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The Amish Midwife (Lancaster Courtships Book 3) Kindle Edition

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 323 ratings

An Amish bachelor needs the help of a guarded midwife to care for his baby niece in this heartwarming, inspirational romance.

An Unexpected Family

Amish midwife Anne Stoltzfus is used to late-night visitors—but she’s shocked to find reclusive bachelor Joseph Lapp on her doorstep with a baby in his arms. Their neighborly quarrels are pushed aside when Joseph explains that his sister has left her daughter in his care—and Joseph needs Anne to be her nanny. Soon they’re bonding over baby Leah, and the love they feel for her is healing them both. When Joseph makes an offer of marriage, Anne’s painful past resurfaces and she’s unsure of what to do. But taking a chance could mean love—and family—are waiting just across the fence.

Lancaster Courtships: Life and love in Amish country

Collect all three books in the series!

The Amish Bride by Emma Miller

The Amish Mother by Rebecca Kertz

The Amish Midwife by Patricia Davids

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

USA Today best-selling author Patricia Davids was born in Kansas. After forty years as an NICU nurse, Pat switched careers to become an inspirational writer. She now enjoys laid back life on a Kansas farm, spending time with her family and playing with her dog Sugar, who thinks fetch should be a twenty-four hour a day game. When not throwing a ball, Pat is happily dreaming up new stories where love and faith conquer all. Contact her at pat@patriciadavids.com.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

"You miserable alt gayse. Oh, no, you don't. Not again!" Anne Stoltzfus shot to her feet when she spotted the intruder working his way under the fence beyond her red barn. She stepped closer to the kitchen window. He was almost through.

"What's wrong?" Roxann Shield remained seated at Anne's kitchen table, her eyes wide with concern.

"It's Joseph Lapp's old goat. He's getting into my garden. I'm not going to lose the last of my precious tomatoes or another prized pumpkin to that thief."

Anne dashed out into the cool morning. Flying down the steps, she raced toward the rickety fence separating her garden plots from her cantankerous neighbor's farm, yelling as she ran. "Out! Get out of there!"

Her nemesis was halfway under the fence when she reached him. Armed with only a kitchen towel, she flew into battle, flapping her weapon in the black-and-brown billy goat's face. The culprit tried to retreat, but his curved horns snagged in the sagging wire. The more he struggled to escape her attack, the more tangled he became. He bleated his misery as loud as he could.

Anne stopped flapping when she recognized his dilemma. He couldn't go forward and he couldn't go back. She rested her hands on her hips as she scowled at him. She heard laughter behind her. Looking over her shoulder, she saw Roxann doubled over with mirth on her front steps.

Anne turned her attention back to the goat. "I should leave you here. It would serve you right to spend the night with your head stuck in the fence."

Feeling sorry for the goat was the last thing she wanted to do, but he did appear miserable sprawled on his belly with his head cocked at an awkward angle. His eyes were wide with fear and his mouth hung open. She looked about for his owner, but Joseph Lapp was nowhere to be seen. Of course he wasn't. Trust her neighbor to be absent when his animal was misbehaving. That was usually the case.

How many times had his goats managed to get in her garden and eat her crops? More than she cared to count. More than she could afford to lose. Each time she drove them out, she bit her tongue to keep from telling Joseph Lapp exactly what she thought of his smelly horde. Her Amish faith required that she forgive grievances, but enough was enough. If the man didn't repair his fences soon, she was going to have a word with Bishop Andy about Joseph's poor stewardship. She didn't want to cause trouble, but she was tired of being on the losing end of the situation.

However satisfying a conversation with the bishop might be, it didn't solve her current problem. The goat continued bleating pitifully. A number of other goats looked over their pens to see what was going on. Anne waited for Joseph to appear, but he didn't. She studied the billy goat for a long moment.

"If you are to be free, I reckon I'll have to do it. Remember this kindness and stay out of my garden."

"Be careful," Roxann called out.

Crouching in front of the goat, Anne put her hand on his head and pushed down so she could untangle his horns. She wrinkled her nose at his stench. Why did he smell so bad? If she had a garden hose handy, she would bathe him before she let him up. Maybe that would deter him from visiting next time. He struggled harder but she was only able to unhook one horn. "Hold still, you wicked animal."

Suddenly, the goat surged forward. His second horn popped free and he made a break for it, barreling into Anne. The impact toppled her backward into her precious tomato plants. Although it was mid-October, the vines still bore huge red fruit, the very last of the summer's bounty and a sure cash crop at her produce stand. She sat in openmouthed shock as the feeling of squished tomatoes beneath her soaked through her dress. So much for a goat's gratitude.

She shook her fist at him. "You miserable, ungrateful beast!"

"Do you need a hand?"

The mildly amused voice came from the far side of the fence. Joseph Lapp stood with his arms crossed on his chest and one hand cupped over his mouth.

He was a tall, brawny man with wide shoulders and muscular arms. A straw hat pulled low on his brow covered his light blond hair. The wide brim cast a shadow across his gray eyes, but she knew he was laughing at her. Again. They rarely shared a conversation, but he was always finding some amusement at her expense. Did he enjoy seeing her suffer?

She scrambled to her feet. "I don't need a hand. I need you to keep your goats out of my garden. Unless you keep them in, I'm going to complain to the bishop."

Joseph walked to the gate between their properties a few yards away and opened it. "Do what you must. Chester,
koom"

The billy goat snatched a mouthful of pumpkin leaves and trotted toward the gate. He walked placidly through the opening, but Anne saw the gleam in his beady black eyes when he looked over his shoulder at her. He would be back. Well, she wouldn't be so kind to him next time. It wouldn't be a kitchen towel. She'd find a stout stick.

Joseph closed and latched the gate. "I will pay for the tomatoes. Just throw the ruined ones over the fence."

She brushed off her stained maroon dress and glared at him. "I'm not going to reward that mangy animal with my fresh tomatoes, even if they are ruined. He'll only come back wanting more."

"Suit yourself. If I can't have them, I won't pay for them."

"Are you serious?" Her mouth dropped open in shock. She took a step toward him and planted her bare foot in another tomato. The pulp oozed between her toes.

"You sat on them. Chester didn't." Joseph turned to walk away.

Furious, Anne plucked the closest whole tomato and threw it with all her might. It hit Joseph squarely between the shoulder blades, splattering in a bright red blob where his suspenders crossed his white shirt.

Horrified, she pressed her hands to her mouth. She had actually hit the man.

Joseph flexed his shoulders. Bits of broken tomato dropped to the ground. Chester jumped on the treats and gobbled them up. Joseph turned to glare at Anne.

She didn't wait to hear what he had to say. She fled to the house as fast as her shaky legs could carry her. She dashed past Roxann and stopped in the center of her kitchen with her hands pressed to her cheeks.

"What a great throw." Roxann came in, still chuckling. "Did you see the look on his face?"

"In all the years I played baseball as a
kinner, no one wanted me on their team. I couldn't hit the broad side of the barn when I threw a ball. But today I struck my neighbor."

"You didn't hurt him with a tomato."

"You don't understand." How could she? Roxann was
Englisch. She didn't have to live by the strict rules of Anne's Amish faith.

Roxann stopped giggling. "Will you get into trouble for it? I know the Amish practice nonviolence, but you weren't trying to hurt him."

"I struck him in anger. That is not permitted.
Ever. If Joseph goes to the bishop or to the church elders, it will be cause for a scandal. I'm so ashamed."

Roxann slipped her arm over Anne's shoulder. "I'm sure Mr. Lapp will forgive you. You are only human. Put it out of your mind and let's finish these reports. You and the other Amish midwives are doing a wonderful job. Your statistics will help me show the administration at my hospital that our outreach education program is paying off. Our funding is running out soon. If we're going to continue educating midwives and the public, we have to prove the benefits outweigh the cost."

Roxann, a nurse-midwife and educator, was determined to improve relations between the medical community and the Amish midwives, who were considered by some doctors to be unskilled and untrained. It was far from the truth.

Anne allowed her mentor and friend to lead her back to the table and resume the review of Anne's cases for the year. Glancing out the kitchen window, Anne looked for Joseph, but he wasn't in sight. She nibbled on her bottom lip. Was he going to make trouble for her?

A full harvest moon, a bright orange ball the color of Anne's pumpkins, was creeping over the hills to the east. The sight made Joseph smile as he closed the barn door after finishing his evening milking. It had been two days since the tomato incident, but he still found himself chuckling at the look on Anne's face when she'd realized what she'd done. From shock to horror to mortification, her expressive features had displayed it all. She might be an annoying little woman, but she did provide him with some entertainment. Especially where his goats were concerned. Her plump cheeks would flush bright red and her green-gray eyes would flash with green fire when she chased his animals. She was no match against their nimbleness, but that didn't keep her from trying.

Goats enjoyed getting out of their pens. Some of them were masters of the skill. Was it his fault that the best forage around was in her garden plot?

It wasn't his intention to make life harder for the woman. He planned to mend his fence, but there simply weren't enough hours in the day. Now that the harvest was done, his corn cribs were full and his hay was safe in the barn, he would find time to make the needed repairs. Tomorrow for sure.

He was halfway to the house when the lights of a car swung off the road and into his lane. He stopped in midstride. Who could that be? He wasn't expecting anyone. Certainly not one of the
Englisch.

Most likely, it was someone who had taken a wrong turn on the winding rural Pennsylvania road looking for his neighbor's place. It happened often enough to be irritating. His farm was remote and few cars traveled this way until Anne Stoltzfus had opened her produce stand. Now, with her large hand-painted sign out by the main highway and an arrow pointing this direction, he sometimes saw a line of cars on the road heading to buy her fresh-picked corn, squash and now pumpkins. Since the beginning of October, it seemed every
Englisch in the countssy wanted to buy pumpkins from her. He would be glad when she closed for the winter.

He didn't resent that Anne earned a living working the soil in addition to being a midwife. He respected her for that. He just didn't like people. Some folks called him a recluse. It didn't matter what they called him as long as they left him alone. He cherished the peace and quiet of his small farm with only his animals for company, but that peace was broken now by the crunching of car tires rolling over his gravel drive. From the barn behind him, he heard several of his goats bleating in curiosity.

Whoever these people were, they should know better than to come shopping at an Amish farm after dark. Anne's stand would be closed until morning. The car rolled to a stop a few feet from him. He raised his hand to block the glare of the headlights. He heard the car door open, but he couldn't see anything. "Hello,
brooder!'

His heart soared with joy at the sound of that familiar and beloved voice. "Fannie?"
"Ja."

His little sister had come home at last. He had prayed for this day for three long years. Prayed every night before he laid his tired body down. She was never far from his thoughts. Still blinded by the lights, he took a step forward. He wanted to hug her, to make sure she was real and not some dream. "I can't believe it's you.
Gott be praised."

"It's me, right enough, Joe. Johnny, turn off the lights."

Something in the tone of her voice made Joseph stop. Johnny, whoever he was, did as she asked. Joseph blinked in the sudden darkness. He wanted so badly to hear her say she was home for good. "I knew you would come back. I knew when your
rumspringa ended, you would give up the Englisch life and return. Your heart is Amish. You don't belong in the outside world. You belong here."

"I haven't come back to stay, Joe." The regret in her voice cut his joy to shreds. He heard a baby start to cry.

After few seconds, his eyes adjusted and he could make out Fannie standing beside the open door of the vehicle. The light from inside the car didn't reveal his Amish sister. Instead, he saw an
Englisch girl with short spiky hair, wearing a tight T-shirt and a short denim skirt. He might have passed her on the street without recognizing her, so different did she look. No Amish woman would be seen in such immodest clothes. It was then he realized she held a baby in her arms.

What was going on?

He had raised Fannie alone after their parents and his fiancée were killed in a buggy and pickup crash. He'd taken care of her from the time she was six years old until she disappeared a week after she turned sixteen, leaving only a note to say she wanted an
Englisch life. For months afterward, he'd waited for her to return and wondered what he had done wrong. How had he failed her so badly? It had to be his fault.

It was hard to speak for the tightness that formed in his throat. "If you aren't staying, then why are you here?"

The driver, a young man with black hair and a shiny ring in the side of his nose, leaned toward the open passenger-side door. "Come on, Fannie, we don't have all night. Get this over with."

"Shut up, Johnny. You aren't helping." She took a few steps closer to Joseph. "I need your help,
brooder. There's no one else I can turn to."

Were those tears on her face? "What help can I give you? I don't have money."

"I don't want your money. I… T want you to meet someone. This is my daughter. Your niece. Her name is Leah. I named her after our mother."

"You have a
bubbel?" Joseph reeled in shock. He still thought of his sister as a little girl skipping off to school or playing on their backyard swing, not someone old enough to be a mother. He gestured toward the car with a jerk of his head. "Is this man your husband?"

"We're not married yet, but we will be soon," she said in a rush.

"Soon?" Had she come to invite him to the wedding?

"Ja. As soon as Johnny gets this great job he has waiting for him in New York. He's a musician and I'm a singer. He has an audition with a big-time group. It could be our lucky break. Just what I need to get my career going."

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00VQF158E
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Love Inspired; Original edition (November 1, 2015)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 1, 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1229 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 245 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 323 ratings

About the author

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Patricia Davids
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USA Today Bestselling author Patricia Davids grew up on a Kansas farm with four brothers. After college she began a wonderful career as a nurse. In 1973 Pat wrote a letter to a lonely sailor. Little did she know her talent with words would bring her love, marriage and motherhood.

An avid reader, Pat longed to write a book, but put her dream on hold as she raised a family and worked in an NICU. It wasn't until 1996 that she began writing seriously. Today, Pat enjoys crafting emotionally satisfying romances where love and faith bring two people together forever.

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
323 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2017
Anne and Joseph are neighbors. He raises goats. Goats that break through his fences and get into her garden. One day after his prize goat gets into her garden and she tells him to fix the fence or he might be missing his goat, he laughs and starts walking away. She picks this time to throw a tomato and actually hits him with it. She was happy, but appalled that she had done that in anger.

That night Joseph's sister comes by and says she is going g into the hospital for a couple days and has no one else to leave her baby with. Then takes off. The baby keeps him up all night crying, throwing up. He finally takes her to Anne's and ask a for help. The baby, Leah, actually works as a conduit to bring these two to a friendship and as time goes by something more.

I loved this story. A little intense in a couple spots, but definitely worth reading.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2016
What a fun story! I had to smile about the relationship at the beginning of this story. It so much reminds me of the way many of my daughter's friendships and jobs began . . . with lots of sparks and not the pretty kind. Those have always been the ones she's cherished the most as years have gone by. As a teacher that's the way it's pretty much been for me, too. The little munchkins who were full of vinegar and a handful all year long are the ones I remember with affection and who come back to see me. Maybe it's because we have to invest so much emotional energy in a difficult relationship or job. That's the way it was for Anne and Joseph. Their relationship is tender, grouchy, laugh-out-loud funny and worth the time you'll invest in reading it. And Ms. Atwood very naturally gives God credit for the happy ending these lovable characters reach.
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2015
The Amish Quilt, Amish Christmas Joy, The Shepherd's Bride and Amish Redemption will probably always remain my favourite Amish books, but I really enjoyed all of Patricia Davids' books. Joseph is a recluse who lost his parents and fianceé in a buggy accident 13 years earlier (he was driving). He then had to take care of his young sister who also survived the accident. When she left the Amish, he blamed himself. Anne also experienced heartache when she was only 17 yrs old. She became a midwife and dedicated her life to helping other women bring babies into the world. When J's sister left her baby daughter with him, he asked Anne for help. I loved how their relationship developed from animosity to friendship and more. This is a beautiful story and I definitely recommend it.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2015
I truly enjoyed the story of Anne and Joseph. Joseph and his goats. Joseph came across to everyone as gruff, but when any of his neighbors were in need he was right there. It is amazing who God will use to get people to come together in this book he used a baby to show the Hero and Heroine that they needed each other.
Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2015
I loved this book. I could not stop reading this book. The message in this story is so simple to understand, about forgiveness and caring for one another. I loved the two main characters, their belief in God, bringing them together as one. God always makes everything right.
Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2016
Loves a wonderful story .Patricia Davids writes wonderful
books .I think I have read all of her amish books.Please
Keep on writing those amish books. A faithful amish reader.
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2016
It let's your mind go back to live in that era. It was a sweet, relaxing, interesting read. Loved it
Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2016
Loved the story, Patricia Davids is sucha good writer!!

Top reviews from other countries

Crystal T.
5.0 out of 5 stars Not sure
Reviewed in Canada on March 5, 2021
On reading list
lesley fensom
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 31, 2015
good
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