Oregon Trails

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by Olivia Gaines




  Olivia Gaines

  Oregon Trails

  Modern Mail Order Brides, Volume 4

  Olivia Gaines

  Published by Olivia Gaines, 2017.

  Davonshire House Publishing

  PO Box 9716

  Augusta, GA 30916

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s vivid imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely a coincidence.

  © 2017 Olivia Gaines, Cheryl Aaron Corbin

  Copy Editor: Teri Thompson Blackwell

  Cover: Koou Graphics

  Olivia Gaines Make Up and Photograph by Latasla Gardner Photography

  ASIN: B01NBK1AJG

  ISBN-13:978-1544247137

  ISBN-10:1544247133

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means whatsoever. For information address, Davonshire House Publishing, PO Box 9716, Augusta, GA 30916.

  Printed in the United States of America

  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 10 9 8

  First Davonshire House Publishing March 2017

  This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.

  OREGON TRAILS

  First edition. March 13, 2017.

  Copyright © 2017 Olivia Gaines.

  ISBN: 978-1386461265

  Written by Olivia Gaines.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Copyright Page

  Oregon Trails (Modern Mail Order Brides, #4)

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Also By Olivia Gaines

  DEDICATION

  For Kristin

  “Easy reading is damn hard writing .”

  - Nathaniel Hawthorne

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  To all the fans, friends and supporters of the dream as well as the Facebook community of writers who keep me focused, inspired and moving forward.

  Write On!

  Also by Olivia Gaines

  T he Slice of Life Series

  The Perfect Man

  Friends with Benefits

  A Letter to My Mother

  The Basement of Mr. McGee

  A New Mommy for Christmas

  The Slivers of Love Series

  The Cost to Play

  Thursday in Savannah

  Girl's Weekend

  Beneath the Well of Dawn

  Santa’s Big Helper

  The Davonshire Series

  Courting Guinevere

  Loving Words

  Vanity's Pleasure

  The Blakemore Files

  Being Mrs. Blakemore

  Shopping with Mrs. Blakemore

  Dancing with Mr. Blakemore

  Cruising with the Blakemores

  Dinner with the Blakemores

  Loving the Czar

  The Value of a Man Series

  My Mail Order Wife

  A Weekend with the Cromwell’s

  Other Novellas

  North to Alaska

  The Brute & The Blogger

  A Better Night in Vegas

  Other Novels

  A Menu for Loving

  Turning the Page

  This is Paul & Kalinda.

  Chapter 1

  T he sun crept over the horizon, making its way to brighten the Imnaha River region as if after a long day it was too tired to properly finish the sun-shining job. A dense fog hovered over the land urging its inhabitants to rise and get the day moving, but like the lazy early sun preparing to make its daily pass, the start of the day felt much like the end for Paul Darton. The land, that he loved, was hard on him. A lonely life as postmaster for the region often made him question a vision for a future for the land that no one believed in but him.

  The more he tried to make others understand and see the potential in the unspoiled corner of Oregon, the crazier people believed him to be.

  "Paul, no one wants to travel way to the Pacific Northwest to hike a trail," his mother told him one day over coffee.

  "Mom, people love wide open spaces. As much as mankind continues to decimate the planet with urban sprawl, there are folks who want to get back to nature, enjoy the feel of grass between their toes, spend some time in the great outdoors...live off the grid a bit," he told her.

  “Yes, but finding a nice girl to live off the grid with you is going to be difficult. No one wants to go without social media, the Internet to an evening of skinning their dinner with a Bowie knife. Most women want to pick their meat up from the grocers wrapped in nice cellophane. I, for one, don't want to come home and see my meat hanging from a hook on my back porch," Beverly Darton told her son. "It is very unappetizing."

  "I don't agree with you, Mom. Out there is a woman who will see my vision, help me build the dream and bring new life to this area," he said with conviction.

  "Yes, and she will probably have a pet monkey named Cobra, or worse a pet cobra named Monkey that she likes to kiss on the lips before she goes to bed at night, or worse," Beverly said with a perfectly manicured arched eyebrow.

  "Have faith Mom; there is someone out there perfect for me," he said with a halfhearted smile.

  "That's my fear. I will end up with little hairy grandbabies who don't use deodorant and like to skin rabbits for fun," Beverly said with an attempted frown. Perfectly manicured fingers touched her Botoxed forehead. "See, I think you just gave me a premature wrinkle, I feel the indentation in my skin."

  Paul moved closer to his mother. At sixty-two she was still a perfect size eight, too reliant on chemicals to maintain her brunette hair, her flawless skin, and tight butt cheeks she often bragged about at inappropriate times. As much as he loved his mother, he didn't want to marry anyone close to being like her. Money had its benefits, yet Paul wanted a wife that would want more out of life than simply looking beautiful. He needed a woman who understood the beauty of life.

  "I know you are out there," he said to himself. He spoke the words again to his mother, "I know she is out there. I have a vision, Mom. I am going to make it come to life."

  "I can only hope your visualization doesn't take the life from you Paul. It is one thing to have a dream, it is another entirely to live in a dreamlike state," she said placing her hand on his arm. "Sometimes I think I failed you."

  "How so?" he asked.

  "I don't know, you and your brother Luke are so different," she said. "I did the same things during the pregnancies..."

  "Mom, stop it. I am who I am. I like who I am," he told her.

  "I know...but...," she started.

  Paul silenced her with a kiss on the temple. "I am fine, Mom. You worry too much. Luke is like Dad and I am more like...someone else in the family," he said to her.

  "I guess," she said. "I know you aren't anything like me."

  "I have your tender heart," he said with a smile.

  Beverly sc
offed at him. "I only wish you had my tough as nails ass. I can crack walnuts with this thing. Pilates is no joke," she said with a smile.

  "Nothing is instant, Mom. Everything takes a little time, especially if it is worthwhile. I truly believe that the greatest gift you can give to another person is caring. When you care about someone else's happiness, your life takes on new meaning, new purpose," he said.

  "That I can agree with, son," Beverly said. Her husband never really cared about anything other than a legacy of more land, more timber, and more money. Luke, her oldest son, was exactly like his father. He was set on winning at any cost. Everything was a competition to him. In many ways, she was happy Paul had moved away from Portland and the family to start his own venture. His hide was too delicate to navigate the shark-infested waters chummed by his father and brother.

  Generations of Darton men had worked at the helm of the industrial side of the company that cuts down timber through six states to make lumber. Diversification in textiles and lumber by products had yielded a family fortune that Paul cared very little to be a part of. Instead, he worked on the public image of the company to preserve lands and habitats for animals. One patch of land in particular up near the Imnaha River had become his swan song. Ten thousand acres of unspoiled land sat uncut and untouched by man. It was a part of the Darton legacy. If Paul had his way, it would remain that way.

  The fantasy that currently kept him up at night, came to him a few years prior when he attended an environmental rally, someone in the crowd mentioned land being auctioned off in the region of the Sheepheads Creek. It was on a weekend away when his then-girlfriend Athena, was in the throes of one of her many temper tantrums, and Paul took off to get some fresh air. A weekend of clear water, open space, and room to breathe changed his life. Following a winding trail up through a small pass, he located a plateau not far from the river. Popping open his tent, he camped out at the site for the weekend. Ill-equipped for the outdoor life, he almost froze to death, developed dysentery and nearly dehydrated himself– all in one weekend. Hovering on death's doorstep, he had never felt more alive.

  Secretly, he purchased the 2,000 acres under the name of Wide Open Spaces. The small Oregonian Outfitting Company also purchased off runs of lumber from Darton Industrial that were transported in small shipments from a warehouse to his new weekend home where he stored his gear for the new company. It took a year to build the three-room cabin that had a decent sized living space that encompassed the living, dining and kitchen area. A stand-up shower was added to the washroom that was basic, but functional. The second bedroom quickly became an office as he started to bring a few friends up to the region to enjoy the beauty of the wide open space. In less than two years, he made runs twice a month with suburbanites who wanted to rough it and get back to nature. At $200 a person, a weekender could rent one of the two tiny houses on the trail or for $100, one of the three campsites.

  The weekend trips were taking a great deal more time from his day job that began a conversation with his father that still hurt him to this day.

  "I have a vision, Dad," he told Jeremiah Darton.

  "That and two dollars will get you a pack of hot dogs Paul. A man needs more than a vision; he has to have a plan, a helpmate, and enough money to buy off a few politicians," his father told him.

  "Dad, I want to leave the company and venture out on my own. See, I have this idea for some of that land up round the Imnaha River," he said, trying to broach the subject.

  "That land is going to be harvested in the next few years," Jeremiah said confidently.

  Paul exhaled, ready to say the words that had been coagulating in his mouth like day old worms being held for a baby bird's next feeding. "You can't harvest it without my agreement or my signature," Paul said aloud.

  Jeremiah, clad in a thousand dollar suit, rose from behind the massive oak desk. His posture was rigid. His eyes were focused. The silver hair that never had a strand out of place did not move as he tilted his head.

  "Are you opposing me, son? Please tell me you are not opposing me on this very lucrative venture on that land," Jeremiah said with some bass in his voice.

  Paul rose to stand toe to toe with his father.

  "I am. I will. I shall," he said. "I want that land for something more...to leave a Darton legacy that doesn't include raping the land of all her beauty," Paul said.

  "The only time a bitch is beautiful is when she has been plowed a few times, son," Jeremiah said. "That fresh as the dew on a baby peach is for punks and dreamers. You want to get somewhere in life, you have to have a woman who is not only beautiful but also seasoned in life. A virgin is only interesting the first time; after that, it is just too much work to train her to do what you need," Jeremiah said with a glare.

  "I hope you don't feel that way about, Mom," Paul said with a frown.

  "I feel that way about all women," Jeremiah said. "Your mother is as ruthless as I am. How do you think we have managed to stay married for so damned long? I can't divorce her, she will take half of everything we own. I can't cheat; she will cut off my balls, so I am stuck with her crazy ass."

  "You are truly an inspiring man," Paul mumbled with some distaste in his mouth.

  "I can teach you a lot more, son," Jeremiah said with pride.

  "I am learning every day from you, Dad," he said to his father as he left the office. He was learning he no longer desired to be a part of this Darton vision.

  "Son," Jeremiah called to him. "She was just a woman. There will be more. I hope you will not allow her to be a permanent wedge between you and your brother."

  "Dad, the wedge between me and Luke is about a helluva lot more than just Rosalyn," he said firmly.

  "You sure, son? I mean she was a pretty girl and all, but never worth allowing to come between blood," Jeremiah stated.

  "It seems to me, Dad, that blood should have come between Luke's desire to have her and any cost and some form of moral compass to guide his muddled mind," Paul said.

  Jeremiah wasn't balking at the implications of Paul's words.

  "Paul, son. Sometimes women will say they were forced just to save face," Jeremiah said.

  "Or sometimes women are forced because some men don't understand the word no," Paul said.

  "Is that what this is about? The land? Rosalyn? Are you blocking this venture from Luke because of that bitch?"

  “No, Dad, this is about me saying no because Luke is a bitch. I am blocking you both because that land is a rare beautiful gem that will be taken care of by me, my children and their children's children," Paul said.

  "Don't oppose me, son!"

  "Or what? You will disinherit me? Stop speaking to me? Treat me like you don't know me? Is that it, Dad?" Paul said. "Funny, those tactics are ineffective because that is what you have always given me. I am the flawed son. The broken one who doesn't get how the world works, but you are wrong. I get it. I get you and I get Luke. I just hate that you don't get me."

  The words were spoken three years ago.

  Paul Darton packed a bag, left everything behind and moved to his cabin on the river. Through word of mouth, weekenders traveled for miles around to come and walk the two trails he had developed in Oregon. Now, the postmaster of Imnaha, he made his daily runs through the area looking for new trails to create, but something was missing. After the weekenders completed the two trails, there was no need for them to come back.

  "I need help," he said aloud.

  On a clear, crisp Thursday afternoon when the sun decided to be friendly, Paul Darton cranked up the satellite and registered with a mail order bride service out of New York. It was an old company that had been around since the first wagon trains headed west. Registration was easy, payment was reasonable and it came with a money back guarantee. He had Curley Joe Mortenson, who owned the local store, to snap a photo of him on the front porch of the cabin as he held a walking stick.

  "I look stupid," he said.

  “Yep, you do,” Curley Joe said, but continue
d to take more. He tried to replace the image but each subsequent photo was worse than the last. Settling on the first image, he composed the ad for a wife.

  "Oregonian Wilderness Outfitter seeks wife that is marketing, social media and internet savvy to aid in growing a business venture. A good cook is a must. Housekeeping skills a plus. Remote location. Let's open a dialogue."

  Paul’s large finger clicked the mouse, pressing the little blue button that read submit. The ad was live. Out there somewhere was a woman looking for him and he hoped the thirty-six-word ad would be the start of something great.

  Instead, the ad was the start of him nearly losing his mind.

  Three months passed and not a single hit. On a cloudy Tuesday afternoon with poor satellite reception, Paul checked his email to find three orders from new weekenders wanting to rent one of the tiny houses and try out his trails. Two invoices were also in the inbox, one for storage at the warehouse and one for the other store supplies he had in his office. However, four messages down, right under the email for penile enhancement supplements, was a message with a little red heart beside it from Kalinda Marsh.

  Nervous fingers fondled the mouse, then clicked the icon to open the message.

  It was simply stated and so purely beautiful that his heart pounded furiously in his chest, simulating a man about to fall overboard as it jumped so vigorously in his chest. He read it six times before he allowed himself to exhale.

  "I am Kalinda Marsh. Savvy in all things social media, a pretty good cook, a moderate housekeeper and a dream builder. Let's start a conversation ."

  Chapter 2

  P aul stood in front of the small bathroom mirror that he used for shaving on Thursday mornings. It was a round disc that would never suffice for a woman to work on her makeup or clear her pores from blackheads and imperfections. "I have to get a bigger mirror for my wife to use," he said aloud.

 

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