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  Praise for

  Yesterday’s Promise

  “Prepare for adventure, romance, and intrigue in nineteenth-century South Africa. Linda Lee Chaikin has done her homework, exploring the world of diamonds and goldmines in the land that would become Victorian Rhodesia. A page-turner of a story told by a veteran novelist.”

  —LIZ CURTIS HIGGS, best-selling author of Thorn in My Heart

  “Linda Lee Chaikin never fails to deliver a dynamite story! In Yesterday’s Promise she weaves the complications of love and history into a storyline that is a sheer joy to read. I can’t wait for book 3 of the East of the Sun series!”

  —DIANE NOBLE, award-winning author of Phoebe

  “I love, love, love this series by Linda Lee Chaikin! It has everything I’m looking for right now in a good read—memorable characters, intrigue, believable romance, fascinating history. If the third in the series was out, I wouldn’t be writing this… I’d be squirreled away, reading!”

  —LISA TAWN BERGREN, best-selling author

  of Christmas Every Morning

  Praise for

  Tomorrow’s Treasure

  Book 1 in the East of the Sun Series

  by Linda Lee Chaikin

  “Tomorrow’s Treasure invites the reader to look closely at God’s fatherly care for his orphans and widows, particularly those whose families were martyred on the mission field. An engaging historical novel!”

  —C. HOPE FLINCHBAUGH, author of Daughter of China

  “Absorbing human drama, intriguing mystery, heart-pounding love interests, a dramatic setting—this novel has it all, including a good message expertly woven into the greater story. I can’t wait for book 2!”

  —LISA TAWN BERGREN, best-selling author

  of The Captain’s Bride

  “Adventure. Intrigue. Romance. Settle back for an enjoyable read. Tomorrow’s Treasure is as old-world as the setting yet as contemporary as the human heart.”

  —KATHY HERMAN, best-selling author of The Baxter Series

  “Linda Chaikin has created a wonderful page-turner with this engaging historical novel. Her sense of time and place is exquisite, her characters so real they seem ready to step right off the page. This is a story rich with conflict, triumph over adversity, and wondrous testimony to God’s grace. Your heart will sing as you read.”

  —DIANE NOBLE, award-winning author of Heart of Glass

  OTHER NOVELS BY LINDA LEE CHAIKIN

  EAST OF THE SUN SERIES

  Tomorrow’s Treasure

  A DAY TO REMEMBER SERIES

  Monday’s Child

  Tuesday’s Child

  Wednesday’s Child

  Thursday’s Child

  Friday’s Child

  Desert Rose

  Desert Star

  To Pegg Hill, a friend, a lover of the peoples of South Africa, and a faithful missionary of our Lord.

  For God is not unjust to forget your work and labor of love which you have shown toward His name, in that you have ministered to the saints, and do minister.

  HEBREWS 6:10

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Peggy and David Hill served as missionaries in South Africa from 1974 until 1990. Peggy was exceedingly helpful by sharing an understanding of her birthplace and the tribes. She sent me rare books and articles as well as conveyed many of her own exciting experiences with wildlife—which I was able to incorporate. Thank you, Peggy.

  Peggy’s parents, Eldon and Florence Sayre served as pioneer missionaries in Rhodesia from 1945 until September 1977, when they were forced to leave due to the unstable conditions at that time.

  Contents

  Cover

  Other Books by this Author

  Title Page

  Acknowledgments

  Map

  Part One

  Chapter One

  Part Two

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Author’s Historical Note

  About the Author

  Copyright

  CHAPTER ONE

  Grimston Way, England

  31 October 1898

  On the perimeter of the village green, a thick stand of ancient trees with half-clad branches trembled in the rising wind. Dark clouds obscured the cheerful face of the sun, and like a harbinger of events to come, a thunderhead cloaked the afternoon sky.

  The first smattering of rain dribbled down branches to a crisp carpet of burnt-orange leaves. Though the countryside seemed draped with a fall gloominess, laughter still danced on the wind from children who joined hands and skipped in a large circle while singing “London Bridge Is Falling Down” and giggling as they dropped to the damp grass.

  A tall white cross graced the village green near the twelfth-century rectory of St. Graves Parish. Below the cross some of the village girls were adding last-minute touches to the outdoor fall decorations. Chains of red pomegranates, yellow gourds, and dried cornhusks, plus bundles of tied grasses and bunched leaves gave a warm touch of color to the festive gathering. This was October 31, Allhallows Eve, the yearly celebration recalling brave Christian heroes and heroines of the past who had faithfully labored for Christ. The outdoor activities in Grimston Way would end at eventide with the lighting of candles, a chapel service, and a friendly supper inside the parish hall.

  Evy Varley, who had grown up as the niece of the now deceased Vicar Edmund Havering and his wife, Grace, emerged from the ancient gnarled oak trees, where she had been gathering dried lacy moss hanging from ghostly branches. She was quite accustomed to the church holidays, spring fetes, and summer bake sales, for she’d been reared to become a vicar’s wife, but Providence, so it seemed to her, had intervened, and she’d been blessed to study music. She had recently graduated from Parkridge Music Academy in London and, by means of a loan from Rogan Chantry, had opened a small music school here in her home village.

  As she paused to take in the view of the village green, however, she now felt strangely alienated, as though she were an outsider looking through a window at a nostalgic scene. Had she been affected by the sudden gloominess? Perhaps it was the odd restive spirit she had sensed for the past few days that seemed hidden in the shadow of her subconscious.

  The sensation intensified to the point that Evy turned away from the singing children and looked toward the fast darkening Grimston Woods. She suddenly remembered an incident in her girlhood—the day when a stranger had stood watching her from these very trees. The man had appeared kindly back then, even sad when he spoke to her, but she now experienced less benign emotions as the dark memory clouded her mind. There was nothing she could describe as out of the ordinary, yet she remained conscious of an inexplicable unease.

  She turned away and quickened her steps back toward the village green, seeking the children’s laughter and their innocent faces as they prepared for the evening’s
festivities. Perhaps her wary mood was due to the season. September had been unseasonably warm and cheery, but the inevitable cold October weather had finally arrived.

  Ahead, Evy heard grave voices coming from behind some old hemlock bushes. She recognized the voices of the twin Hooper sisters, Mary and Beth, who were students in her piano class. The two schoolgirls emerged from the bushes carrying wicker baskets filled with dried lavender and lemon grass, and their pretty blue calico skirts flared in the chilling breeze that sent leaves scattering about their feet.

  They both wore spectacles and had corn-colored hair that was braided and looped. The only noticeable difference between them was that Mary wore a red-and-white polka-dot ribbon.

  With them was Wally, son of the village carpenter, a tall boy with long arms and big hands, which he had shoved into his too-short, faded breeches. He was listening to the girls with his head bent, his longish brown hair ruffling beneath a floppy hat.

  The three huddled together like guilty accomplices, with Mary’s solemn voice taking the lead, as usual. She seemed to be trying to convince Wally of something.

  “…it’s got to do with murder.”

  Evy’s fingers tightened around her basket as a chill breeze reached the back of her neck.

  “Murder runs in family blood, you know,” Mary stated matter-of-factly. “Science says so.”

  “Poppycock,” Wally scoffed.

  “Science is never wrong.” Beth nodded in grave agreement, adjusting the spectacles on her snub nose. “And Mary is always right.”

  “We both are,” Mary agreed with a polite nod to her twin.

  Evy remained still so the brittle leaves beneath her shoes would not announce her presence and embarrass them.

  “Science ain’t always godlike, and murder don’t run in the blood, ’cept if you’re talking about sin. And sin be in the human nature of us all. Even the dowager, old lady Elosia Chantry. A more stuffy aristocrat you never seen than her.”

  “That’s what I mean, Wally. Lady Elosia’s heard how Miss Varley was born out of wedlock.”

  “You be meaning the wrong side of the blanket?”

  “That is quite what Mary means.” Beth nodded knowingly.

  “Lady Elosia wants Master Rogan to marry a lord’s daughter, Lady Patricia Bancroft. That’s why Lady Patricia’s sailing to Capetown in the spring to marry Rogan. And there’s plenty the Chantrys wish to hush up about their family history. Henry Chantry was Miss Varley’s father. He brought her back from Capetown and gave her away to Vicar Havering.”

  “So then, Miss Varley is Miss Chantry.”

  “No, Wally!”

  “You just said Master Henry was her father.”

  “He and her mum weren’t married.”

  “So? He’d still be her father, you silly goose.” Wally’s voice became wearied.

  “Well, that may be, but the vicar and his wife took Evy in out of kindness.”

  “Everyone knows that. They had Christian hearts.”

  “But…Henry Chantry died before his time!”

  “Uds lud!” Wally said. “Everybody in Grimston Way has heard that old tale. He done kilt himself in his study on the third floor at Rookswood. Room’s haunted.”

  “He was murdered,” Mary repeated. “And Miss Varley’s mum from Capetown is the murderess. Vengeance was the motive, because he betrayed her.”

  “How could she have done it if she was dead already?” Wally mocked.

  “Her ghost came and did the dark deed.”

  The twins nodded sagely at each other and then at Wally.

  “Even I know that’s impossible,” Wally scoffed. “Uds! Look, Twins, it’s your mum. She’s beckoning.”

  “If she learns we’ve been playing Scotland Yard again, she’ll take away our science books. Hurry, Beth.”

  They ran across the green toward the rectory. Wally turned and headed for the road, as though he knew the twins’ mum did not approve of them being close friends with the carpenter’s boy.

  An icy gust of wind took Evy’s breath away and sent the hem of her dark hooded cloak billowing around her ankles. She looked after them, a little amused by the absurdity of their reasoning, yet disturbed as well about Lady Patricia Bancroft.

  Was it true? Was she voyaging in the spring to Capetown to become Rogan’s bride?

  The dry leaves rattled through the overhead branches, while a withering blast of wind swept through her lonely heart, leaving desolation in its wake. Rain, like cold, wet fingers, spread across her face and neck. Drawing up her shoulders in a little shiver, she lifted the hood of her cloak over her thick, tawny hair.

  Any interest she’d had earlier in the candlelight supper at St. Graves parish hall was now extinguished. She must get away. She must think things through. Little else would solace her spirits except retreating to her beloved piano to play her favorite pieces. She could lose herself in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 21 in C, and her heart would stir with a desire to worship.

  Evy hurried toward the road, keeping close to the hickory trees so as not to be noticed. It was to her advantage that most of the folks had deserted the green in order to congregate in the warm parish hall. Questions beat like the wings of a trapped rook against her restless soul.

  Yes, secrets and suspicions abounded around the Chantry family. The theft of the famous Kimberly Black Diamond still remained unsolved after all these years. And then there was Henry’s mysterious death at Rookwood. The authorities had ruled it a suicide, but even Rogan believed his uncle had been murdered.

  The wind and cold rain drove against Evy as she slowly made her way up the dirt road that ascended to Rookswood Estate. She was soon soaked to the skin, her cloak billowing and whipping with each gust. The wind filled her ears as it rushed through the great trees that loomed overhead like sentinels guarding the only entrance that led to the ancestral home of the Chantrys.

  She neared her rented cottage, which stood well back from the road, tucked among the trees, with Rookswood Estate as her nearest neighbor. The bungalow’s isolation, however, did not trouble Evy. The cottage was perfect for her music classes, with room in the large parlor for her grand piano. In fact, the term cottage was rather misleading, since it contained six ample rooms and an attic.

  She looked again toward the tall trees of Grimston Woods, now encroaching on the side of the meandering road and growing darker by the minute. She could imagine Rogan Chantry emerging from those trees riding his fine black horse, just as he had on the day she first met him, back when he’d been a spoiled, arrogant boy, determined to lord his station in life over her. She could see him now as that youth, his glossy dark hair waving past his forehead, his flashing brown eyes and taunting smile that insisted she would be his one day whether she liked it or not.

  As Rogan grew up, however, he had matured and mellowed and had been much kinder to her. He had gone so far as to arrange a loan so she could complete her final year at the music academy. He had even given money through Vicar Osgood to start her own music school, enabling her to live independently.

  Will I ever see him again? she wondered. And if not, will it matter to him as much as it does to me?

  A creaking sound broke her reverie, and as Evy approached the cottage, she noticed the front wicket gate was open. The wind must have loosened the latch after she left for the rectory. The gate was swinging so hard that if it had a mind of its own, it should be quite dizzy. Her own feelings were being buffeted in much the same way. Wisdom argued with folly, and she knew wisdom should easily win, but when it came to her will, it was not so easy to yield her desires to the Lord. She must pray about that harder.

  Despite the rain, she paused by her gate. From here she could look straight up the dirt road to the forbidding Rookswood Estate. The towering stone gate, weathered by generations of time and decorated with leering faces of medieval gargoyles, was bolted shut against her, serving as a stern reminder that Rogan Chantry was not only gone from Rookswood but also from her life—perhaps foreve
r, if the Hooper twins were right.

  The rain continued to descend in torrents, bouncing off those hideous stone creatures of man’s twisted imagination. Hee, hee, they seemed to mock with bulging eyes as the rainwater came gushing from their open mouths and over their protruding tongues. My own imagination is perhaps as wild, she thought. Even as a girl, in the company of Rogan, she had not appreciated those gargoyles; nor did she now. She glared at them, then turned away and entered her yard, securing the gate latch against the tugging wind.

  The sturdy cottage, with its white walls and green shutters, withstood the storm as bravely as it had for generations, but she noticed an open shutter on the high window near the peaked roof. The dark pane stared back, looking opaque and silent as the rain slashed against it.

  She came up the walk past whipping vines that reached their tentacles toward her and shaking bushes now devoid of autumn’s golden flowers.

  Rogan… Her feelings, unlike the twins who seemed to agree on everything, argued between desire and anger, but when it came to Rogan Chantry, it seemed neither emotion won. Hadn’t it always been so—even when she was a girl? There were times when her frustration over his failure to write made her angry enough to throw things, but she had been brought up too well for such childish displays of unbridled anger. On more frequent occasions it was not anger, but a deep longing she felt, a keen desire for Rogan’s company. Denied this, she at times wilted under an intense sadness that often reached the level of pain. One day she loved him and remembered in detail his fiery kiss good-bye, then she loathed him the next when the post delivery continually passed her by.

  “No mail today, Miss Evy,” old Jeffords would call out when he came by in his pony-trap to deliver the post and saw her on the porch busily pretending to care for a potted flower. She was sure the news spread around Grimston Way how Miss Varley waited for an envelope postmarked from South Africa.