- Tourist Lady: [Book is in town with Eli. Eli and the other Amish are trying to avoid the tourists with cameras] Hi! We're just here for the day, would you mind...
- John Book: Lady, you take my picture with that thing and I'm gonna rip your brassiere off... and strangle you with it! You got that?
- Tourist Lady: [in disbelief, to no one in particular] Did you hear what that Amish just said to me?
- John Book: Samuel, the man who was killed tonight was a policeman, and it's my job to find out what happened. I want you to tell me everything you saw when you went into the bathroom.
- Samuel Lapp: Um... there were two.
- John Book: There were TWO men?
- Samuel Lapp: I only saw one.
- John Book: [turning to Carter] Does anybody else know about this?
- Det. Sgt. Elden Carter: No, no one's had a chance to talk to him.
- John Book: What did he look like, the man that you saw?
- Samuel Lapp: He was... like him.
- [pointing at Carter]
- John Book: He was a black man, had black skin?
- Samuel Lapp: Ya, but not schtumpig.
- John Book: Schtulpig? What's 'schtumpig'?
- Rachel Lapp: On a farm, when a pig is born small like that, it's called schtumpig, a runt.
- John Book: Oh, so he wasn't a runt. He was a big guy, like me?
- [John puts his arm around an embarrassed Carter]
- Samuel Lapp: Big guy!
- Rachel Lapp: He's leaving, isn't he?
- Eli Lapp: Tomorrow morning. He'll need his city clothes.
- Rachel Lapp: But why? What does he have to go back to?
- Eli Lapp: He's going back to his world, where he belongs. He knows it, and you know it, too.
- [Book, having just dropped off Rachel and Samuel back at Lapp's farm, is driving away when he convulses and passes out from loss of blood from an untreated gunshot wound and crashes into a birdhouse. Rachel and Samuel run out to Book]
- Rachel Lapp: My God! Why didn't you get to a hospital?
- John Book: [struggling] No, no hospital. Gunshot wound, they have to file a report. And if they file a report, they find me. And if they find me, they find the boy.
- Rachel Lapp: I should tell you this kind of coat doesn't have buttons. See? Hooks and eyes.
- John Book: Something wrong with buttons?
- Rachel Lapp: Buttons are proud and vain, not plain.
- John Book: Got anything against zippers?
- Rachel Lapp: Are you making fun of me?
- John Book: No.
- Rachel Lapp: Like the tourists, staring all the time. Sometimes they come into the yard, it's very rude. They seem to think we're quaint.
- John Book: Can't imagine why they'd think that.
- Rachel Lapp: Are you enjoying your reading?
- John Book: Oh yeah. I'm learning a lot about manure. Very interesting.
- Rachel Lapp: [as she and Samuel are walking through the police station with Book] When can we leave the city?
- John Book: We're trying to get this done as quickly as possible, then you can go. But, Samuel's probably gonna have to come back to testify. I'm sorry.
- Rachel Lapp: No, you are not, you are glad.
- John Book: Huh?
- Rachel Lapp: Because now you have a witness.
- John Book: Yeah, now I got a witness.
- Rachel Lapp: I just don't like the idea of my son spending all this time with a man who carries a gun and goes around whacking people!
- John Book: [in disbelief] Whacking?... whacking?
- Townsman: [Book, dressed in Amish clothes, has just finished severely beating a local youth who was harassing Daniel Hochleitner] Never seen anything like it in all my years!
- Daniel Hochleitner: He's from Ohio, my cousin.
- Townsman: Well, them Ohio Amish must be... different. Around here, the brethren don't have any of that kinda fight in 'em! Good day to you, Mr. Lapp! This ain't good for the tourist trade, you know! Tell that to your Ohioan friend!
- Eli Lapp: [John is out of bed and in the barn trying to re-start his car] Book... that you, Book?
- John Book: [comes out of car] Yeah.
- Eli Lapp: What you doing there?
- John Book: Trying to get the car started.
- Eli Lapp: You are well enough to do that, you can do work for me.
- John Book: Sure... what can I do?
- Eli Lapp: Milking, maybe... you know, cows.
- John Book: Yeah, I've seen pictures.
- Eli Lapp: Good. We start tomorrow.
- John Book: What happened to Hochleitner?
- Rachel Lapp: He went home. He's a friend of the family... he's like a son to Eli.
- [Notices John planing a board]
- Rachel Lapp: You know carpentry. Can you do anything else?
- John Book: Whacking. I'm hell at whacking.
- Rachel Lapp: Whacking is not much use on a farm.
- Rachel Lapp: We're all very happy that you're going to live, John Book. We didn't know what we would do with you if you'd died.
- John Book: [John has returned from town, Rachel is labeling freshly canned peaches, John returns his gun and bullets] Here. Don't put 'em in the peaches.
- Eli Lapp: This gun of the hand is for the taking of human life. We believe it is wrong to take a life. That is only for God. Many times wars have come and people have said to us: you must fight, you must kill, it is the only way to preserve the good. But Samuel, there's never only one way. Remember that. Would you kill another man?
- Samuel Lapp: I would only kill the bad man.
- Eli Lapp: Only the bad man. I see. And you know these bad men by sight? You are able to look into their hearts and see this badness?
- Samuel Lapp: I can see what they do. I have seen it.
- Eli Lapp: And having seen you become one of them? Don't you understand? What you take into your hands, you take into your heart. Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing. Go and finish your chores now.
- Samuel Lapp: Yes Grossvater.
- Rachel Lapp: Your sister says you don't have a family.
- John Book: No, I don't.
- Rachel Lapp: She thinks that you ought to get married and have children of your own, instead of trying to be a father to hers.
- John Book: Yeah.
- Rachel Lapp: Except she thinks you are afraid of the responsibility.
- John Book: That's interesting... anything else?
- Rachel Lapp: Mm hm... she thinks you like policing because you think you are right about everything and you're the only one who can do anything, and when you drink a lot of beer you say things like 'none of the other police know a crook from a bag of elbows!'. At least I think that's what she said.
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: Calling me at home. I can't trace the call. That's smart, John, very smart.
- John Book: Lost the meaning, did you, Paul?
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: What?
- John Book: Isn't that what you used to say about dirty cops? Somewhere along the way they lost the meaning?
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: Now don't make this difficult, John. We know where you are. We're about to...
- John Book: Oh no, man, you got it wrong. I'm coming to get you!
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: [laughs] I like your style, John. I've always liked your style.
- John Book: I'm gonna do to you whatever you did to Zenovich. And whatever you did to Carter, I'm gonna fucking do that to you too, asshole.
- Rachel Lapp: [Book and Carter are driving around a rough neighborhood looking for a suspect that fits Samuel's description, with Rachel and Samuel in tow] Where are you taking us?
- John Book: I'm sorry... we're looking for a suspect in the area, we'd like the kid to take a look at him.
- Rachel Lapp: You have no right to keep us here.
- John Book: Oh, yes I do. Your son's a material witness to a homicide.
- Rachel Lapp: You don't understand. We want nothing to do with your laws.
- John Book: Doesn't surprise me. A lot of people I meet are like that.
- John Book: [after Samuel and Rachel converse in German] What'd he say?
- Rachel Lapp: He asked who you are, your name. I told him we didn't need to know anything about you.
- John Book: Book... John Book!
- Daniel Hochleitner: Your hole, it is better now?
- John Book: Yeah, it's pretty much healed.
- Daniel Hochleitner: Good. Then you can go home.
- Elaine: [Book has just dropped off Rachel and Samuel at Elaine's] How could you do this to me tonight?
- John Book: It's important!
- Elaine: [Elaine runs upstairs and gets Rachel and Samuel settled, then runs down to chastise John] I told you I had company!
- John Book: Where's Jason and Billy?
- Elaine: Upstairs asleep.
- John Book: You got a man in the house and the kids are upstairs?
- Elaine: That's none of your business! So, keep you holier-than-thou mouth shut! Anyway, they like Fred!
- John Book: Oh, now we've got Fred!
- Elaine: Who are these vagrants, anyway?
- John Book: They're Amish!
- [Daniel Hochleitner comforts Rachel after her husband's death, then walks by as some funeral guests are chatting]
- Amish: Jacob was a good farmer.
- Amish: Not a man to buy a horse from. Hochleitner, wasn't it he who sold you the one with the ruptured testicle?
- Moses Hochleitner: Said it was a bee sting that made him walk that way!
- Daniel Hochleitner: That horse had one good ball. That's all it takes!
- [Men laugh]
- [Samuel opens the drawer to John's bedside table and finds his gun]
- John Book: DON'T MOVE!...
- [Samuel is startled, Book calms down]
- John Book: What are you doing?
- [sits on bed next to Samuel, says calmly]
- John Book: Come here, Samuel... this is a loaded gun. This is very dangerous. Never, ever touch a loaded gun. Here, I'm gonna take the bullets out. Now it's safe. I don't want you to get hurt. I don't mean to yell at you, I just don't want you to get hurt. If you want to handle it, you can handle it... while I'm here.
- Samuel Lapp: Okay, John Book.
- [Rachel enters the room, John takes the gun from Samuel. Rachel glares at both of them]
- Rachel Lapp: Samuel, wait for me downstairs.
- [Samuel leaves]
- Rachel Lapp: John Book, while you are in this house I insist you respect our ways!
- John Book: Right... here, put it somewhere where he won't find it.
- [John, Rachel, Eli, and Samuel are sitting down to a hearty breakfast after John's first morning of farm work. Eli dumps food on John's plate]
- John Book: No, no...
- Eli Lapp: Eat, Book, eat. What's the matter, where is your appetite?
- John Book: I'm not used to eating in the middle of the night.
- Eli Lapp: Not used to hard work. That's what makes appetite.
- John Book: [takes a sip of coffee] Honey, that's great coffee!
- John Book: [all pause, puzzled] Uh, it's a joke... from a commercial... on television.
- Mrs. Yoder: Everyone here has an idea about you and the Englishman Book.
- Rachel Lapp: [forcing a smile] All of them charitable, I'm sure.
- Mrs. Yoder: [straight-faced] Hardly any of them.
- Daniel Hochleitner: They say you are a carpenter.
- John Book: Yeah.
- Daniel Hochleitner: Well,we can always use a good one.
- John Book: [John appears in Amish clothes before going to town with Eli, Rachel laughs, John approaches Rachel] My gun, I need my gun.
- [Rachel gets the gun out of the cupboard, John turns to leave]
- John Book: The bullets? Not much good without 'em.
- Rachel Lapp: Of course.
- [Rachel takes an almost empty can of flour and pours the bullets and remaining flour into John's hand]
- John Book: Thanks.
- [John blows the flour off his hand]
- John Book: How do I look, I mean, do I look... Amish?
- Rachel Lapp: You look plain.
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: Are you trying to tell me that there's no way we can locate this woman? We're talking about 20th century law enforcement, Sergeant.
- Sheriff: There's your problem, Chief. Your Amish man doesn't live... in the 20th century, doesn't think in the 20th century. Chief, if the Amish have taken your man in... I wouldn't want to hang from a rope until you find him. The problem is, about every third Amish man around here is named Lapp. And we've got upwards of 14,000 Amish men around here. That's just Lancaster County. Over in...
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: Very interesting, Sergeant... but this is a very important matter. It involves the murder of a police officer. Now, there must be a directory of some sort of these people somewhere.
- Sheriff: Sure. Tax rolls, voter registration, but tell you right now... I don't have the manpower to send a deputy to every Lapp farm... in Lancaster County to see if they've got your Rachel.
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: Maybe, Sergeant, you could do a little telephoning?
- Sheriff: Yeah, maybe I could. But since the Amish don't have any telephones, I wouldn't know who to call.
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: Thank you, Sergeant. It's been an education.
- Eli Lapp: You know there has been talk. Talk about going to the Bishop and having you shunned.
- Rachel Lapp: That is idle talk.
- Eli Lapp: Do not take it lightly. Rachel. They can do it. They can do it just like that. You know what it means, shunning? I cannot sit at table with you. I cannot take a thing from your hand. I cannot go to worship with you. Child... do not go so far.
- Rachel Lapp: I am not a child.
- Eli Lapp: But you are acting like one.
- Rachel Lapp: I'll be the judge of that.
- Eli Lapp: No. They will be the judge of that, and so will I. If you shame me...
- Rachel Lapp: You shame yourself.
- John Book: [as Rachel holds up Amish menswear] What's that?
- Rachel Lapp: Your clothes are stained with blood. I have them soaking. You can wear these.
- John Book: They your husband's?
- Rachel Lapp: Yes. It's good that someone can have the use of them. Besides, in your clothes you'd stand out to strangers. Oh, I should tell you that this kind of coat doesn't have buttons. See? Hooks and eyes.
- John Book: Something wrong with buttons?
- Rachel Lapp: Buttons are hochmut. Proud and vain. It's not plain.
- John Book: Got anything against zippers?
- Rachel Lapp: [as Book planes a piece of wood] Can you do anything else?
- John Book: Whacking. I'm hell at whacking.
- Rachel Lapp: Whacking's not much use on the farm. Tomorrow I'll let out those trousers for you.
- John Book: Good.
- Chief Paul Schaeffer: I know he's with the Amish. God, I'd give anything to see him now. Can you see John at a prayer meeting?
- Rachel Lapp: I've committed no sin.
- Eli Lapp: Maybe. Maybe not yet, but, Rachel, it does not look. You know there has been talk, talk about going to the bishop and having you shunned.
- Rachel Lapp: It is idle talk.
- Eli Lapp: Do not take it lightly. Rachel! They can do it. They can do it just like that. You know what it means? Shunning? I cannot sit at table with you. I cannot take a thing from your hand. I cannot go to worship with you. Oh, child, do not go so far.
- Rachel Lapp: I'm not a child.
- Eli Lapp: But you're acting like one.
- Rachel Lapp: I'll be the judge of that.
- Eli Lapp: No! They will be the judge of that, and so will I, if you shame me.