Books by Misty M. Beller
HEARTS OF MONTANA
Hope’s Highest Mountain
Love’s Mountain Quest
Faith’s Mountain Home
© 2020 by Misty M. Beller
Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan
www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
Ebook edition created 2020
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4934-2172-5
Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Cover design by Kirk DouPonce, DogEared Design
Author is represented by Books & Such Literary Agency.
To my line editor, Jen Veilleux.
Your detail, your ability to strengthen any story line, your kindness, and, above all, your patience have blessed me beyond measure. I’m so grateful to work with you!
For the LORD seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the LORD looketh on the heart.
1 Samuel 16:7b
Contents
Cover
Books by Misty M. Beller
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Epigraph
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
Epilogue
Sneak Peek of Misty M. Beller’s upcoming novel
About the Author
Back Ads
Back Cover
One
LATE SEPTEMBER 1867
SETTLER’S FORT, MONTANA TERRITORY
Just a little farther.
Laura Hannon dared another step on the rock ledge that wrapped around the mountain. The flat space was just wide enough for a person to walk, as long as she stayed close to the stone mountainside on her right. The sheer drop on her left stole her midsection every time she allowed herself to look over the edge, so she kept her focus on the path in front of her. Of course, it would be impossible not to occasionally lift her gaze to take in the magnificent view of the mountain cliffs surrounding her.
This was why she’d come out here, after all. To escape into the beauty of the landscape. To remember that her problems were but a tiny dot compared to the vastness of the mountains God created. And yet, He cared about each one and loved her enough to help her through anything she might face. She paused to soak in that thought as she inhaled a deep breath of the cool, invigorating air.
Then she stepped forward again. Her boot slipped, skidding toward the edge of the cliff. Bits of loose stone skittered out from under her foot, tumbling off into empty air. With a squeal she scrambled to the right, throwing her weight toward the rock wall, away from the edge. She landed hard on her right foot, sending a jolt of pain through the ankle that had always been weak, ever since she broke it as a young child.
As she struggled to settle her trembling and still her racing heartbeat, she repositioned her feet onto solid stone. The right ankle held, only a little pain still throbbing through the joint.
Barely daring to breathe, she eased upright, pulling away from the cliff wall just enough to stand straight.
She took a deep breath, then eased the air back out. She was fine. She’d not fallen, and if she was careful, she could explore a bit farther before turning back.
Turning her face so the brisk wind fanned the loose tendrils away from her cheeks, she soaked in the crisp autumn air. This freedom was what she needed. Out in the beauty of these mountains, she could sense God’s spirit. Feel the peace she couldn’t seem to grasp anywhere else.
Even in the cooling temperature of late afternoon, perspiration beaded on her face. But the natural views and physical exertion were exactly what she needed to clear her head. To restore some semblance of peace to her raw nerves. She’d thought hiding herself away as an assistant in the doctor’s clinic these last three months would soothe the lingering effects from the kidnapping.
At first, the peaceful atmosphere around the Bradleys’ home and clinic had provided some healing. But lately, the walls had seemed to close in on her. Especially since every day, she helped care for one of the men who’d taken part in her kidnapping. Aaron hadn’t been one of those scoundrels who’d hurt her. In fact, he’d actually tried to help her escape once during that awful ordeal, and he’d paid far worse for his part than she’d ever meant him to when she shot him. An accident that shattered his left thighbone and possibly rendered him unable to walk for the rest of his life.
She still battled the churning in her middle when she thought about the effect of that one single mishap. If she’d only taken a half second longer to focus her aim . . . if only Aaron hadn’t dived for Rex to stop him from shooting her. She might have hit the man she’d intended to shoot—the one who’d been aiming his gun at her.
“God, help me move forward somehow,” she whispered into the mountain air.
After another moment relishing the breeze, she turned back to the path she’d been following. She inched her way along the ledge, circling the cliff’s side as she stepped over crumbled leaves and mountain goat droppings. How wonderful to be one of the wild creatures who so easily perched on the side of this precipice, with a majestic view of treetops and distant peaks spread out as far as the eye could see.
Nothing but God’s creation. This was a view she could take in for the rest of her life, forgetting about the town hidden below—and the man whose presence served as a constant reminder of what she so desperately wanted to leave behind.
A bird twittered in the distance, pulling her from her reverie, drawing her focus back to the path. Pressing close to the cliff on her right, she took tiny steps around the curving stone. Now that she’d finally broken loose from her obligations for an afternoon, the urge to do something daring grew stronger and stronger inside her.
The mountain goat trail climbed upward, through the crevice between a boulder on her left and the sheer mountain face on her right. Down onto another ledge, she stepped around a jagged stone protruding onto the path.
A black hole appeared in the cliff face beside her, stopping her midstride. A cave? She’d seen a few caves on her journey west from Missouri, and something about their mystery beckoned to her every time. What people or animals had taken refuge within? Outlaws? Bears? Mountain lions?
The opening sat low, only as high as her waist. Maybe this was only a deep indentation in the rock, not a true cave. She lifted her satchel strap over her head and bent low to peer inside. Darkness met her view, so black sh
e couldn’t see anything within. She reached out, expecting to brush cold stone. Her fingers touched only empty air.
She stretched her arm farther in. Still nothing. Maybe this was a cave. The ones she’d seen before all had tall openings and shallow insides, so she could see all the way in without entering. This opening seemed more like it led to a deep, dark den.
She jerked her hand back as her pulse leapt faster. It was still too early for bears to hibernate, but a mountain lion or any other manner of beast could be inside. Maybe she should move on.
But . . . her curiosity warred within her. She could at least light a match and peek inside. She wouldn’t go far until she knew the place was empty.
Opening the possibles bag she tended to carry with her when she went out by herself, she fumbled past the pistol, the knife fastened in its sheath, and the leather-wrapped food. Finally, her fingers brushed the long, thin matchbox. Too bad she hadn’t packed a candle. She’d only brought the matches in case she needed to light a campfire. After the last time she’d ventured out for a walk and ended up kidnapped for a week, she’d never be caught unprepared again.
It took a few tries to strike a small flame, and she held the light forward into the dark hole. The tiny glow illuminated the thick black, flickering off the rock wall on both sides for only a short distance before the wall on the left seemed to fall away.
Still bent low, she grabbed her satchel and inched forward into the darkness, extending the match in front of her. The opening was even deeper than she’d expected, and she shuffled several steps inside.
As though the spark of her match sprang twice its size, the dim, flickering light finally grew around her, opening up a cavern that stole her breath.
This massive room contained a ceiling that rose to at least twice her height. She stood and took in the expanse around her. To her right, the rock stretched beside her in a solid wall. But to her left, the cavern extended twice the width of her bedchamber back at the doctor’s clinic. This entire place was probably the size of the cabin where she’d lived her first eighteen years.
Larger, even. She hadn’t yet seen the back wall.
Stepping forward, she peered into the murky depths that her tiny match tried to illuminate. The heat at her fingers grew intense, drawing her focus back to the matchstick. She’d have to either drop the stub or blow it out.
She sank to her haunches, then rested the burning stump on the stone floor and reached into her bag for the matchbox. The flame from the first had almost burned out before she finally found a second match to light.
The new flame blazed to life, and she quickly rose and stepped farther into the cavern. To examine everything, she’d need a candle—or better still, a lantern. But at least she could see how far this cavern went before she used up all her matches. Maybe later she could come back with a better light. Exploring this cave was exactly the adventure her spirit craved.
As she advanced farther, something skittered across the floor. She lowered the light just in time to see a mouse scuttle over the stone, only an arm’s length away. She barely held in her shriek, suppressing it quickly into a gasp. There was no telling what other animals might be in here. Too much sound could bring on an attack.
A scan with the light didn’t show any more creatures. Nothing alive anyway. Plenty of dead insects littered the stone floor, along with leaves and who knew what else. She pressed the satchel and matchbox to her chest as she worked to gather the remnants of her courage.
A little farther ahead, strange spiky rocks came into view, some hanging from the high ceiling with tips pointing downward, others rising up from the floor to point upward. In one place, the upper and lower spikes met in a narrow column, no thicker in the middle than her thumb.
With her next step, the floor dropped out from under her, and she barely caught herself as the stone sloped downhill. She held the match low to better see the ground. The descent steepened in only that one place, dropping about the height of a porch step.
She eased forward carefully, then reached in her case for another match. She’d only brought five with her, so she wouldn’t be able to stay much longer. But she still couldn’t see the end of the cavern. The flame ate away at the match quickly, and she scrambled to ready a new stick for lighting.
“Miss Hannon?”
She spun at the sound of a masculine voice behind her. At the same moment, the flame reached her fingers, singeing her skin with its fiery touch. She flung the match, dropping her satchel as she scrambled. Her feet tangled beneath her, and the box of matches slipped from her fingers. She struggled to keep her balance. The uneven stone caught her boot, but her body was already twisted in its effort to stay upright.
With a cry, she fell forward onto her knees, the stubborn boot of her right foot stuck in a dip in the uneven stone floor. Her hands caught her from falling even more, and she braced herself on hands and knees for a suspended heartbeat. She had to get up, had to know who stood at the entrance of the cave. A man who knew her name.
Her mind flashed back to the last time she’d been discovered. The fierce anger on Bill’s face when he spotted her trying to hide in the bushes. The rage in his eyes as he’d stalked forward. She’d been desperate to get away, grabbing little Samuel’s hand and clambering down the bank toward the stream. But her skirt had caught on a tree, slowing her down just enough for Bill’s meaty hand to grip her. The pain in his clutch radiated through her arm and up her shoulder. The ropes they’d tied her in had cut into her wrists, leaving scars that still ached with memory.
But it wasn’t her arm or wrists that hurt now. She blinked, fighting her best to return to the present.
Her knees. Her ankle. Had she injured anything else?
“Miss Hannon?”
She jerked her head up at the voice drawing nearer. Who had found her? And why?
“Are you injured?”
The voice sounded familiar but . . . it wasn’t Bill. Bill was gone. Dead. Hanged for shooting the sheriff. She struggled to orient herself to the present.
The silhouette of a man appeared in the cave opening. Recognition washed over her.
“Nate Long?” Her pounding heart didn’t know whether to speed up or slow down at his presence. Why was the brother of one of her patients following her into the mountains, a good half-hour’s hike from town?
Besides, this man wasn’t just the brother of a patient. He’d also been a member of Bill’s gang.
Only . . . Nate hadn’t been there when she and Samuel were kidnapped. He hadn’t been one of the men planning to hurt her. When he’d discovered the crime, he spoke out against Bill and Rex’s horrible plans—even tried to free her and then had been tied up right along with them.
Still, he’d ridden with those vile men for years and taken part in their lawless robberies.
Since the band had been captured and Nate freed to make restitution, he’d seemed like a changed man. In truth, she sometimes had trouble believing he could have committed the crimes he’d been accused of. He’d spent countless hours at his brother’s side, taking over her role as nurse when he could and doing his best to keep up Aaron’s flagging spirits.
But why was Nate here? Had he followed her? For what purpose?
The match she’d dropped flickered out, blanketing the cave in darkness, save for the light filtering in from the small opening. Pinned between a cavern and a criminal, her heart hammered enough to nearly force its way out of her chest.
“Are you hurt?” Nate had paused just inside the cave. He probably couldn’t see more than thick blackness inside, what with his eyes not yet adjusted from the light outside.
The question brought to life the ache in her legs, the pain in her right ankle. Pushing her weight more on her hands, she eased that foot out of the dip in the rock that had snagged it, and the action sent a knife of agony through the joint. She did her best to quash the groan in her throat as her limb seemed to light on fire.
“You are hurt. Miss Hannon, what can I do to help?�
�� Nate’s tone echoed with worry, and he shuffled forward. Laura could see the outline of his hands waving in front of him against the light behind him.
“What are you doing here?” Hopefully he would only hear the determined demand in her voice, not the edge of fear she was trying to suppress. Being alone with a man this far from town brought back too many vicious memories of that last time. Panic climbed up her chest, but she forced herself to stay calm.
Pushing down the pain in her leg, she shifted her hand over the floor until she brushed the fabric of her satchel, then quietly rooted around inside and found her pistol. Over these past quiet months at the doctor’s office, she’d come to think of Nate very differently than before—almost to trust him—but she couldn’t be too careful. Not in this remote place with no other person near enough to hear a scream.
“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to frighten you. I was leaving work at the mine, and I had just reached the base of the mountain when I saw you slip on the rock ledge. I was coming up to make sure you weren’t injured, then saw you duck into this cave. Where are you hurt? Have you any more light?” His voice rang so earnest, so concerned. The tension in her nerves eased.
Yet she couldn’t seem to still the galloping in her chest.
“I’m not hurt.” Her leg screamed that the words were false, but she couldn’t let him know she’d been weakened. Couldn’t put herself at a disadvantage. “My matches spilled. Go back outside, and I’ll be there as soon as I gather them.”
“Are you sure?” His voice hesitated, sounding concerned. “Can I carry something for you?”
“I have it.” With the pistol and satchel in one hand, she scooped up the matches and their case, then shoved them in her bag. Nate might not mean harm, but she would only feel safe when they were around other people. And it didn’t seem he would leave until she proved she could manage on her own.
She straightened her skirts and shifted her feet to stand, but moving the right boot sent a shot of pain through that ankle. Gritting her teeth, she raised up, keeping her balance mostly on her left side.
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