Copyright © 2012 by Leanna Ellis
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Ellis, Leanna.
Plain fear : forbidden : a novel / Leanna Ellis.
p. cm.
1. AmishâFiction. 2. WidowsâFiction. 3. Pregnant womenâFiction. 4. Life change eventsâFiction. I. Title.
PS3605.L4677P565 2012
813'.6âdc23
2012016292
To those who feel lost and need to be found, I hope you find hope within the pages of this book.
He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted,
to proclaim freedom for the captives
and release from darkness for the prisoners,
to proclaim the year of the LORD's favor
and the day of vengeance of our God,
to comfort all who mourn,
and provide for those who grieve in Zionâ
to bestow on them a crown of beauty instead of ashes,
the oil of joy instead of mourning,
and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair.
They will be called oaks of righteousness,
a planting of the LORD for the display of his splendor.
Isaiah 61:1â3
Akiva ran toward the light.
Its glow in the moonless night blazed a path before him, beckoning him, drawing him toward it with the force of gravity. Icy rain stabbed his face, melting under a torrent of scorching tears.
Save
him. Save him. Save him!
Her words chased after Akiva like vile hounds ready to rip apart his flesh.
He focused on the beam and ran straight toward it as hard as he could, until his world glowed an angry red. The pain pulsed and throbbed, consuming him. Arms pumping, legs stretching, muscles straining, he prayed it would sear him, burning up every thought, every emotion, every memory, until he was no more. Then he wouldn't have to remember her.
Hannah.
Nor her plea to save
him
âLevi.
Once Hannah had given Akiva hope, promise, love. Now he spat her name out like a bitter root.
But he could not banish the memory of the lie smoldering in the depths of her eyes. He could have accepted her hatred, even her anger. He'd expected it, even planned for it. But her deceit? Her disdain? Her disgust? It corroded his thoughts and distorted his love for her into a boiling, fuming explosion.
What did
she
know of love? Her beliefs, emotions, desires were simplistic.
Levi!
Of all people, his own brother. Akiva had offered her eternity, and she wanted to live an insipid life in Promise with Levi. Her betrayal scalded him.
He pushed himself, running full out, as fast as he had that day when he was eight years old. He'd hidden in a copse of trees beyond the woodworking shop, gasping for air, fear grinding into him. Rules were fixtures in their household, and if he broke one, then Pop made sure not to “spare the rod.” Pop had been searching for him, and he'd brought along a switch. The running and hiding had done no good thoughâafter buckling beneath the shiver of cold and gnawing of hunger, both switch and boy were eventually broken.
Now, Akiva felt the same bite of winter but a growling hunger of a different sort.
The light before him intensified until it separated into two distinct orbs racing toward him. A screeching sound ripped through the night, and suddenly he barreled into a metal object.
The impact rattled his bones, but he stood straight as a concrete pillar, unwavering, fortified with his anger. Bracing his hands on the warm, wet metal, he glared through the windshield. He could see two sets of wide, startled eyes staring back at him.
He slammed his hands again on the car's hood. The metal trembled, and the concussion of vibrations shot up his arms. Inside the car, the woman cried out. Akiva thought it more of a surprised sound than fear. But the fear would come.
For two years, Akiva had hoped a piece of himselfâJacob's humanityâstill existed inside him. He had believed once it was a positive thing, a trait to which he could cling, and nurture. A piece that separated him from the others like him.
But he was wrong. The ragged shred of compassion was a weakness. A weakness that left him vulnerable. The tiny slivers of emotion sliced through him. All hope and purpose poured out of him, pooling around him, until there was nothing left. Words, once a comfort, scattered in his mind, and he grasped at them as if they could save him.
“âFarewell!'”
His voice shattered like broken shards of glass. He shook his head and stared up at the gray clouds and tried again: “âA long farewellâ.'”
He collapsed forward over the hood of the car. Squeezing his eyes shut, he tried to remember the words, the poet, even the sentiment. But he was emptyâempty of words, empty of feelings. Empty of everything he ever was or ever wanted to be.
Sleet turned to snow and spattered his face and back, slowly reviving him. Were the snowflakes his prayers falling back to earth, unheard, unanswered? Ancient words chilled his soul and sputtered out of him: “âAnd when he falls, he falls like Lucifer, Never to hope again.'”
“Hey!” the man inside the car called. “You okay? What's wrong with you?”
The coldness inside Akiva solidified, and he looked up, stared ahead of him at the dirt and sludge on the windshield, at the bits of snow and sleet, the tiny flakes glistening. The woman fumbled with a cell phone, the pale glow reflecting fear and uncertainty in her eyes. The man peered at him over the rim of the steering wheel.
Akiva pounded the hood again. “Get out!”
The woman screamed. This time, fear saturated the shrill cry.
The horn blared, and the man waved his arm over the steering wheel. “Get out of the way, or I'll run you over.”
Akiva tapped his forefinger on the hoodâ
tap, tap, tapâ
then he gave a caustic laugh. “âOnce upon a midnight drearyâ¦'” His forehead pinched as he fumbled the words. “âDrearyâ¦forgotten loreâ¦'”
Snowflakes speckled his face, and he laughed again, felt a spark, a flame deep within. “âI muttered, “tapping at my chamber door; Only this, and nothing moreâ¦bleak Decemberâ¦dying emberâ¦ghost upon the floor⦔'”
His gaze penetrated the windshield again, and the fear trapped inside the car renewed his strength, charged him like a bolt of electricity. Once more he tapped the hood as if he was tapping on a windowpane. “Tap, tap, tapping⦔
The car jerked as the driver shifted into drive. The wheels inched forward then lurched to a stop again. Akiva grabbed the door and ripped the metal section off its hinges. He tossed it aside as if it weighed nothing, the door clattering and clanging against the asphalt.
“What are you doing?” the driver yelled, pulling back away from the opening, cowering and blocking the woman at the same time. His hands were shaking, his mouth opening and closing. “You want money? That it?”
But Akiva simply smiled.
He paid no attention to the cries, screams, or wails. He tore into flesh, ripping and severing. His interest wasn't in gorging himself. He didn't bother tasting or savoring but simply destroyed, until he was covered in the sticky warmth of their blood.
Heaving and gasping, he glared down at the bodies. No satisfaction, which usually followed a kill, came, no fulfillment.
Silence hummed about him. He lifted his chin, staring out at the bleak night with its heavy clouds and softly falling snow. The fire inside hardened the last bits of emotion into glassy shards, and he felt shame and disgust at the memory of Hannah's eyes. The awareness. The understanding. The shock and horror of who he was, what he had become. Despair collapsed upon him, suffocating him with the inescapable and unchangeable truth.
Then the words of the illusive poem finally came to him, and he spoke:
“âAnd his eyes have all the seeming of a demon's that is dreaming;
And the lamplight o'er him streaming throws the shadow on the floor;
And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor
Shall be liftedânevermore!'”