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Zack's Montana Bride (Sweet, Clean Western Historical Romance)(Montana Ranchers and Brides Series)

Page 12

by Maya Stirling


  Lydia nodded wordlessly and Zack's eyes lit up. He grasped her hand, his fingers intertwined in her own, and tugged her gently along by his side. They made their way back down the path toward the house. Lydia had no idea what Zack was up to, but something deep inside told her that his judgment would be sound, his knowledge of this place more profound than her own. If Zack had a hunch, that was good enough for Lydia.

  It felt good for her hand to be held by Zack, to allow him to lead her, guide her. Zack took a turn to the left and Lydia glanced ahead, seeing that they were heading toward the barn close to the stable. She frowned. Hadn't they passed that on the way before? But, then she glanced across the clean, white expanse of the thin layer of snow and saw something that immediately made her heart jump.

  Tracks!

  "Zack. Look," she gasped, the words almost choking her, the emotion rising fast within her chest.

  Zack turned and nodded. "I knew it," he said simply, tugging her on. They both broke into a run, dashing toward the barn. The tracks were leading straight to the barn door. And there were two sets of tracks.

  "Zack. It's them," Lydia said breathlessly as they stopped at the barn doors which were closed.

  Zack opened the door and Lydia peered over his shoulder into the darkness of the barn. She saw a small lamp, bales of straw, and a girl with a little dog in her arms.

  "Gretchen!" Lydia cried out, racing past Zack and into the cold interior of the barn.

  Her daughter was kneeling on a bed of straw. She gazed up at Lydia as her mother ran toward her. Lydia extended her arms and squatted down beside Gretchen.

  "You're safe! Thank goodness, you're safe," Lydia uttered, her voice cracking, her eyes moistening. She wrapped her arms around Gretchen, immediately feeling the cold clinging to her daughter. "You're freezing, Gretchen," Lydia exclaimed. She felt Gretchen shivering.

  Lydia turned to Zack. He had closed the barn door and was watching them both with a mixture of relief and concern on his face.

  There was a yelp and Lydia looked down at the puppy which was burying it's head into Gretchen's affectionate embrace. This was no time to castigate her daughter, Lydia realized. All that mattered was that Gretchen was safe.

  Lydia looked at Zack. "How did you know they would be here?"

  Zack quirked a brow. "When Joshua told me about the puppy, he also told me the dog had been frightened to leave the barn where he was being looked after by his mother." Zack smiled. "I guessed the dog might seek shelter in a familiar place, once he realized it wasn't such a good idea being outside."

  "You were right," Lydia said to Zack with a smile.

  "I'm sorry, mama. I didn't mean to frighten you," Gretchen started to explain. "It was just that I heard Scooter crying after everyone went to bed and I went downstairs to see what the matter was. I wanted to show him the snow. It looked so pretty. I figured he'd like it. But he just scampered out the door and away from me. I followed him here."

  Lydia sighed. "Never mind that. We need to get you back to the house. Get you warmed up."

  Zack walked over to them. "You hold onto Scooter." He bent down suddenly and lifted Gretchen up into his strong arms. Gretchen smiled and squealed. Lydia stared at Zack in surprise.

  "You've got no shoes on. And your feet look like they're ice," he said. "You're coming with me, young lady. We need to get you in front of a warm fire," Zack said firmly.

  Gretchen glanced at Lydia who merely nodded. "Just do what your father says," she ordered her daughter. Gretchen didn't protest. She clutched the puppy close to her and let Zack turn and head out of the barn. Lydia picked up the lamp and followed Zack and Gretchen out of the barn.

  She turned and closed the barn door. By the time she started to make her way back to the house all she could see was Zack running slowly across the yard toward the ranch house with Gretchen in his arms, her bare feet flapping by his side.

  Lydia thought about what had just happened. She and Zack had gone out into the cold and dark in search of their daughter, and it suddenly seemed to her that, in the process, they had found so much more.

  More than she could ever have thought possible.

  EPILOGUE

  Christmas Day

  The Buchanan ranch

  "I'd like to propose a toast," said Joshua getting to his feet and lifting up his glass. Lydia smiled at Zack and looked along the length of the table. She saw that Aaron was rolling his eyes, which prompted Eva to dig her elbows playfully into Aaron's side. The children were chasing each other around the room, puppy in pursuit, while all the adults tried hard to maintain the appearance that this Christmas dinner was well under control.

  Which, of course, it wasn't.

  "To our dear friend, Zack and his beautiful new wife," Joshua said with a warm, generous smile. "I don't know about you Aaron, but I still find it kind of amazing that such a lovely woman as Lydia could ever have chosen such a good for nothing as Zack," Joshua said with a sly grin.

  Zack raised a hand and made a gesture of shooting his friend with an imaginary pistol. Joshua smiled and continued, gesturing toward Lydia with his glass. "But seriously. Laura and I were saying on the way over today that it is a real pleasure to welcome you to Montana, Lydia. Or should I say, back to Montana. The place where you and these fantastic, if noisy, children belong."

  Lydia smiled at Joshua, nodding in acknowledgment.

  "You're going to make us all cry," Aaron joked wiping an invisible tear away from his cheek. "And on Christmas day, too." He gestured toward the remains of the sumptuous Christmas dinner they had all enjoyed.

  "The person you should be toasting is Mrs. Brodie," Zack said looking toward the housekeeper who was sitting at the corner of the table teasing the contents of her glass. Judging by the flush of color on her cheeks she was clearly delighted with what she had been sipping during the last hour.

  Joshua turned to Mrs. Brodie and smiled. "Of course. I include in this toast the amazing Mrs. Brodie and her extraordinary culinary skills," he said. Mrs. Brodie's face turned an even deeper shade of crimson and she waved a dismissive hand toward Joshua.

  "It has been a delicious and delightful dinner," Joshua continued.

  "I didn't know you were a poet," Aaron teased Joshua.

  "There're a great many things you don't know about me," Joshua responded which prompted a narrowing of Laura's eyes.

  Joshua raised his glass and looked along the table at Zack and Lydia who sat alongside each other. "I think everyone will agree with me when I say we wish Zack and Lydia and the children a bright and prosperous future," Joshua said. There was a unanimous murmur of agreement and they all drank from their glasses.

  Lydia reflected on the almost perfect Christmas day they had all enjoyed. It had started with the children waking bright and early. They had raced to the parlor, tearing open the presents which awaited them under the brightly decorated tree. There had been screams of delight and moans of jealousy as all the children discovered what Zack and Lydia had spent so much time in Great Falls buying for them.

  The snow had settled as a white blanket covering the ranch over the past few days. After Gretchen's escapade with the puppy, the girls now understood that they had to be wrapped up if they wanted to be outside in the snow. Zack and Lydia had delighted in standing arm in arm at the window of the ranch house watching the children playing out front. For Lydia it was a dream come true to see her children so happy and safe on Christmas morning.

  Then, later Aaron and Joshua had arrived with Eva and Laura. Eventually they had all settled down to the Christmas dinner, but not without the almost obligatory crisis in the kitchen when the turkey almost burned.

  Now, Lydia sat back in her chair and savored the moment. She glanced at Zack and saw that he was looking at her with such an expression of love and adoration in his eyes that it made Lydia feel an all too familiar surge of emotion rise up inside her.

  Lydia sighed quietly and smiled at her husband. He was truly an amazing man. As she glanced at her chi
ldren chasing each other out of the parlor with the barking puppy in hot pursuit, Lydia could hardly believe that life had turned out so well for them all. And it was all thanks to the wonderful man who now gazed at her with such longing and love. This amazing man who had taken the biggest chance a man could take in asking a woman who had left him so many years before to come back into his life and become a part of him, a part of the place that he called home.

  Zack seemed to sense her mood. He reached over and took her hand. With a gentle movement of his head he made it clear to her that they should leave the room for a moment.

  "Lydia and I are going to check the children," Zack said to everyone at the table. Lydia could see that no-one really believed that Zack's reason for leading his wife by the hand out of the room had anything to do with checking on the children.

  Lydia followed Zack out of the room. The front door was open. Lydia paused by Zack's side. She peered out into the yard and saw the children off near the barn, rolling around in the thin covering of snow.

  "They are going to make such a mess when they come back into the house," she said with a frown.

  Zack's arm went around her waist and he drew her in close. "That's not important, right now," he said quietly. "All that matters is that I am here with you on the most perfect Christmas day I could ever have imagined," he said, his eyes shining bright, fixed intently on her.

  "It has been nice. Hasn't it?" she said.

  "More than nice. Perfect." Zack wrapped both arms around Lydia. "Just like you," he whispered, his voice deep and resonant.

  Lydia felt the breath stop in her throat. She looked up into his beautiful eyes and gave him the warmest smile she could. It seemed to satisfy him for the moment. He leaned down, taking possession of her lips, making her feel that the world had suddenly stopped turning.

  Lydia leaned back and looked into Zack's eyes. She saw the depth of his love there, the strength of his feeling for her.

  "What will the children think if they see us?" she asked suddenly.

  Zack smiled. "They'll think that their mother and father love each other. That's what they'll think," he murmured. "Because that's the truth, isn't it?"

  Lydia felt her face glow with the realization of that truth.

  "I love you, Lydia," Zack whispered. "You know that, don't you."

  With barely a pause Lydia nodded. "I know that, Zack. And I know it has been a long road, and it has taken me such a long time to find you. Truly find you." Lydia reached up and ran the back of her fingers down the side of Zack's face. "But I've found you, Zack. At last. And I love you."

  Zack's eyes widened and she saw his lower lip tremble slightly. His head dipped and he kissed Lydia.

  As she sank into his embrace, and with the sound of the children coming nearer, Lydia Buchanan realized that it was possible that, even if a woman had to wait for what seemed like an eternity, that eventually, if she had faith and trust, then all good things could come to the one who waited.

  THE END

  Thank you!

  Thank you for reading Zack's Montana Bride. I hope you enjoyed it.

  If you'd like to know when my next book is available, you can sign up for my new release email list at mayastirling.com

  I appreciate all reviews on Amazon, whether positive or negative. They help me know what readers of my books want in future novels.

  The Montana Ranchers and Brides series

  Montana ranchers and their search for brides in the 1880's

  An Amazon Bestselling series in Historical Romance

  These books are all standalone stories and can be read without having read previous volumes

  Nathan's Montana Bride

  Devlin's Montana Bride

  Trent's Montana Bride

  Joshua's Montana Bride

  Aaron's Montana Bride

  Zack's Montana Bride

  The Brides of Sweetheart Falls

  Three sisters and their struggles finding husbands and new lives in 1870's Wyoming

  An Amazon Bestselling series in Historical Romance

  Book 1 Mail Order Vows (Cassie's story)

  Book 2 Mail Order Beau (Martha's story)

  Book 3 Mail Order Blessing (Rachel's story)

  Mail Order Vows (Cassie's story)

  Brides of Sweetheart Falls series: Book One. A sweet, full length, complete mail order bride romance novel with a happy ending.

  Wyoming 1878

  On the verge of giving up on a future in the growing Wyoming town of Sweetheart Falls, and heading back to an uncertain life back East, recently widowed mail order bride Cassie Miller is given a final chance at happiness.

  Soon Cassie finds out she has no choice but to marry handsome ex lawman Ethan Macleod. However, can she make a new life while trying to come to terms with the loss of her beloved husband Joshua?

  Can she really trust Ethan, the man the entire town agrees would make a perfect husband? How come he already knows so much about Cassie?

  And just how far will he go to prove to her that he is worthy of being her new husband?

  Book 2 Mail Order Beau (Martha's story)

  Brides of Sweetheart Falls series: Book Two. A sweet, full length, complete mail order bride romance novel with a happy ever after.

  Wyoming 1878

  Martha's story.

  After waiting months for the Sweetheart Falls Matrimonial Society to find a husband for herself and her sister, Cassie Macleod's sister, Martha is beginning to wonder if she and Rachel will ever get married. Meanwhile, there's a baby on the way at the Macleod farmstead, and Martha and Rachel need to move out so that their sister and her wonderful husband, Ethan can start their new life as a family, without relatives getting in the way.

  However, when town matchmaker Hettie finally provides a selection of suitable husbands, only one of them holds any promise.

  Who is the mysterious ranch owner who wants to wed one of the unmarried sisters? Why is he going to such lengths to keep his identity secret? And just what will Martha have to do to secure a future for herself and Rachel?

  Book 3 Mail Order Blessing (Rachel's story)

  Mail Order Blessing. A sweet, full length, complete mail order bride romance novel with a happy ever after.

  Wyoming 1878

  Rachel's story.

  Sweetheart Falls' town matchmaker Hettie Longfellow has finally found a husband for young, eager to marry, Rachel. Or so Rachel thinks. But there's one obstacle. Aaron Caldigate doesn't want to settle down in town. Then there's the problem of Aaron's past and how it stands in the way of Rachel's chances of married bliss.

  Aaron Caldigate is a man who keeps his word. He's returning to Sweetheart Falls because he promised he'd come back after completing his training as a lawyer. But he's not planning on staying, especially since his mother has taken it upon herself to find him a bride!

  However he hasn't counted on a very determined and beautiful young bride-to-be who is going to do everything she can to persuade him that Sweetheart Falls is the only place to settle down, and that she is the only woman for him.

  Copyright

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Zack's Montana Bride © 2014 Maya Stirling

 

 

 


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