All Things Hidden

All Things Hidden

by Kathy Herman
All Things Hidden

All Things Hidden

by Kathy Herman

eBook

$11.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

The Past Is Back

Ellen Jones’s hands are full after she begrudgingly brings her aging father to Seaport. Lawrence’s memory is failing—though he can’t seem to forget what he’s been holding against Ellen for the past forty years. But when he’s diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, Ellen realizes she never released her resentment and it’s too late for reconciliation. Then suddenly—literally overnight—her son, Owen, comes face-to-face with the consequences of his wilder days gone by. No one is prepared for the changes he, and the entire family, will have to make as a result. The past weighing heavily in the present, a clean start is out of the question for both Ellen and Owen. How can God heal their deepest wounds? Enter the least expected person of the bunch… Can secrets kill?

Ellen Jones gets a disturbing call from her elderly father’s neighbor and must face the fact that her father, Lawrence, is no longer safe living alone. Ellen resents that he forgets the simplest of details and yet remembers the one thing he’s held against her for the past forty years. Her being his caregiver is out of the question.

Ellen and her husband Guy pair up their fathers to share an apartment in a nearby retirement community. The setup seems ideal until Lawrence wanders off...right past the scene of a murder. Did he see something? He can’t quite remember... but the killer doesn’t know that!

Just when Lawrence is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and Ellen realizes there’s no chance they’ll ever be reconciled, a shocking secret surfaces from her son Owen’s past that drops her to her knees. Ellen is desperate for a miracle. Will God intervene and erase the consequences of past mistakes—or does He have an even better plan?

Story Behind the Book

“I was twenty-seven when I gave my heart to Jesus. And twenty-nine years later, I’m still realizing the long-term consequences of some of the choices I made during the years I was enslaved to sin. The words of Galatians 6:7, “Do not be deceived. God cannot be mocked. A man reaps what he sows,” are as true today as when the apostle Paul wrote them. In the writing of All Things Hidden, my goal was to create unforgettable characters caught in the throes of overwhelming consequences, and enable us to watch the response of a merciful God not to remove their struggle, but to walk with them through the pain and redeem it for His glory.”

—Kathy Herman

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307562814
Publisher: The Crown Publishing Group
Publication date: 04/28/2010
Series: A Seaport Suspense Novel , #3
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Kathy Herman is an award-winning poet and bestselling novelist who is very much at home in the Christian publishing industry, having served on staff at the Christian Booksellers Association for five years. She has drawn on her eleven years of bookstore experience as a children’s products specialist to conduct related seminars in the U.S. and Canada. She has helped develop public school character-building curriculum and has also been a preliminary judge for the ECPA Gold Medallion Awards. Kathy and her husband, Paul, residents of Tyler, Texas, have three grown children and five grandchildren.

Read an Excerpt

All Things Hidden

A Seaport suspense novel
By KATHY HERMAN

Multnomah Publishers

Copyright © 2006 Kathy Herman
All right reserved.

ISBN: 1-59052-489-6


Chapter One

Don't eat the candle, son!" Owen Jones was laughing so hard he was sure he had blurred the three pictures he had just taken. "Let Mommy light it so you can blow it out. Honey, hurry! This is going downhill fast."

Hailey Jones wiped the tears off her face and tried to look serious as she bent down and put a yellow candle in the middle of the red fire-truck cake. "Remember what Mommy told you: The candle is hot. Don't touch it."

Hailey struck a match and lit the candle and began to sing slowly until everyone in the room joined in:

Happy birthday to you, Happy birthday to you, Happy birthday, dear Daniel, Happy birthday to you.

"Okay," Owen said, "blow!"

Daniel's mouth formed an O, and he produced noise and drool, but no wind.

"Let Grandma help." Ellen Jones stood behind the boy's highchair, then bent down and put her cheek next to his. "Ready? One ... two ... three ... blow!" She let out a quick puff of air and the candle went out. "You did it! Good job, Daniel!"

Everyone cheered and clapped.

The birthday boy squealed with delight and grabbed a fistful of icing. He squeezed it through his fingers, then brought it to his mouth.

"Are you going to let Grandpa eat part ofthat fire truck?" Guy Jones said.

Daniel offered a handful of red goo to Guy, who pretended to take a bite. "Mmm ... that's good. I want more. More! Give me more!"

Daniel giggled and grabbed another handful of icing and held it up.

"Better let me cut the cake before he grosses us all out," Hailey said.

Owen heard the phone ringing and went out to the kitchen. "Hello."

"May I speak with Ellen Jones, please?"

"Sure. May I tell her who's calling?"

"My name won't mean anything to her. I'm her father's neighbor."

"Did something happen?"

"It isn't an emergency, but I need to make her aware of something. If this isn't a good time, maybe she could call me back."

"No, it's fine. Hold for just a minute."

Owen went into the dining room and motioned to Ellen. "Mom, the phone's for you. It's Granddad's neighbor. She says it's not an emergency."

"How would she know to call me here?"

Guy smiled sheepishly. "I forwarded our calls here. If the tailor calls, I thought we could pick up my suit on the way home."

Hailey turned to Owen. "Darling, would you get the ice cream? Oh, and the plates, napkins, and forks? They're on the countertop."

Owen followed his mother into the kitchen and took the ice cream out of the freezer and listened to her end of the phone conversation.

"Have you ever noticed this behavior before now?" Ellen said. "I didn't know that ... Did you ask him about it afterwards ...? I'm sorry. My father can be really blunt ... Yes, I can see that ... I guess I need to drive down there ... No, not at all. I appreciate your letting me know." Ellen hung up the phone and seemed to be staring at nothing.

"Is everything all right with Granddad?" Owen said.

"Sounds as though his mind is slipping."

"Mom, he's what, almost ninety?"

"Eighty-seven, actually, and this isn't normal forgetfulness. Sybil, his neighbor across the street, found him sitting in her porch swing yesterday afternoon. She went outside and asked if there was something she could do for him. He said no, but for her to go ahead and make herself at home. She didn't know what to say and went back inside. When she looked out again, he was standing in his own yard, watering the flower beds."

Owen smiled. "He was probably kidding around. You know how he is."

"Sybil's convinced Dad didn't have a clue he wasn't sitting on his own porch. She asked him this morning if he liked the new cushions on her swing, and he got huffy. Asked her how he should know since she never invites him over. Apparently, he's over there all the time. She thought he looked scared."

"I can't imagine Granddad being scared of anything."

"Me either, Owen. This is disconcerting. Unless the neighbor is overreacting, it sounds as though he shouldn't be living alone." Ellen breathed in and exhaled. "I've been dreading something like this since Mother died."

"What're you going to do? He'll never agree to move."

Guy breezed through the doorway. "Hey, what's holding up the ice cream? What did the neighbor want?"

Ellen told Guy everything Sybil Armstrong had said. "I don't know what we should do. Dad and I wouldn't last a week under the same roof, but he's certainly not ready for nursing care."

"Honey, both our fathers would be better off in Seaport where we can watch out for them. Maybe it's time to look into assisted living."

Ellen raised her eyebrows. "Yes, we could hog-tie my dad and haul him here kicking and screaming. I can hardly wait."

"Too bad they couldn't move in together," Owen said.

There was a long moment of silence.

"Why couldn't they?"

"Mom, I was kidding."

"They've always seemed to get along. It's certainly worth considering. Dad's in reasonably good physical shape even if his mind's slipping. And Roland's mind is sharp, even if his arthritis slows him down. They might be good for each other."

"You're serious," Guy said.

"It would solve our immediate problem of getting them to move out of their houses and transition from being independent. This could be a huge first step in preparing them for assisted living, don't you think?"

"Well, I ... I suppose they could move in together," Guy said. "But would they? Better yet, should they? I mean, is it feasible to think-"

Hailey poked her head in the kitchen. "Where's the ice cream? The birthday boy's getting antsy."

"Sorry, I got sidetracked." Owen picked up the stack of plates and utensils and the ice cream and looked over at his parents. "I really was kidding. But if you decide to go through with it, you know Hailey and I will help you any way we can. It'd be great having them closer, and I'd love for Daniel to have a chance to know them."

"Well," Ellen said, "Daniel may be just the hook we need to get your grandfathers to consider this."

Ellen sat on the veranda of her home, listening to the crickets and aware of her heart pounding much too fast.

Guy came outside and pulled the other wicker rocker next to hers and sat. "I heard your wheels turning all the way in the living room. You want to talk about it?"

"I don't even want to think about it, much less say it out loud."

"Honey, you knew your father couldn't be independent indefinitely."

"He's managed this long, I actually thought he might." She glanced up at one bright star visible between the tree branches. "I dread the thought of him living nearby, and I feel guilty for feeling that way."

"Well, there's a lot of bad history between you two. Maybe that'll change now."

"I can't erase a lifetime of hurt just because Dad is suddenly needy."

"No, but maybe he's mellowed. You've hardly seen him in-"

"Don't remind me how long it's been. I feel bad enough his neighbor had to call and inform me his mind is slipping."

Guy took her hand in his. "Well, let's take one step at a time. At least we know my dad is open to sharing an apartment with yours. All we have to do now is convince Lawrence it's a good idea."

"Surely you don't think he's going to give up his house and move here without a fight?"

"Probably not. But he can't stay in Ocala."

(Continues...)



Excerpted from All Things Hidden by KATHY HERMAN Copyright © 2006 by Kathy Herman. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews