unsubscribe at anytime.

Other books

Risk Assessment by James Goss
Horse Heaven by Jane Smiley
Ghosts by John Banville
Only Human by Candace Blevins
According to Mary Magdalene by Marianne Fredriksson
The Tenth Power by Kate Constable


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024