âWhat will you do if your sonâs infatuation with the circus life has not yet been satisfied?â Levi asked.
âI donât know,â Hannah admitted.
âI mean, Caleb is what? Eleven, you said?â
âAlmost twelve.â
âThen he has some time.â
He saw her peer up at him curiously. âTime?â
âWell, as I understand it, a boy does not make a final decision to follow the ways of the Amish until heâs maybe fourteen?â He had taken this conversation too far and soon she would start to raise questions he wasnât prepared to answer. Questions like how it was that he knew so much about the Amish life. He had almost opened the door to the past. What was it about this woman that made him want to do that? Heâd had dealings with the other Amish before. But he had never had to face the daily reminder of what he had run away from all those years ago. Not until Hannah Goodloe had walked up to his front door and into his life.
is an award-winning author of more than twenty-five works of historical and contemporary fiction. She is a two-time finalist for a coveted RITA>® Award from Romance Writers of America, as well as a four-time finalist for an RT Book Reviews Reviewerâs Choice Award. Her most recent RT Book Reviews Reviewerâs Choice nomination was for her 2008 Love Inspired Historical novel Seaside Cinderella, which is the first of a series of four historical novels set on the romantic island of Nantucket. Critics have called Anna âa natural writer, spinning tales reminiscent of old favorites like Miracle on 34th Street.â Her characters have been called ârealisticâ and âendearingâ and one reviewer raved, âI love Anna Schmidtâs style of writing!â
Sarasota, Florida, May 1928
Levi Harmon pushed aside the piles of bills littering his desk and swiveled his high-backed, leather chair toward the series of leaded glass-paned doors that led outside to the front lawn. The room had been designed as a solarium, but Levi had seen little use for such a space and instead had located his Florida office in the room with its tiled terrazzo floor, its arched doors opening to the out-of-doors that he loved so much. After all, what was the use of being rich if not to live as you pleased?
He walked out onto the terrace and leaned against the stone railing. Before him the lawn stretched green and verdant past the swimming pool and rose garden, past the mammoth banyan trees that heâd insisted the builder spare when constructing the mansion and on to the gatehouse that was a miniature version of the mansion itself. Heâd worked hard for all of this and had thought that by now he might be sharing it with a wife and children, but work had consumed him and he had never found a woman that he thought suited to the kind of vagabond life heâd chosen.
Heâd come outside to think. Perhaps he should take a walk along the azure bay that most of the mansionâs rooms looked out on. That always calmed him whenever business worries piled up. And indeed, they had begun to pile upânot just for him but for many men who had taken the cash flows of their businesses for granted these past several boom years. He had started down the curved stairs to the lawn when he noticed a woman he did not recognize walking up the driveway.
She moved with purpose and determination, her strides even, her tall slender frame erect, her head bent almost as if in prayer. As she came closer, he saw that she wore a dark gray dress with a black apron and the telltale starched white cap that was the uniform of the Amish women. How was it possible that she had not been stopped at the gate, detained there while the gatekeeper made a call to the house?
At that same moment he heard the phone in the foyer jangle. He moved back to the open office doorway and continued watching the woman even as he half listened to his butler, Hans, hold a quiet conversation with the gatekeeper. The woman was even with the pool when Hans came onto the terrace to deliver his report.
âShe is Mrs. Hannah Goodloe,â Hans said.
âSheâs Amishâprobably lives out near the celery fields,â Levi said impatiently. âWhat business could she possibly have here?â
âShe would not say, but insisted on speaking with you personally. Shall Iâ¦â
Levi waved him away and went inside, rolling down the sleeves of his white shirt as he retrieved his jacket from the hall tree in his office. âShow her to the Great Hall,â he said as he ran his fingers through his copper brown straight hair.