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Bayou Covenant (The Covenant Series: Book 1)
True shepherds lay down their lives. False ones build fences.
Missionary nurse Claire Marchand came to the Louisiana bayou to disappear. Eighteen months after her fiancé’s death in a West Africa clinic, she’s been running — from grief, from the deployments she can’t face, from the version of herself that existed before loss. Covenant Reach sounds like exactly what she needs: a secluded Christian community deep in the backwater, six weeks of basic medical care, nothing complicated.
She arrives at dawn. The compound is beautiful — white-painted buildings, a chapel spire, a vegetable garden in careful rows. Elder Silas Broussard receives her with warm authority. The community brings her food and asks polite questions and seems genuinely glad she’s come.
And then the small things begin to accumulate.Women whose bodies hold themselves wrong. Faces performing the right emotion a beat too late. A teenage girl who mouths two words across the dining hall — help me — and then looks away. A note slipped under Claire’s cottage door: They took my baby. They’ll take yours too if you stay.
The woman Claire is called to treat hasn’t fallen. The compound’s one telephone is monitored. And the new community member who arrived days before she did — Elder Silas’s quiet, watchful nephew — is not a returning believer.
Wade Broussard is DEA undercover, embedded to break a drug trafficking network running supply boats beneath the compound’s missionary cover. He did not account for a real missionary nurse. He didn’t expect to feel responsible for her. And he certainly didn’t expect, when his extraction window finally opens, to realize he doesn’t want to leave without her.
As Claire maps the full scope of what’s happening beneath Covenant Reach’s surface — systematic abuse, women held captive by weaponized faith, children used as leverage — she and Wade have forty-eight hours to get a compound full of people to safety before his cover falls and the exits close for good.
Bayou Covenant is a novel about grief that becomes purpose, faith tested in the darkest rooms, and two people who find each other on the other side of what they thought they couldn’t survive. It is also a story about the difference between a shepherd who loves you and a fence with scripture on it.
Perfect for readers of Lynette Eason, Colleen Coble, and Dani Pettrey who love Christian romantic suspense with a propulsive plot, layered characters, and a faith thread that earns its resolution.
==Standalone story with a satisfying conclusion
==Book One of the Covenant Series
==Clean romantic suspense — no explicit content
==Faith-forward with nuanced, non-preachy spiritual themes
True shepherds lay down their lives. False ones build fences.
Missionary nurse Claire Marchand came to the Louisiana bayou to disappear. Eighteen months after her fiancé’s death in a West Africa clinic, she’s been running — from grief, from the deployments she can’t face, from the version of herself that existed before loss. Covenant Reach sounds like exactly what she needs: a secluded Christian community deep in the backwater, six weeks of basic medical care, nothing complicated.
She arrives at dawn. The compound is beautiful — white-painted buildings, a chapel spire, a vegetable garden in careful rows. Elder Silas Broussard receives her with warm authority. The community brings her food and asks polite questions and seems genuinely glad she’s come.
And then the small things begin to accumulate.Women whose bodies hold themselves wrong. Faces performing the right emotion a beat too late. A teenage girl who mouths two words across the dining hall — help me — and then looks away. A note slipped under Claire’s cottage door: They took my baby. They’ll take yours too if you stay.
The woman Claire is called to treat hasn’t fallen. The compound’s one telephone is monitored. And the new community member who arrived days before she did — Elder Silas’s quiet, watchful nephew — is not a returning believer.
Wade Broussard is DEA undercover, embedded to break a drug trafficking network running supply boats beneath the compound’s missionary cover. He did not account for a real missionary nurse. He didn’t expect to feel responsible for her. And he certainly didn’t expect, when his extraction window finally opens, to realize he doesn’t want to leave without her.
As Claire maps the full scope of what’s happening beneath Covenant Reach’s surface — systematic abuse, women held captive by weaponized faith, children used as leverage — she and Wade have forty-eight hours to get a compound full of people to safety before his cover falls and the exits close for good.
Bayou Covenant is a novel about grief that becomes purpose, faith tested in the darkest rooms, and two people who find each other on the other side of what they thought they couldn’t survive. It is also a story about the difference between a shepherd who loves you and a fence with scripture on it.
Perfect for readers of Lynette Eason, Colleen Coble, and Dani Pettrey who love Christian romantic suspense with a propulsive plot, layered characters, and a faith thread that earns its resolution.
==Standalone story with a satisfying conclusion
==Book One of the Covenant Series
==Clean romantic suspense — no explicit content
==Faith-forward with nuanced, non-preachy spiritual themes

