THREAT FROM HER AMISH PAST
Eight years ago, a drifter destroyed Becca Millerâs ties to her Amish communityâand murdered her family. Now a special agent with Fort Rickmanâs criminal investigation department, Becca knows her past has caught up with her and doesnât want to relive it. Sheâs convinced that the killer, who supposedly died years ago, is very much alive and after her. Special agent Colby Voss agrees to help her investigate. Yet the closer they get to the truth, the closer the killer gets to silencing her permanently.
Military Investigations: Serving their country and solving crimes
Colby glanced into the dense forest on each side of the road, his internal warning system on high alert.
The sky was clear, the wind calm, yet there was a fallen tree in the middle of the road. He unbuttoned the safety on his holster.
âWatch yourself, Becca,â he cautioned.
She approached the fallen tree and then turned to face him. âWeâll have to move the log off the road.â
Inadvertently, she stepped into the arc of illumination from her carâs headlights.
Colbyâs shoulders tensed. âYouâre exposed, Becca. Get away from the light.â
He moved toward her. She stepped aside, but not fast enough.
A shot rang out.
For half a heartbeat, Becca froze.
Colby lunged and shoved her to the pavement. Two more shots pummeled the log. A third pinged against her open driverâs door.
A car engine whined in the distance. Tires screeched along a narrow path that paralleled the newer two-lane.
Becca wiggled under Colbyâs weight.
âIt was a trap,â he said, his tone sharp. âYou could have been killed.â
She almost had been, he realized. On his watch.
DEBBY GIUSTI
is a medical technologist who loves working with test tubes and petri dishes almost as much as she loves to write. Growing up as an army brat, Debby met and married her husbandâthen a captain in the armyâat Fort Knox, Kentucky. Together they traveled the world, raised three wonderful army brats of their own and have now settled in Atlanta, Georgia, where Debby spins tales of suspense that touch the heart and soul. Contact Debby through her website, www.DebbyGiusti.com, email [email protected], or write c/o Love Inspired Suspense, 233 Broadway, Suite 1001, New York, NY 10279.
Then he said to them all: âWhoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it.â
âLuke 9:23â24
In Memory of Ginger Leary
A dear friend who loved books and always encouraged me to keep writing.
PROLOGUE
Eight years earlier
The moon peered down between dark, billowing clouds and cast the Amish farmhouse in shadows. Rebecca Miller stepped from her car onto the one-lane, dirt road she knew so well and shivered in the frosty night air.
Leaving two years earlier had sealed her fate. She would not be welcomed nor accepted back unlessâand untilâshe asked forgiveness. Something she could never do.
If only her father had believed her. Perhaps then, she would have remained in Harmony, Alabama, and spent the rest of her life wrapped in the familiar embrace of the Amish way.
Instead she had created a new future for herself in the military. Seemingly a drastic shift from the peace-loving community of her childhood, but then too many ignored what Rebecca knew so well. Evil existed even among the Amish.
After driving straight through from Fort Campbell, Kentucky, her legs were stiff and her shoulders tense.
Cautiously she climbed the front steps, her breath clouding the air. She shivered, anticipating her fatherâs icy stare and quick rejection.
Her sisterâs words replayed in her memory. I fear for my life.
Rebecca tapped ever so lightly on the unlatched door. An even more chilling shiver snaked up her spine.
âKatie,â she whispered, pushing the door open.
An acrid stench wafted past her before she saw her father and the dark circle of blood pooling on the wooden floor beneath his chest. The cloying scent of copper clogged her throat and sent a jab of fear deep into her heart.
âDatt?â Without thought, she slipped back to her Amish past.
He lay on the hand-hewn floorboards his bearded face pale and drawn, life ebbing from his glassy eyes. Trying to assess which of the many stab wounds to stanch, Becca dropped to her knees and touched his outstretched hand.
Her fatherâs eyes widened ever so slightly.
âWho was it?â she whispered, knowing even before he answered.
âJa-Jacob,â he stammered, ignoring the ban that forbid him from speaking to his daughter.