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  "Care to share it with me?"

  "To run my farm," Aaron said. "If you will excuse--"

  "I'd think you might be able to spare a few precious seconds to save your daughter from going to jail, Mr. Fisher."

  "My daughter is not going to jail," he said stubbornly.

  "It's not for you to decide."

  The farmer took off his hat. He looked tired, suddenly, and much older than Lizzie had originally thought. "It's not for you to decide either, but for the Lord. I trust in His judgment, as does my daughter. Good day, now." He tapped the reins, and the mules jumped forward in unison, the plowing equipment groaning through the earth.

  Lizzie watched him go. "Too bad God won't be sitting on that jury," she murmured, and then began the long walk back to the farmhouse.

  Ellie finished wiping up the last of the pickling spices that dusted the kitchen table. It was beastly hot in the kitchen-- God, what she'd do for air conditioning, or an electric fan--but she had promised Sarah she'd take care of the cleanup detail, since she'd missed a good portion of the actual canning work while she was consoling Katie.

  And what was she to make of that last confrontation? Mysteries were beginning to fall into place in her mind, as neatly as tumblers in a lock--Katie's selective amnesia, her denial of the pregnancy and the birth, Samuel's stunned expression when they'd last spoken. For the first time since she'd arrived at the farm, Ellie did not feel revulsion at the thought of the neonaticide Katie had committed, but pity.

  As a defense attorney she'd supported her share of clients who'd committed heinous crimes, but she instinctively worked harder when she could make herself understand what had brought them to that point. The woman who'd murdered her husband in his sleep was less of a monster when you factored in that the man had beaten her for thirty years. The rapist with a swastika tattoo across the bridge of his nose was far less intimidating when you thought of him as a boy being abused by his stepfather. And the Amish girl who killed her newborn couldn't be forgiven, but certainly understood, if the father of the child had sexually assaulted her.

  On the other hand, it was the final nail in Katie's coffin. In terms of motive, it made very good sense for a young woman to want to kill the baby conceived in an act of rape. Which meant that--no matter how much Ellie might sympathize with Katie, no matter how much she hoped to get her counseling--no mention of rape would ever be made during her defense.

  Ellie wrung out the sponge in the sink. She wondered if Katie would start to confide in her now. She wondered if she ought to go upstairs again, so that Katie would not awaken alone.

  At the sound of the door opening behind her, Ellie shut off the faucet and wiped her hands on the voluminous apron she'd borrowed from Sarah. "I'm glad you're back," she said, facing away from the door.

  "I must say, that's a surprise."

  Ellie whirled around to find Lizzie Munro standing there instead of Sarah. The investigator's gaze traveled from Ellie's sweat-soaked hair to the hem of her apron.

  Folding her arms across her waist, Ellie straightened, trying to look as commanding as possible given her attire. "You ought to get that crime scene tape down. There are people here trying to get on with their lives."

  "It's not my tape. Call the state police."

  "Give me a break, Detective."

  Lizzie shrugged. "Far as I'm concerned, they should have taken it down days ago. We have everything we need."

  "You think you do."

  "This case will be won on forensic evidence, Ms. Hathaway. Clear away the smoke and mirrors, and there's a dead baby left behind."

  Ellie smirked. "You sound like a prosecutor."

  "Professional hazard."

  "Interesting, then, that for such an open-and-shut case you'd feel the need to interview the Fishers."

  "Even here in the shadow of Philadelphia, we know how to cover our asses during an investigation."

  Ellie took a step forward. "Look, if you think this is about pitting a big-city legal operation against a small-town county attorney, you can tell George right now--"

  "Tell George yourself. I'm not a courier." Lizzie glanced up the stairs. "I'd like to speak to Katie."

  Ellie laughed out loud. "I bet you would. Personally, I'd like a margarita and central air." She shrugged. "You knew when you came here I wasn't going to let you near my client. And I'm sure George will understand when you tell him you couldn't get a statement from the defendant or her father."

  Lizzie's eyes widened. "How did you--?"

  "Inside advantage," Ellie said smugly.

  The detective started toward the door. "I can see how this place would start to wear on you," she said, gesturing toward Ellie's apron. "Sorry to interrupt your ... uh, big-city legal operation."

  Ellie stared at the door as it closed after Lizzie. Then she took off the apron, folded it neatly over a chair, and went to check on her client.

  Levi craned his neck one more time to make sure that Aaron and Samuel were still busy in the fields, then ran the flat of his hand along the curved hood of Lizzie Munro's car. It was as red as the apples that grew beside his Aunt Frieda's house, and as smooth as the tiny waterfall that ran over the dam in the Fishers' creek. The metal was warm to the touch. Levi closed his eyes and imagined sitting behind the wheel, revving the gas, flying down the road.

  "Ever seen one of these before?"

  The voice nearly made him jump out of his skin. Levi turned, an apology trembling on his lips, and found himself staring at the lady detective who'd come the day they'd found the dead baby. "A sixty-six Mustang convertible, one of the last of a dying breed." She set her hand just where his had been, patting it like it had feelings, like it was one of their own horses. "Want to look at the engine?"

  She reached inside the car and turned the ignition, then suddenly the hood popped up. The detective released the latch and opened it to reveal its spinning, working insides. "A small-block V8, with a three-speed manual transmission. This sweetheart can fly." She smiled at Levi. "You ever travel over a hundred miles an hour?"

  Eyes wide, Levi shook his head.

  "Well, if you see any state troopers--neither have I." She winked at him, then reached inside again. The car immediately stilled, leaving behind the faintest trace of exhaust.

  The detective grinned at Levi. "I know you're not the chauffeur--so what do you do around here?"

  Levi nodded toward the fields. "I work with Samuel."

  "Oh, yeah?"

  "He's my cousin."

  The detective raised her brows. "I guess you know Katie pretty well then, too."

  "Well, ja. Everyone knew they were gonna be getting married soon enough. They've been courting for a year, now."

  "What's taking him so long to ask?"

  Levi shrugged. "It's not the wedding season yet, for one thing. That's November, after the harvest. But even that's only going to happen if Samuel can keep her from picking fights."

  "Katie?"

  "She makes Samuel wonderful mad sometimes." Levi gently reached out with his thumb, hoping the detective couldn't see, and touched the side of the car again.

  "Maybe they should just find other people to court," the detective suggested.

  "That would be even worse for Samuel. He's been after Katie forever."

  The detective nodded solemnly. "I suppose that her parents are expecting to get Samuel as a son-in-law, too."

  "Sure."

  "Would they be disappointed if Samuel and Katie broke up?"

  Levi squinted at her. "Broke up?"

  "Split. Started seeing other people." The detective sighed. "Found others to court."

  "Well, Sarah's counting on a wedding come fall. And Aaron, he'd be sorry, for sure."

  "Seems like he might be angry, more than sorry. He comes off as a pretty strict dad."

  "You don't know him," Levi said. "Even if Katie wouldn't marry Samuel, he wouldn't cut her off like he did Jacob."

  "Jacob," the detective repeated.

  "Ja, you kno