Always and Forever

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Always and Forever Page 1

by Wendy Lindstrom




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Chapter One

  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

  Epilogue

  Dear Reader,

  Chances Are

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Books by Wendy Lindstrom

  About the Author

  Always and Forever

  Always and Forever is the SWEET edition of

  When I Fall in Love (Grayson Brothers series)

  New York Times and USA Today Bestselling Author

  Wendy Lindstrom

  www.wendylindstrom.com

  Wendy on Facebook

  Wendy on Twitter

  Wendy on Goodreads

  Wendy on Amazon

  Sign up for Wendy’s Newsletter

  An Unexpected Mail Order Bride Must Risk Everything For A Chance At Love

  The problem was Nancy Mitchell couldn’t marry the man her father chose for her. Her only escape from the arrangement was to find another husband quick — so she became a mail order bride. When a drastic change in circumstances dumps her into the arms of Hal Grayson, she knows the handsome, brooding man is for her. But is she up for the challenge of opening Hal’s grieving heart and showing him that love heals all wounds?

  “Their love story is filled with many emotions that it's difficult to put down” — Maria

  “The Grayson family and extended family are a wonder to explore. I hope they will make it into a tv mini series.” — Yolanda Gutierrez

  “If you enjoy reading heartwarming historical novels, add this one to your list.” — Pat Fordyce

  Be the first to know about Wendy’s new books! Sign up for her newsletter!

  Chapter One

  Always and Forever is the SWEET edition of

  When I Fall in Love (Grayson Brothers series)

  As Hal Grayson angled his gouging tool and created a shallow arc in the lid of an oak chest, he tried to lose himself in the scraping, rasping sounds from his carving tools. The rhythmic motion of carving and sanding wood, and the earthy smell of the old barn that housed his woodshop, usually calmed him after a hard day’s work at the sawmill. But tonight nothing could soothe the anger churning inside him.

  With an agitated groan, Hal braced his fists on the workbench and dragged in a hard breath, trying to settle his frazzled nerves. He had to finish carving the lid and staining the chest before he could line it with cedar, but his hands were too unsteady to work.

  His brother had completely lost his mind.

  Hal and his brother John Radford had experienced their share of disagreements over the years, but they always talked it out in the end. That’s why Hal believed they would have a successful partnership in the sawmill business, but John’s latest decision made Hal question that possibility.

  What was John Radford thinking ordering a wife like one might order a piece of furniture? And why hadn’t he talked to Hal before making such a foolhardy move? He was thinking only of himself, that’s what. He wasn’t thinking about Hal, and he sure as heck was not considering the future of their mill.

  Hal tossed aside the gouge and slammed his fist on the workbench. The whole idea was absurd. They couldn’t afford the responsibility and expense of another person and that’s why they hadn’t hired a man at the mill. They were trying to build a business, and Hal was going to remind his thick-skulled brother of that fact as soon as John Radford returned from making their last delivery of pine planks.

  How could John have done something so irresponsible and thoughtless? Their sawmill business was just beginning to show a profit, but still not enough support them. The money Hal made building furniture for Addison Edwards was barely enough to cover their monthly payment on the mill and their house. How could John not see that they couldn’t afford a single added expense. They ran the mill until dark and built furniture in his woodshop until the wee hours of the morning. They were already working around the clock and couldn’t physically work more hours if they had them. They were exhausted. What they needed were extra hands at the mill, not a woman to warm John’s bed.

  Shaking his head, Hal inspected the chest lid, eyeing the sweep from his last pass with the gouge. He took up a veiner to add finer detail, but had to stop several times to take a calming breath and relax his tensed hands before he ruined the piece. Not even the fragrant scent of cedar, his favorite wood, could unlock the tension between his shoulders.

  Hal loved his brother, but he could literally throttle John at the moment. Barely a year apart, they were usually lock-step on everything. But just two hours ago John had flippantly announced that he’d found a bride and made an agreement with her. Hal had stood staring at him, open-mouthed and stunned. He still couldn’t believe it.

  Gads, even now thinking about it made his chest cramp with anger. What a fool-brained and inconsiderate decision.

  Hal had told John in no uncertain terms that he needed to break the agreement with the woman.

  John just laughed and promised Hal that he’d soon be thanking him for bringing in a lady who could tend their house and put some decent meals on the table. Then he said he needed to deliver the lumber and drove out of the mill whistling a happy tune as if their conversation was over and Hal’s opinion didn’t matter.

  Oh, no, it was a long way from over.

  Hal blew out a breath and flexed his fingers. He needed steady hands and a clear mind for carving such a detailed piece. One wrong arc with the gouge could ruin the whole lid of the chest. But his head felt ready to explode and concentrating on the intricate detail proved impossible.

  The sound of the barn door banging closed signaled his brother’s return.

  “John! Get in here,” he hollered. They were going to have it out and get this problem resolved so Hal could clear his mind and get back to work.

  When Thomas Drake stepped inside, Hal’s irritation jumped a notch. Not because he didn’t like the man. Drake, a dark-haired somewhat stocky man about Hal’s age was actually becoming a friend. Hal liked and greatly respected his competitor, but he wasn’t interested in leasing his sawmill to the man.

  Hal tossed the veiner tool onto the workbench and raised an eyebrow. “I suppose you’re here to bend my ear about leasing the mill?”

  “I wish I were,” Tom said quietly. Hal expected to see a grin light Tom’s face as their back and forth was becoming a bit of a friendly debate that Drake seemed to enjoy. But there was no light in Tom Drake’s face. All Hal could see in the man’s eyes was pain. “There’s been an accident, I’m afraid.”

  Hal’s heart started pounding.

  “The axle on your wagon broke and —”

  “Is John all right?” Hal asked stepping toward Drake. “Has he been hurt?”

  Tom’s shoulders seemed to deflate and he shook his head. “I’m sorry, Hal. Reggie Orwald found him beneath the wagon and it was… it was too late.”

  An ocean roared in Hal’s ears. H
e heard Drake talking, but felt as if he were floating in thick liquid that made it difficult to move, to breathe, to understand.

  “The front axle broke and the wheels snapped off. We suspect John was thrown off the seat. The crash surely startled horses and... well, it seems they pulled the wagon over top of him.”

  Shaking his head, Hal backed away from the words that were pelting him like shards of ice.

  His back slammed into the workbench, jarring his tools, shattering his composure. Crushing pain gripped his chest. His breath came in ragged gasps. He couldn’t get enough air.

  “Your brother is at Doc Kinley’s house.”

  Hal shook his head. “This is a mistake.” He glanced toward the door, expecting his brother any minute. “John was delivering a load of pine planks. It can’t be him.”

  Thomas wrung the black cap he held in his hands. “Reggie didn’t know John and thought he might work for me so he came by the mill to let me know. I went to Doc Kinley’s to make sure my suspicion was true before I came to see you. I’m sorry Hal, but it’s your brother, John Radford.”

  Gut-punched by the news, Hal sagged forward, his back against the workbench, his knees barely able to support him. It couldn’t be true.

  “I’ll help any way I can,” Tom said, his voice coming from the end of a long tunnel.

  A loud buzzing filled Hal’s ears and his body quaked. The smell of cedar wood shavings that he loved so well turned his stomach.

  It couldn’t be true.

  He’d just talked with John. They hadn’t even finished their argument.

  How could his brother be... dead?

  John was smiling when he left the mill. He was happy — and alive!

  Oh, God.

  Oh, no...

  Dear Mr. Grayson,

  I will be arriving the Dunkirk station June 2nd at 6 o’clock.

  I look forward to meeting you in person.

  Your intended,

  Nancy Mitchell.

  Hal Grayson folded the mud-spattered letter and jammed it into the pocket of his dusty trousers. He clenched his fists around the reins and directed his team of rented horses toward the Dunkirk train depot and a meeting he did not want to have.

  He should be delivering a load of cherry planks to A. B. Edwards store, not meeting his brother’s intended. But his brother, John Radford, couldn’t make the trip because he was...

  Dead.

  Hal squeezed his eyes closed and then opened them wide trying to clear the gut-wrenching nightmare he couldn’t seem to awaken from. His brother, John Radford, was really gone.

  On any other day, the clip-clopping sound of the horses’ hooves and rattle of the wagon would have rocked Hal into an easy state of woolgathering. But today even the singing birds and warm sunshine on his shoulders agitated him. How could life go on as normal when everything was upside down? How could his strong, healthy brother be dead?

  Dropping his forehead into his palm, Hal squeezed, trying to force the image of John’s inert body out of his mind. “You should have listened to me,” he whispered, his throat thick with grief and love. Hal lifted his face to the breeze, deeply regretting that one of his last conversations with his brother had been so heated and upsetting.

  But John’s insistence that they needed a woman to tend their house and prepare their meals had vexed Hal. It wasn’t that he’d disagreed with John that they needed a caretaker for their home. They worked sixteen hours a day, wore their clothes for days at a time before washing them in the creek and tossing them over a sagging clothesline to dry. They barely slept. They ate apples and eggs and bread given to them by their neighbors. Their small house had grown dirty and remained scantily furnished, a sad fact neither of them had time to worry about. They were too busy trying to keep their sawmill business afloat.

  That’s why Hal wouldn’t entertain the idea of John taking a bride because they couldn’t afford the expense.

  They’d been hunting bigger dreams.

  Hal and John were making monthly payments on a small home and sawmill they were buying from Tom and Martha Fiske. They believed if they worked hard they could earn enough money to help their father as well. Progress was slow, but Hal was earning income by carving spectacular pieces for Addison Edwards’ store and also partnering with John in their new sawmill. They had made their first whole dollar of profit the week before John died.

  That’s when John had revealed that he’d advertised for a wife — and that he’d found one.

  Miss Nancy Mitchell, a gal from Buffalo, had answered John’s advertisement.

  Her train would arrive in a few short minutes.

  With a snort of disgust, Hal sat upright and turned his wagon onto Central Avenue and headed toward Dunkirk. Leafy maple trees lined the street on either side, reminding him of one of his favorite areas back home in Buffalo.

  The irony of meeting his brother’s intended made his gut burn. How could John have accepted a bride he’d never even met? Little wonder that John hadn’t a clear thought since receiving Miss Mitchell’s letter. That’s likely what distracted him from noticing the problem with the wagon wheel until the axle snapped in half.

  A flood of regret and anger filled Hal’s chest and restricted his breathing. He wanted to shout out his pain and hurl it past the leafy tops of the maple trees. He wanted to howl and rant and force time to move backwards so he could rescue his father’s new sawmill from being repossessed by Lloyd Tremont — and save his beloved brother from death.

  But it was too late.

  And so Hal drove toward the train station because there was nothing else he could do.

  Sick to his soul over the whole mess, Hal pulled up at the depot and parked the wagon. Sunshine streaked across the hard-packed yard and bleached the wooden slats on the platform of the depot. Other carriages and wagons were arriving, perhaps to fetch a friend or family member coming in for a visit, or to send a loved one off on their own journey. The expressions of anticipation or trepidation on the faces around Hal indicated both. Neither of those emotions were present within him, however. He was too numb to feel anything. And this was merely a bit of business he needed to deal with so he could return to work.

  Still, he wondered what his own expression revealed. Grief? Agitation? Anger?

  Dread. That’s what he felt inside. His stomach ached with dread as he stepped down from the driver’s seat. To even mention John Radford’s name wrung Hal’s insides. To reveal such tragedy to Miss Mitchell would be gut-wrenching. What would she think of this turn of events? Would she offer quiet condolences and return home? What else could she do?

  What else could anyone do?

  A howl of grief rose up in Hal’s throat, choking him. He sucked in sharp breaths as he strode to the ticket office. Five minutes later, he stood on the platform, fists clenched, waiting to meet his brother’s mail-order bride.

  As the train came to a stop at the Dunkirk station, Nancy turned from the window where she’d been watching the landscape pass and sat up to adjust her hat. Her heart ached and she was scared and terribly homesick for all she’d left behind. She hadn’t wanted to leave. She loved her family deeply and had never thought to run off this way.

  But staying would have forced her to do something that would have broken her sister’s heart.

  Better that it be her own heart she was breaking.

  Passengers folded newspapers, straightened skirts and coats, gathered their children and valises and began departing the train.

  Nancy stood, wavering with indecision, the ribbons on her hat left untied. What if John Grayson didn’t like what he saw? What if he decided he didn’t want to marry her?

  Her stomach rolled and for the life of her she couldn't seem to draw a full breath.

  She was running away.

  She was going to marry a man she’d never met.

  And she’d lied to secure John Radford’s agreement.

  Mile after mile she had practiced her name Nancy Mitchell, she silently repeated. Mitche
ll... Mitchell... Mitchell. Changing her last name was necessary because... because the Grayson family hated her father.

  She had heard her father state this truth to her mother in a recent discussion they’d recently had over supper.

  Nancy didn’t know much about the Grayson family because they socialized in different circles, but her father knew Daniel Grayson well and seemed to consider the man a friend. Other folks spoke highly of the Grayson family, so when Nancy found John Grayson’s advertisement seeking a bride to join him in Fredonia, she grasped his offer with both hands and answered as Nancy Mitchell, using her mother’s maiden name.

  The lie was necessary and yet the deception ate at her. Her only comfort came in knowing she would do all in her power to be a good wife and to create a loving marriage with John. She would tell him the truth as soon as it was possible to do so, when she felt he might understand and forgive her this one falsehood.

  But withholding information was a form of lying, too, and so it was more than one lie on her conscience.

  She’d also lied to her cousin James to get him to deliver her and her trunks to the station.

  So many lies! Nancy gripped her stomach fearing she might be sick. The lies bubbled like acid in her gut, eating at her.

  A young lady in a stylish blue dress and matching cape exchanged a warm glance with her handsome young escort as they passed Nancy’s seat. Their love for one another was obvious. Nancy envied them. Would she and John ever look at each other with that same warmth? Or would he ultimately hate her because she’d lied to him?

  Adjusting her gloves and smoothing her skirts into place, Nancy told herself there was nothing to do but to step off the train.

  Negotiating her way to the door on shaky legs proved difficult. She used the high seatbacks to keep herself upright and moving through the car. As she stepped from the train, she clutched her small reticule and surveyed the milling crowd. Not one face looked familiar. Not one person approached her.

 

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