With a book open and a mug of coffee in hand, Ephraim sat on his couch, listening to the rain.

He’d spent thousands of quiet evenings by himself since building this house nine years ago. Before Cara none of those times had been lonely. Well… maybe a little. But he’d never been lonely for someone in particular.

Then Cara showed up, and without her knowledge she passed on to him a long and healthy life of true loneliness.

The lonesomeness tempted him to…

He stopped himself cold, growled softly, and went to the kitchen. Lightning flashed across the sky, immediately followed by a loud boom of thunder. He thought he heard a phone ring. Setting his mug on the table, he cocked his head, listening. He did hear a phone ring. Three. Four. Five rings. Then silence.

Inside his dark home he waited. The phone rang again. He grabbed his black felt hat and flew out the door. Five rings, a pause, and then more rings meant it wasn’t a business call or a wrong number. It was someone trying to reach him. He bolted across the soaked field and driveway. Fumbling through the dark, he grabbed the phone.

“Hello.”

“Ephraim.” Ada’s voice held concern. “I’m in a little fix.”

“What’s up?”

“Cara went for a walk, but then the skies opened up. She’s been gone over two hours. The creeks flooded. I’m watching Lori, and Deborah’s not here, so I’m not sure what to do.”

“I’ll hire a driver and be there as soon as I can. Whatever you do, don’t leave Lori, and don’t try to cross that creek with her in tow.”

Ephraim called half a dozen drivers before finding Bill at home. He arrived within ten minutes. In another fifteen Ephraim was climbing out of the car at Ada’s house. She opened the door for him.

“Has she returned?” Ephraim had to yell to be heard over the pouring rain.

Ada motioned him in, leaving the door open for Bill to follow. “No. She was pretty upset when she left here.”

“Why?”

“We were talking, and she had her mother’s Bible in hand, the one her dad mailed to her. She found a note in it. I think she was shaking when she looked at me and said, ‘He’s real.’ Then she bolted.”

Excitement poured into him, making his head spin for a moment. But if learning she had relatives in Dry Lake was stressful, realizing God was real had to be hundreds of times more emotional. “Where was she headed?”

“I don’t know, but she went through the pasture where that winding creek is sure to catch her. As a city girl, will she understand how dangerous the currents get in weather like this?”

Ephraim knew where she’d gone, but Ada’s question worried him. “I’ll take your horse.”

“You want help?” Bill asked.

“No. We only have one horse, and it’s too dangerous on foot. I’ll find her.” He hurried down the steps.

“Ephraim,” Ada hollered through the pouring rain. He stopped. She motioned to him and then disappeared back inside. When he reached her door, she passed him a quilt and a two-way radio. “Let me know the minute you find her. If I don’t hear from you within an hour, I’ll call the police.”

Ephraim spoke what he prayed would be true. “You’ll hear from me.”

Riding bareback, he spurred the horse along the muddy trail. Thunder rumbled in the distance as the rain slowed. When he came to the creek, he found it had flooded its banks and spanned into the lowlands of the pasture. As he carefully guided the horse through the shallowest area, he tried to block thoughts of Cara struggling to cross and being swept downstream. Soon the horse was on the other side. “Cara!” He cupped his hands around his mouth and called to her.

He wondered how she felt about her discovery. The problem with believing was it changed everything inside a person without altering the past. And sometimes it didn’t change the present either—only the person’s heart.

Even under the canopy of trees, large scattered drops pelted him. He pulled his felt hat down tighter and kept the horse moving forward along the slippery trail. “Cara!” he called against the rain, but his voice didn’t carry far.

Through a clearing he spotted the old barn she loved so much. Hoping he’d find her safe, he felt peace warm him. When he came within a hundred feet of the barn, a flash of lightning illuminated the fields briefly but he didn’t see any sign of her. He spurred the horse onward. “Cara!”

The barn door opened. She stood in the entryway with dripping wet hair and clothes. He urged the horse toward the barn. She stepped back, giving the animal room to enter the rugged structure. He tugged on the reins and came to a halt.

When she looked up at him, hope and longing tempted him to say things he knew he shouldn’t.

“He’s real.” Her tone sounded both certain and surprised.

Too emotional to speak, he pointed to a wooden cattle gate behind her, and then he held out his hand. With the rain pouring and the creek rising, they needed to get to the valley and cross over before the currents grew too strong, or they could end up stranded on this side for the next day or two. She climbed up several rungs of craggy gate and took his hand. He pulled her onto the horse behind him.

He passed her the blanket and waited while she draped it around her. He shifted so he could look into her eyes.

Using the blanket she wiped rain off her face. “Just for a second I saw a man. He… He died so that no one would be separated from Him the way I was from my family.” In spite of her proclamation, confusion was reflected in her eyes.

Ephraim placed his hat on her head and brushed one finger down her cheek, feeling more connected to her than to his own self He squared himself on the horse. She wrapped her arms around him and laid her cheek on his back. He pulled the two-way radio out of his pocket. “Ada.”

“I’m here. Have you found her?”

“Yes. We’re heading back.”

He slid the two-way into his pocket. With one hand he guided the horse, and with the other he kept his hand on hers, glad the darkness and rain hid the tears that stung his eyes.

She was safe.

And she believed.

The creek water swirled higher and faster when he crossed the second time, but soon they were in Ada’s barn, and he was helping Cara off the horse. She passed his hat back to him. The place smelled of fresh hay. Bundled in the wet quilt, Cara leaned against a stall, watching him wipe the horse down with an old towel.

He tossed extra oats into the horse’s trough. “I…just want you to know you shouldn’t feel the need to be Amish.” He tossed hay into the stall and closed the gate. “You’re free to go wherever. Join wherever.”

“Thank you, ’From. For everything.”

He wrapped her in his arms, feeling her tremble even through the blanket. “You scared me.” He propped his cheek against her head, and they stood, watching the rain.