âNo.â The tears had stopped. Shelby was drained of everything. How long had it been since theyâd abducted her daughter? âIâm not all right, Tim. I want my daughter back.â
âI know you do. But Aimee is fine, Shelby. We have to believe that.â Tim stared at her, his eyes filled with shadows. âThe writing said she was safe.â
âI donât believe that. And neither do you. She was safe here with me, Tim. Happy and healthy and loved. How can Aimee be safe away from the one who loves her most?â
âBut, Shelby, you have to have faith. You have to.â
âItâs hard to keep hoping, Tim,â she whispered. âAll the terrible things you hear that happen to kids. What if Aimeeââ
âNo!â Tim jumped to his feet. âDonât say it. Donât even think it! Until we know differently, Aimee is fine. Do you hear me? Sheâs fine!â
Sneaking a flashlight under the blankets, hiding in a thicket of Caragana bushes where no one could see, pushing books into socks to take to campâthose are just some of the things Lois Richer freely admits to in her pursuit of the written word. âIâm a book-a-holic. I canât do without stories,â she confesses. âItâs always been that way.â
Her love of language evolved into writing her own stories. Today her passion is to create tales of personal struggle that lead to triumph over lifeâs rocky road. For Lois, a happy ending is essential.
SECRETS OF THE ROSE
LOIS RICHER
Be still and know that I am God.
âPsalms 46:10
This book is dedicated to Cristopher, who keeps
digging until he gets the answers he needs. Congratulations on reaching your goal.
Dear Reader,
Welcome to Finders, Inc.âa place dedicated to finding the truth. The idea for this series grew after a return visit to a city I particularly love, Victoria, British Columbia. While I was sitting in the hotel lobby, a woman stopped in, tossed off a cryptic comment then disappeared. And my story wheels started turning.
Shelby Kincaid is my kind of heroine. Sheâs tough, strong and competent. But sheâs also vulnerable in her love for her only child. As I imagined the pain and terror of a mother whose child is missing, I was drawn to thoughts of God and His suffering when we refuse to walk with Him, to obey His rules. Our human love pales against His. There is no greater love than the Father for His beloved creations, His precious children.
I hope youâll return for another visit to Finders. Until then I wish you contentment with whatever state youâre in, courage to deal with the future and most of all loveâwithout it we are nothing.
Blessings,
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
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
But he that dares not grasp the thorn,
should never crave the rose.
âAnne Brontë
Victoria, British Columbia
Monday, April 21
Perhaps it was the dateâten months to the day after Grantâs abrupt, tragic death.
Perhaps it was the hourâthat no-manâs-land of black yawning silence in which all the world seemed to die.
Or perhaps it was simply that she wasnât yet used to being alone.
Whatever the excuse, Shelby Kincaid was wide-awake. She lay on her bed, bathed in a puddle of moon shadows that washed through her balcony doors, and ordered her mind to shut down, to forget the past and focus on the future.
It might have workedâexcept for the creak of one tired floorboard in the hall.
Shelby sat up, glanced at the greenish-blue hands on the gilt clock Grant had presented on her last birthday: 3:13 a.m. Shadows danced over the walls as a shiver of wind tickled the blossoms of the apple tree outside her window.
Creak.
The hardwoodâs protest came again, closer this time. Just outside her door.
The phone on the nightstand sat waiting. All she had to do was pick it up and dial 911. She reached out.
Reech!
Her hand froze. The second squeak was barely discernible over the thud of her heart, but Shelby knew exactly where it came from, had vowed to oil that same hinge a hundred nights before when sheâd crept in to check on her baby.
Aimeeâs door.
Someone was inside her house and now they were going into Aimeeâs room!
Forget the phone.
She twisted toward the security panel on Grantâs empty side of the bed and stabbed the silent alarm. Soon the soundless summons would bring police from all directions of the city. But she couldnât wait for them. She had to go to Aimee.
Her legs, rubbery with fear, barely held her upright. Shelby pushed away from the bed, tiptoed across the thick butter-cream broadloom and opened her door just a crack, enough so she could scan the hall, perhaps catch a glimpse of the invader.
No one lurked in the shadows. Which meant he must already be inside Aimeeâs room.
Her entire body began to tremble. Her stomach squeezed into a knot imagining her five-year-old daughterâs terror waking to a strangerâs face. Shelby reminded herself of her past training with Grant: Assess, then act.