by Martha Hix
The diners at the next table left, allowing Linnea more room to speak privately with the other bride on her way to the milk and honey of Lubbock, Texas.
Linnea reached for Jewel’s bony hand. “Jewel . . . Never have I ever in my wildest dreams imagined that a decent gentleman might come along. Mr. Samson Kincaid of the High Hopes Ranch offers even more than dreams. He is security.”
“By all accounts Mr. Kincaid is a decent, God-fearing cattleman. His uncle—my intended—serves as his foreman.” Jewel lifted her nose so high that the black hairs in her nostrils protruded. “They’re now expanding their success with cotton farming. Absolutely, Mr. Kincaid expects to match with a mail-order bride of his own stripe. But you are an imposter.”
“You needn’t remind me.”
Still gnawing the bone of righteousness, Jewel chewed down. “If you hadn’t lived the scandalous life, missy girl, you wouldn’t have to worry about some reporter’s opinion.”
“I didn’t do anything wrong, except marry stupidly.”
“You mean you didn’t do anything wrong until now.”
Why was it so wrong, grabbing a chance for happiness laced with refuge? A great lady—the grandest person she’d ever known—had told Linnea it was cheap and common, stooping to tit for tat. Unfortunately, recollections along the ladylike-behavior line usually came as second thought.
She came back with, “What’s it to you?”
“You’d be my niece. Family. Forever. That’s my stake.”
“That’s reason enough for me to call it quits.”
“Smart aleck.” The arbiter of deportment slurped coffee from its saucer. “The newspapers called your Mr. Powell a gambler.”
It could be that Linnea owed her self-appointed inquisitor—and future in-law—a few explanations.
“Percival was whatever the moment needed him to be.” That was being generous. “I was barely eighteen when he called on Reston Oaks to sell Bibles. That very day, he said he’d give me a Good Book, if the lady of the house bought one. The mere idea of owning my own Bible—I was thrilled half to death. I was an orphan. I’d never owned anything special.”
“Oh? That set of cameos you’re wearing. That brooch. Those earbobs. They look pretty special . . .”
Linnea’s shaking fingers touched the diamond-surrounded cameo she’d pinned above her breast. Her worldly possessions totaled her Bible and what was left of Miz Myrtie’s diamond-studded cameo jewelry. Never in her twenty-three years had she even seen jewels more beautiful than her matching brooch and earrings.
“Of course they’re special,” she said. “They belonged to a grand lady. Miz Myrtie. Myrtle Reston. Mrs. Rutherford G. Reston. I was her parlor maid. I’m sure you’ve heard of her. Before she and Mr. Reston moved to New Mexico to improve her health, she was well-known in Shreveport for her good deeds.” Linnea swallowed the lump in her throat. “Miz Myrtie went to her greater reward, last summer, several months before my husband answered to his Maker. She left these cameos to me in her will.”
“What luck. Valuable jewels to a housemaid.”
“Their value isn’t counted in dollars. They remind me of a grand lady who was decent and kind, and understanding and sentimental.” Linnea closed her suddenly scratchy eyes.
“I don’t know about the cameos, but diamonds are valuable.”
Better they were made of paste. Then her husband wouldn’t have stolen the matching ring, just to lose it in a game of three-card monte. That very same week, Percival Powell also lost his life.
As his widow Linnea had no one to turn to. With the citizens of Shreveport shunning her, she couldn’t find work. Finally, she decided to throw herself on the mercy of Miz Myrtie’s relocated widower, which meant a trip west. Then along came hope, glorious hope, in the form of Ermentrude Flanders.
As if she read Linnea’s mind, Jewel said, “I can’t imagine why Ermentrude even offered this exchange.”
Jewel knew those reasons; Linnea saw no reason to rehash the situation with Miss Deaf Ears, who just wanted to be hateful. “Ermentrude doesn’t want to marry Samson Kincaid. I ache for this chance to become Mrs. Kincaid. I wish her every success in becoming a doctor. Besides, it’s not as if I’m doing anything to hurt her, or Mr. Kincaid. I do intend to make him a fine and respectable wife.”
“Do you cook?”
“Well . . . no.”
“How are you at making shirts for your husband?”
“Dadgum it, Jewel! Refined ladies don’t sew any confounded shirts. Rich ladies arrange flowers and make nice homes for their husbands. They have hired help for the shirts and the washing up.”
“That’s the life you’re already on your way to. With that banker in New Mexico. Why don’t you go on? He’s a widower. I think you should marry your banker.”
“He is old enough to be my grandfather. Besides, he would never marry beneath his station.” Linnea lowered her voice to the lowest of agitated whispers. “Dang it, Jewell, I’m pushing my luck simply asking Mr. Reston for a job, since he knows about my husband’s untimely demise.”
“What if Mr. Kincaid discovers the weak points in your charade?”
Linnea sighed. “I guess, well . . . I suppose if things don’t work out, I can catch the next coach for New Mexico. My ticket is validated to there.”
“You don’t know much about polite society, even though you seem to think you do.” Jewel shook her head of finely textured, straight black hair that looked like it had been cut with a dull knife. “You can’t play with a gentleman’s emotions for a week, then leave with your reputation intact. You’d have another mark against you when you got to Clovis.” She paused before adding, “Surely you’re educated enough to understand what I’m saying.”
Linnea tried to swallow the panic that seized her throat. “Look, Jewel. I’m not planning to reside at the High Hopes Ranch until after the nuptials. From all Mr. Kincaid and his uncle have written, he can certainly afford to humor me. I’m sure he won’t mind putting me up in the hotel you plan to stay in until you can marry Mr. Craig. The Antlers, I believe you called it.”
“Got it all figured out, have you?”
“Jewel, it took selling Mr. Powell’s horse and saddle—all I had remaining—to pay off his debts and to survive these past months. I—”
“I bet you could sell those cameos for a pretty penny.”
“They are not for sale.”
“You think wearing jewels will hide your flaws?”
“I wear this jewelry to remember Miz Myrtie. She was like a grandmother to me. I was deeply touched that she cared enough to remember me in her will.”
“Just because you hobnobbed with your betters doesn’t mean you’ll convince Mr. Samson Kincaid that you graduated from the Heaven’s Gate School for Young Ladies, same as Ermentrude.”
“I have to convince him. Most gentlemen expect a dowry. He won’t.”
“I don’t care if it is hard to find a marriageable lady out on the plains. My dear fiancé described Ermentrude’s man as ‘tall, dark, handsome, and well fixed.’ Considering you aren’t the prettiest girl in the state of Texas, you should set your sights lower.”
There wasn’t much Linnea could do about her looks, but surely she wasn’t that awful. Furthermore, the wafer-thin Jewel didn’t have room to talk. She looked like she’d never partaken of the meals she’d cooked at the school. Of course, with her mouth of bucked and crooked teeth, she had a lot easier time running her mouth than using it to chew food.
Linnea had had enough of her tormentor’s upper hand. “Bite your tongue. Those men are lucky to have us. You can cook and work hard as the foreman’s wife, and I will make a proper home for the ranch owner. I do plan to give our marriage all that I can give.”
“You have a nerve is all I can say.”
“I may not be Venus de Milo, but I doubt we’re going to Adonis and Atlas. Anyhow, I don’t care about my man’s looks. I need shelter and security. Tall, dark, a
nd handsome aren’t as important as strength of character.”
“So you want a gentleman you can lie to?”
“Dadgum it, Jewel, stop!”
The scarecrow jacked up a hoity-toity look. “I could tell him the truth. After all, I am the genuine article. Before Mr. Kincaid’s uncle wrote the school to ask for the hand of a lady not quite as young as the graduates, I served as chief cook and seamstress at the academy.”
“How nice for you,” Linnea came back, gritting her teeth.
“I could warn Mr. Kincaid that you are neither eighteen nor a virgin.”
You hateful witch! “I guess you’d get a lot of satisfaction, tattling on me.”
“You’ll tattle on yourself. Once he’s in, you’ll be out!”
Panicked, Linnea grabbed her unraveling plan. “Don’t be silly. He probably won’t even notice.”
Jewel Bellingham let out a bellow of laughter that displayed a number of her unfortunate teeth. Naturally, the laugh drew the attention of every diner in the place. “You simpleton,” she said as soon as the spectators lost interest. “Men can always tell.”
“How do you know?”
“Never you mind that. What I want to know is, what are you going to do when the subject comes up?”
I have no earthly idea!
She wanted to marry the Texan. She needed this woman’s help. What could she do to get Jewel on her side?
While her wifely arts might be lacking, Linnea had gained an education at the Academy of Hard Knocks. Instinct told her that Jewel Bellingham’s loyalty carried a high price. It might be fastened to the breast of Linnea’s one last traveling suit. “What if I were to give you this brooch?”
“My loyalty is not for sale.”
“I’m not trying to sell it. I am willing to give it to you as a gift. Would you be willing to show your gratitude by promoting my cause?”
“Never in my twenty-nine years have I owned a piece of jewelry . . .”
Already Linnea was loosening the catch. “Now you do.”
“I never . . . Oh! It is so beautiful!” Jewel reached for the brooch with one hand, her fingers crabbing around the treasure. “Oh, happy days! Thank you, Linnea. This is so sweet of you.”
Giving up her brooch was a great sacrifice, but . . .
At last, Linnea’s troubles were over.
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About the Author
Martha Hix is an internationally and multi-published, award-winning author. Living in the breathtakingly fabulous Texas Hill Country, she is blessed with a husband, two daughters and one son-in-law, their children, many friends, and relatives, and has a house filled with books and spoiled four-legged kids. She enjoys volunteering for good causes, and is an election judge and precinct chair for her county. She loves to hang out with her WINOS and Slacker girlfriends, and with her writing muse, Barbara Catlin.
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Previously published as Caress of Fire
SHE GOT WHAT SHE WANTED
Lisette Keller has always dreamed of opening up a millinery shop in Chicago. But first she has to get there. Taking a job as a cook on a cattle drive certainly wasn’t part of her dream, but then so wasn’t the iron-jawed rancher running the whole operation. Maybe it’s the way he wears his Stetson or the steely gaze underneath the brim drinking her in, but when he touches her, it’s like a dream she never wants to end . . .
HE FOUND WHAT HE NEEDED
When the spirited beauty applied for the cook opening, Gil McLoughlin was doubtful she could handle the long hot trail from Texas to Abilene. But he was also tempted by thoughts of what she could handle. Against his better judgment, he not only hires Lisette, but soon enough, under a starry night sky, he gives in to every temptation she lights up inside him. From that point on, where they’re heading no longer matters. Home had found them in their lasting embrace . . .
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SHE YEARNED FOR EXCITEMENT
Mariah Rose’s innocent fantasies of the wild west didn’t prepare the British beauty for the man she saw barreling out of the Texas brush—splendidly tall, overpoweringly masculine. . .and naked as the day he was born! Then the arrogant scoundrel had the audacity to appoint himself her gallant protector! He obviously had more than protecting her in mind, and Mariah steeled herself against his lusty charm. But it was impossible to keep her distance in this untamed paradise. . .especially when she found herself burning for his demanding kisses and yearning for his seductive caress!
HE ACHED FOR HER EMBRACE
The delectable Mariah enticed Whitman Reagor as no woman ever had—and the virile rancher had sampled the delights of many! But this time honor demanded that he resist temptation. He swore he’d escort the English enchantress safely across the rugged plains without touching a hair on her silken head. But when the curvaceous red head stole into his bed one moonlit evening, he couldn’t resist taking what she so willingly offered. He would learn all the secrets of her creamy flesh, savor the sweetness of her ruby lips...and share a lifetime’s worth of loving with his Wild Texas Rose.
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Table of Contents
About the Book
Books by Martha Hix
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chaper 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
His Make-Believe Bride Teaser
About the Author
The Cattleman Takes a Wife
Wild Texas Rose