“Rail. I just want to get there and get everyone back here before all hell breaks loose.” Craig confided. “You know the main camp isn’t more than two weeks behind the surveyors in town.” Craig outlined his travel plans, to take the coach for the full-day drive to Kansas City, and take the rail the rest of the way to Boston. He’d telegraph Candace Shepherd the next day right before he left, so they could immediately begin the journey back to Abilene. From her letters, it seemed as though they didn’t have much in the way of belongings, so they wouldn’t need a wagon to get back.
“Well Sheriff,” Karl grinned at Craig. “You best be getting’ some sleep tonight. I’ll check in on Mark as the night wears on, just to make sure those yokels don’t give him trouble.” Craig knew that Karl was talking about the rail men, rather than the twin yokels they knew and loved. Karl snorted in derision. “I might just have to ask what the hell Junior said this time. Poor Bud, never starts the fight.” He shook his head.
“He is good at finishing them, though.” Craig replied. He stood up to go while Karl was still chuckling and muttering to himself, “there is that, all right, there is that.” Craig tipped his hat to Miss Eva and left the saloon while it was still civil and prayed that it stayed that way for the night. He trusted his men to keep order, but tonight, at least, he’d be better off with a few hours of sleep.
2. Candace
As she read the telegram, Candace reeled with a fairly even mixture of excitement and horror. She couldn’t believe that suddenly, after a score of letters that never made any direct statements about the state of their possible future together, Mr. Ferguson was on his way to collect them. The missive was short, but very clear. They were to pack only their clothes and most prized possessions, because he couldn’t be away from Abilene for long.
“I suppose a rancher can’t be away from his land for long.” Candace mused to herself as she hurried home from the dress shop to tell her brothers. Her mistress, Mrs. Brown, had been nothing but supportive of her, and had even slipped her two dollars on top of her last hours worked to help out. Candace had cried, and thinking about it brought tears to her eyes again. After she was forced to leave the textile mill, Mrs. Brown had taken her in and believed her story. After being called a liar and worse, it had been salvation to be given even the crumbs that Mrs. Brown could afford to pay.
Because of the shop-keep, Candace had been able to continue taking care of her brothers, Sill and Darren. She sighed. It would be easy enough to pack, as they had nothing but the clothes on their backs worth keeping, and even those were mostly questionable. Her skill with needle and thread had kept what little they had in good repair, if a little threadbare, and she prayed mightily that with her lack of a dowry, at least her handiness would speak to her value as a wife.
She had grown to respect Mr. Ferguson through his letters, which she felt were uncommonly detailed and pleasant for a man’s writing. She longed to see the open spaces he spoke of, no more coal choked air and streets that smelled of piss and booze. She hurried past the docks where her brothers had taken work as loaders. She spotted them immediately by their size. They were dwarfed by the rest of the men they threw cargo with, but more than one of the men had told Candace that they pulled the weight of men twice their size and never complained.
She was terribly proud of her younger siblings. She couldn’t wait until they were back in school like other boys their age, learning so that they didn’t have to be menial laborers for the rest of their lives. Farming seemed a respectable living, caring for the land and providing meat and grain for the tables of city-folk like her.
She waved in big arcs to get her brothers’ attention. One of the older dock workers saw her and sent the teens over to her. They hurried over, looking almost like twins now that Sill had begun growing at an astronomical rate. They also wore twin scowls as they approached her.
“What’s happened, Candace?” Darren inquired with worry in his voice. “Why aren’t you at work?” He looked her over as though checking for injuries. Candace waved the telegram in his face and squeaked with glee as he took it from her and read.
“Collect your pay at the end of your shifts, tomorrow we need to wash and pack, and then we’re leaving this place for good.” Sill smiled quietly, and Darren whooped and danced a jig in place.
“You did it, Sis.” He congratulated her. “I told you any man would be lucky to get a smart, handy woman like you!” He did another hop and a turn, and slapped his younger brother on the back. Sil’s smile widened, then faltered.
“You don’t think there will be trouble between now and then, do you?” Her youngest brother asked her. He was justified in his concern. The foreman that had tried to force himself on Candace had made her the villain when she defended herself, hitting him in the face with the shuttle from her loom. The police had even gone to Mrs. Brown’s shop looking for her, but her employer had told them she’d been fired and was gone already. Candace hid in the closet for a good thirty minutes after they’d left, she was so terrified.
“Don’t worry, Sill.” Candace comforted him. “Mrs. Brown said they’re probably not even looking for me anymore. It’s time for us to start over in a new place, where people treat each other differently than they do here.” Sill nodded and slipped his newsboy cap back over his raven curls.
“We best get back to work then.” He advised his older brother. “I don’t want them docking my last day’s pay!” Darren punched him in the shoulder with a laugh, and the two boys jogged back to the crew. A moment later, Candace heard a cheer go up from the dock workers, and saw one of them lift Sill onto his shoulder while the boy pumped his arms and cheered along. City people hadn’t all been bad, she thought to herself. She watched the celebration for a few more minutes before heading back to the tiny box they’d been living in.
She hung her bonnet on the hook behind the door and surveyed the living area. The furniture, sparse as it was, had been provided with the lease of the one-bedroom space. The dishes were hers, but it was no great sacrifice to leave them behind. She pulled her father’s old trunks out from under the bed. As she went through all their belongings, she realized that they would barely need both trunks for everything they owned. In fact, her greatest concern was to find them some decent traveling clothes. Candace would not let Mr. Ferguson’s first impression of her and her brothers be that they were dirty, or disheveled, even though frequently, the boys couldn’t seem to look any other way.
She took her earnings and rolled the bills up into a small leather pouch that her father had given her when she was just a little girl, to hide small treasures in. She carefully tied the pouch to a garter and slid it up high enough on her thigh that the pouch wouldn’t slip and wouldn’t make her walk funny. The coin she kept in her purse. Even though she still feared losing it, a thief would walk away with far less if they got her purse, but enough that they might not look for more.
She tied the bonnet under her chin again and set out, walking the distance to the clothier and carefully choosing two new pair of pants and two over shirts for each of the boys. For herself, she bought only a blouse and a newer clean bonnet. She could take in another of her mother’s old skirts tonight, and she had made herself a dress she’d never taken the opportunity to wear. She’d designed and sewn the dress at Mrs. Brown’s request. It had been her test of Candace’s skills, and when it was completed, the dressmaker had let her keep it.
By the time the brothers arrived home, Candace had begun packing away nonessential items. When she noticed the arrival of dusk and the lanterns being lit on the street below, she set aside her packing and began cooking supper for her boys. She had been drawn to the butcher on her way home from buying clothes, and against her better judgment, had let the friendly old Scot talk her into a length of hard sausage and a cut of roast. The price she’d paid for it all was highway robbery, but her brothers had stuck by her through her trials and she was excited to give them a treat.
The apartment smelled like heaven to the b
oys when they trudged in, tired from their long day of work, and smelling suspiciously of lager. Candace blocked the way to the table and sniffed Darren. She narrowed her eyes at him and glared until his face became flushed and he dropped his gaze.
“It was only a drop, Candace.” The lanky teen whined. “C’mon, it was our last day. The blokes just wanted to say goodbye.” He finished, sucking in a breath when Candace fisted her hands on her hips and stomped one small foot.
“There will be no more drinking. You hear?” She admonished them both. “We need to show our best selves to Mr. Ferguson when he arrives.” Both boys apologized, and Candace shooed them to the sink to wash up before she let them eat the small tender roast and potatoes she’d cooked for them. Without being asked, Sill helped with the dishes, while Darren collected the work shoes for all three of them and took them out to the tiny balcony to clean them.
Candace read to them by the light of a great, fat tallow candle she’d also splurged on that afternoon. It had been a long while since they’d spent money to have light in the evening, and both Sill and Darren curled up to listen as their older sister read from the serial novel, “Oliver Twist”. It had been a favorite from before their parents had died, and they had kept all twenty-four installments. Darren drifted off to sleep on the couch by the end of the first chapter, but Candace continued to read to her youngest brother until the candle was one quarter its former height.
She tucked Sill into his bedroll on the floor and made her way to the bedroom with what remained of the candle, tidying along the way. Her chest pressed tightly down about her heart as she considered the adventure they were about to embark on. Losing their mother had been terrible, but their father had held the family together, with help from then fifteen-year-old Candace. When he too had passed, it had taken every ounce of strength she possessed to care for her brothers and raise them right.
Now, she feared that although he had seemed quite friendly and amenable in their letters, Mr. Ferguson would see her and change his mind. She knew that some men had preferences as to the way their women should look, and she couldn’t believe that anyone would see her and think her beautiful. Her face was long, like her father’s, and she had his almond-shaped eyes, while her brothers had large round eyes like her mother. She did have the figure of her mother, only on a smaller scale. Her waist nipped in without the aid of a corset, and her hips were full enough that she only permitted herself the smallest of bustles on her dresses, if she chose to use one at all.
She tried to view her reflection in the old mirror by candlelight. The effect was ghastly, and she started and pinched the flame out, cursing her stupidity for scaring herself. Heart racing, she climbed into the rickety bed and tossed and turned before sleep finally settled over her. Her dreams were of a mysterious man who carried a star in his pocket, and protected her from harm with the strength and tenacity of a lion.
The next day raced past the little family as they rushed to prepare for their journey to the west. Candace cut the boys’ hair and they cleaned and packed as she took in her mother’s old skirts and hemmed her brothers’ new clothes to fit properly. The boys went out to the market to purchase supplies for the trip, and Candace baked bread and wrapped it neatly in cloth to keep it fresh until they needed it.
There was no reading on their last night in the hovel they called home. Exhausted from the packing and sheer nervousness, the three siblings crashed hard in their beds, makeshift or otherwise, and slept like the dead until morning.
While it was still early, a knock on the door made Candace jump. Excited, she rushed to answer it. “Maybe it’s a telegram from Mr. Ferguson, telling us he’s almost here!” She thought to herself as she quickly dried her hands on her apron and threw back the bolt. She opened the door and nearly slammed it shut again. Instead of a telegraph courier, standing on her doorstep was a tan, dark-haired man with a single flower in his hand and a cowboy hat on his head.
Candace gaped at the handsome man standing in front of her, looking bewildered. When she realized that she was staring, she swallowed hard and backed away from the door, looking over her shoulder at her brothers, who were both staring back at her expectantly. She faced the stranger again and steadied herself.
“Mr. Ferguson?” She murmured softly. A look crossed the man’s face that Candace couldn’t place. She feared that she’d embarrassed him and he was going to leave. Instead, the man smiled gently at her and reached out with the flower.
“Your picture truly didn’t do you justice, Miss. Shepherd,” He drawled in an accent that delighted Candace and gave her an indescribable feeling that made her blush prettily. She stepped back and let him into their home, experiencing another pang at the obvious distaste he had for their lodgings.
“It may not be much, Mr. Ferguson,” Candace chided him in her quiet, sweet voice. “It may even be awful to you that people live here. But we are grateful that we had a home at all, with the way things have been.” She stated, standing tall and pushing her shoulders back. Craig raised an eyebrow, and inclined his head in a small bow.
“I didn’t mean to offend you, girl.” Craig mentioned softly as he stepped into the cramped parlor space. “I would have come sooner if I had fully realized the extent of your hardship.” He apologized. Candace dropped her gaze. She hadn’t intended for him to see her living arrangements at all.
She twirled the large pink daisy in her hand. It was simple and sweet, and when she pressed it to her nose she could inhale the lightest, most delicate fragrance she’d ever discovered.
“We don’t have flowers like this here.” She commented as she watched her brothers size the older man up. “We don’t have anything that looks this wild, or unfettered, even in the parks.” She concluded. Craig looked at the brothers with arched eyebrows.
“You sure about that?” He asked with a wink and a smile. Sill smiled in response and stepped forward to shake his hand.
“It is nice to finally meet you.” Sill ventured, in his soft gravelly voice. “Candace has read to us from your letters.” He added. “I would very much like to see the ranch and all the animals.” Craig smiled in response.
“You must be Sill.” He replied, as the boy nodded vigorously. “Your sister mentioned in her letters that you have a knack for saving hurt animals.” He looked over his shoulder at Candace. “That’s a talent that comes in handy on a farm.” He turned to Darren, who looked on with his arms folded across his chest and a wary look in his eye.
“And that makes you Darren.” Craig made it a statement. He extended his hand to the boy and Darren slowly stepped forward.
“What did my sister tell you about me?” He asked, his arms still folded across his chest.
“Well, she said you care about how people are treated.” Craig replied. “I figure you might be a good man to have keep the peace someday.” Darren perked up at the words. “As my town’s sheriff, I can tell you, it takes a lot of care for others to do that job. Wearing the star isn’t about guns or arrests, so much as the people you keep out of worse trouble.” Craig suggested. He extended his hand further, and the reticent boy gave in and shook his hand.
“Did you hear that, Candace? He’s a sheriff! I bet he could take care of…” Darren’s voice trailed off at the terrified look Candace shot him.
“Now boys.” Candace spoke sharply. “It’s getting on time to go. What do we need to do, Mr. Ferguson?” She asked, her voice still soft, but her heart racing. “You never mentioned being a sheriff, Mr. Ferguson.” She added with a worried look on her face. Is there something I should know about?” Craig held his hands open in apology.
“Honestly, Miss, Shepherd,” He replied, “It simply wasn’t ever the part of my life that seemed interesting for letters.” He stated nonchalantly. “I love my land, and I guess the arrangement of marriage that we spoke of makes me able to do more with it. Talking about that just made me happy.” He finished, dropping his hands. He inhaled sharply at the change in her countenance as she processed his words.<
br />
Her face glowed with a slow, sweet smile, and Craig would have sworn on a bible that the entire room was suddenly filled with light. The girl who had answered the door was pretty, but the one he gazed upon now was nothing less than strikingly beautiful. Craig wondered how many ways he could find to make her smile at him that way again.
He composed himself and checked his pocket watch. They still had an hour to get to the station for their train to Kansas City. He’d found them an overnight passenger train, which would get him back to town that much sooner. Candace sent Darren to call for a carriage, and Craig helped the boys carry the trunks and few small pieces of luggage down from the humble apartment.
He marveled at how little they carried. Candace explained that they’d sold most of their belongings to keep out of debtors’ prison when their father died, so their move to Abilene was definitely a new beginning. At his look of concern, she quickly explained that they had saved their earnings and all planned on finding employment immediately upon arrival, so they wouldn’t be a burden to him.
“What?” He exclaimed in shock. “No wife of mine will be forced to work, and these boys will only do what they can after their schooling.” He admonished. “I wasn’t upset that you have so little because I will provide for you.” He added gently. “I was angry that you have had to go through so much, while grieving for your parents.” He shook his head and gave the brothers a wry smile. “You all will do just fine on a ranch, that’s for sure. You’ll likely think it a vacation, after what you’ve been up to on the docks.” Darren grinned at him in response, his enthusiasm hardly dimmed by his sister’s chiding voice declaring that “there wouldn’t be any drinking on the ranch for the boys, either.” Upon hearing that, Craig’s eyes, widened, and he winked at the young offenders.
The carriage driver clucked to his horses and flicked the reigns, and they were on their way. Sill had never ridden in a cab before, and he pushed back the small curtain and peeked out nervously. By carriage, it took thirty minutes to traverse the bustling city, and they arrived at the station with time to spare. Craig purchased tickets for all of them and they boarded the train after handing off their large trunks. In the small cases they carried with them were a change of clothes each and the bread and fruit Candace had put in oil cloth for the boys to snack on during the journey.
The Thanksgiving Day Bride: Mail Order Bride Novels Page 19