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Beware of the Stranger

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by Janet Dailey




  Beware of the Stranger

  Janet Dailey

  An [ e - reads ] Book

  No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, scanning or any information storage retrieval system, without explicit permission in writing from the Author.

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

  Copyright 1978 by Janet Dailey

  First e-reads publication 1999

  www.e-reads.com

  ISBN 0-7592-0094-7

  Author Biography

  Janet Dailey was born Janet Haradon in 1944 in Storm Lake, Iowa. She attended secretarial school in Omaha, Nebraska before meeting her husband, Bill. Bill and Janet worked together in construction and land development until they "retired" to travel throughout the United States, inspiring Janet to write the Americana series of romances.

  In 1974, Janet Dailey was the first American author to write for Harlequin, her first novel was NO QUARTER ASKED. She has since gone on to write approximately 90 novels, 21 of which have appeared on The New York Times bestseller list. She has won many awards and accolades for her work, appearing widely on Radio and Television. Today, there are over three-hundred million Janet Dailey books in print in 19 different languages, making her one of the most popular novelists in the world.

  Other works in Janet Dailey’s Americana Series also available in e-reads editions

  Dangerous Masquerade

  Northern Magic

  Sonora Sundown

  Valley of the Vapours

  Fire and Ice

  After the Storm

  Difficult Decision

  The Matchmakers

  Southern Nights

  Night of the Cotillion

  Kona Winds

  The Travelling Kind

  A Lyon’s Share

  The Indy Man

  The Homeplace

  The Mating Season

  Bluegrass King

  The Bride of the Delta Queen

  Summer Mahogany

  Bed of Grass

  That Boston Man

  Enemy in Camp

  Giant of Mesabi

  A Tradition of Pride

  Show Me

  Big Sky Country

  Boss Man From Ogallala

  Reilly’s Woman

  Heart of Stone

  One of the Boys

  Land of Enchantment

  That Carolina Summer

  Lord of the High Lonesome

  The Widow and the Wastrel

  Six White Horses

  To Tell the Truth

  The Thawing of Mara

  Strange Bedfellow

  Low Country Liar

  Dakota Dreamin’

  Sentimental Journey

  Savage Land

  A Land Called Deseret

  Green Mountain Man

  Tidewater Lover

  For Mike’s Sake

  Wild and Wonderful

  With a Little Luck

  Darling Jenny

  Preface

  When I first started writing back in the Seventies, my husband Bill and I were retired and traveling all over the States with our home — a 34’ travel trailer — in tow. That’s when Bill came up with the great idea of my writing a romance novel set in each one of our fifty states. It was an idea I ultimately accomplished before switching to mainstream fiction and hitting all the international bestseller lists.

  As we were preparing to reissue these early titles, I initially planned to update them all — modernize them, so to speak, and bring them into the new high-tech age. Then I realized I couldn’t do that successfully any more than I could take a dress from the Seventies and redesign it into one that would look as if it were made yesterday. That’s when I saw that the true charm of these novels is their look back on another time and another age. Over the years, they have become historical novels, however recent the history. When you read them yourself, I know you will feel the same.

  So, enjoy, and happy reading to all!

  Introduction

  Introducing Janet Dailey’s AMERICANA. Every novel in this collection is your passport to a romantic tour of the United States through time-honored favorites by America’s First Lady of romance fiction. Each of the fifty novels is set in a different state, researched by Janet and her husband, Bill. For the Daileys it was an odyssey of discovery. For you, it’s the journey of a lifetime.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Beware of the Stranger

  Chapter One

  SAMANTHA’S FINGERS punched relentlessly at the typewriter keys. A furrow of concentration formed between her dark eyebrows and the line of her mouth was grim with determination. Regardless of her efforts, she couldn’t achieve any speed with the manual typewriter. She might as well have been pecking the keys with one finger. Her little finger missed the “a” in “Yale” and the typed word became “Yle.”

  Sighing impatiently, Samantha reached for the eraser, nearly worn out from frequent use. The image of the sleek electric typewriter at home flitted wistfully through her mind. If only she could bring it to work, she thought, and immediately shelved the idea. An expensive model like that would raise too many eyebrows and too many questions.

  The eraser gouged a hole in the paper, completely obliterating the error. “Damn!” Samantha muttered in exasperation, and ripped the sheet from the carriage.

  “Problems?” The question was loaded with good-natured ribbing.

  Samantha shot the dark-haired girl a quelling look. “None that a little manual dexterity wouldn’t cure. Why don’t you lend me some of yours, Beth? You can afford it.”

  The snappish reply carried a trace of envy. There wasn’t a machine in the place that Beth couldn’t operate with lightning speed and efficiency. It didn’t matter whether it was a manual or an electric typewriter, a copy machine or the teletype in the adjoining news wire room.

  “Poor Sammi,” Beth laughed. “Why don’t you try the one-finger, hunt and peck method? Mr. Lindsey has used it for years.” Referring to their mutual boss and the owner-editor of the newspaper.

  “This is one reporter who’s going to be a speedy typist — even if I have a mental breakdown first,” Samantha grimaced, but her sense of humor had returned, however wryly.

  “What are you working on?” Beth ignored the comment except for a faintly sympathetic smile that touched her lips. “I’m not busy. Maybe I can type it for you?”

  “No, thanks.” Samantha shook her head firmly, thick, luxurious seal-brown hair rippling about her shoulders. “It’s the Around and About column. It’s so dull you’d fall asleep before you were half-done. I wish Har — Mr. Lindsey would let me spice it up a bit.” She quickly corrected her near reference to their boss by his first name.

  Beth wrinkled her nose. “How could you ever spice up that boring column? ‘Mrs. Carmichael’s daughter Susan was home for the weekend.’ ‘Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bradshaw entertained guests from out of state.’ ” She irreverently mimicked the type of copy that appeared in the column.

  “It would be easy,” Samantha asserted, “if I were allowed to do a little snooping. Take this item about Frank Howard, our esteemed attorney and Yale graduate, who had one of his former classmates spend the weekend. It
just happens that this former classmate applied for the position of District School Superintendent and Frank Howard just happens to be chairman of the school board. Now if that doesn’t smack of political maneuvering and collusion, nothing does.”

  “Really?” Beth breathed, her eyes widening at that piece of gossip. “But no one’s been offered the position yet?”

  “Not yet,” Samantha agreed dryly. “But I doubt if anyone else will get it other than our chairman’s friend and fellow alumnus.”

  “Does the boss know?”

  “Yes.” She inserted a new sheet of paper into the typewriter and turned her disgruntled expression to her notes. “And he reminded me that he doesn’t print that type of column.”

  Harry Lindsey had said a bit more than that. Samantha had listened to his twenty-minute lecture concerning the diplomacy needed to operate a small-town newspaper. He had pointed out that any of the innocent items in the column could be turned, through conjecture and supposition, into juicy gossip, a fact Samantha was well aware of.

  He had also forcefully pointed out that these same people who liked to see their names in print in the innocent column were generally business people in the community. The same business people he relied on to run advertisements in his newspapers and provide him with an income to keep the newspaper going. And a good editor didn’t offend his clients just to sell copies unless there was ample justification. A little political back-scratching did not fall into that category unless there was fraud or criminal intention involved.

  It was a statement Samantha couldn’t throw stones at for fear one of them would boomerang. Her father did plenty of back-scratching. It was his considerable influence that had obtained her this job with Harry Lindsey for the summer. She had wanted to learn the basics of newspaper reporting, and what better place to do it than on the staff of a small-town newspaper? With this experience and a diploma in journalism that would be in her hands at the end of her next college year, Samantha was confident that she could get a job with a big publication. Her ambition was to become one of the best investigative reporters around.

  But realistically, Samantha sighed, she had to concede the wisdom of Harry’s attitude. For the time being, she would simply have to stem the instinctive urge to delve below the surface of a given situation. Her natural curiosity could run free later when she had achieved her ambition.

  It wasn’t a goal she talked about too much. Few people she knew would understand her desire. Most of her female classmates and even her co-workers on the paper, such as Beth, still considered work of secondary importance. Their first ambition was to find a man, with luck, to marry, There were one or two who were as dedicated as Samantha was to the pursuit of their careers, but each one also planned to have a man to share in her future.

  At twenty-two, Samantha had few illusions left about men, at least as far as she was concerned. She didn’t hate them or even dislike them. Samantha had simply faced the fact that there never could be “one” man in her life.

  It wasn’t that she was repulsive to look at — quite the contrary. Her freshly scrubbed, wholesome features were quite pleasing to the eye. There was even a suggestion of sensuality to the curve of her lips. The brown of her eyes, the same richly dark shade as her hair, sparkled often with animation and a zest for life. There was a frankness to their expression that was decidedly fresh and appealing. Her eyes didn’t know how to be coy and flirt. Occasionally there was a glimmer of shrewdness in the warm brown depths, an inheritance from her father and a trait that Samantha intended to put to use in her chosen career.

  The truth was that she was every man’s ideal of a perfect sister. It was a backhanded compliment received so often that it had lost its sting. That could have been overcome with the right man. But Samantha doubted that there was a man alive who could overcome her biggest obstacle.

  This summer’s charade had pointed that out to her. Being a new female face in a small town had attracted a lot of male attention to Samantha. Most of it was dissolved by her sisterly looks. At a local dance, she had overheard her date being teased that it must be like kissing his sister when he took her home. It was the last time the man had asked her out.

  The few, very few, who had remained attentive would run to the hills the minute they found out she was Reuben Gentry’s daughter, Samantha knew. She had discovered very early in life that the male ego was too fragile. Men weren’t willing to marry a woman whose father would overshadow them their entire lives. Unless they wanted to share in the wealth and power he commanded, and Samantha wanted no part of that kind of man. Thanks to the shrewd perception she had inherited from her father, she usually spotted that kind the instant she met them and steered clear.

  For a while Samantha had thought if she could find a man as powerful and wealthy as her father, she wouldn’t have to worry about the problem of being Reuben Gentry’s daughter. She had even been engaged to such a man when she was eighteen, but it had lasted only a month. She had found out two things. One was that money always wants more money and her fiancé considered their engagement more of a business alliance with her father. And secondly, she didn’t love the man.

  The broken engagement had also brought an end to any plans for a man in her life — at least in the singular. In time she would probably have affairs with men. She was a red-blooded woman with physical needs, too. It was even possible that she would fall in love with someone, but it wouldn’t last — Samantha knew that. She loathed the terms “spinster” and “old maid.” She preferred to think of herself as a confirmed “bachelorette.” In these liberated times there was nothing to be ashamed of in not being married.

  Reuben Gentry had always silently understood the burden she carried as his daughter. Only once had he said anything about it, and that had been after her engagement was broken and Samantha had explained why she had done it. He had suggested that she might prefer some anonymity, hinting that he wouldn’t object if she changed her name.

  Samantha had refused outright, declaring, “I’m not ashamed of who I am!”

  Her cheeks dimpled slightly as Samantha concealed a smile. Only for this summer had she concealed her identity, wanting to work for the small newspaper without the usual notoriety that followed her. The smile continued to play about the corners of her mouth. Only minutes ago she had been wanting to spice up the column with a bit of gossip. And she was the biggest story in the entire town. Imagine how everyone would be set back on their heels if they found out that the innocuous Samantha Jones was really the Samantha Gentry!

  “What are you smiling about?” Beth wanted to know.

  Samantha let her mouth curve into a full smile. “Just imagining the readers’ reactions if I actually printed the truth,” she replied, without explaining further her exact meaning.

  Beth shrugged, not finding the idea nearly as humorous as Samantha did. She continued flipping through the magazine lying on her desk and stopped turning pages when a particular article caught her interest.

  “Here’s my horoscope for the month,” Beth said aloud and began reading it. “’June will be a calm month with plenty of warmth and laughter. Weekends will mean pleasant jaunts but not too far from home. Your closest friends will be a source of joy.’ Nothing about weddings,” she sighed. She glanced over the rest of the page. “Here’s yours, Sammi. Do you want to hear it?”

  “I don’t care,” Samantha shrugged. She didn’t put any stock in horoscopes. To her they always seemed to be couched in words that could be interpreted any way the reader wanted.

  Her lack of enthusiasm didn’t deter Beth. “’June will be an uncertain month. Beware of strangers entering your life. They may not be what they represent. Check the facts before trusting your intuition. Travel is not recommended.’ ”

  “Wait until I tell the boss that,” Samantha laughed. “I’ve finally got him to agree to let me do a feature article on that lady celebrating her hundredth birthday in the next town, and now I’ll have to tell him I can’t do it because my horoscope
says travel isn’t recommended.”

  “He’ll be furious,” Beth agreed seriously.

  “Oh, honestly, you don’t really believe all that hogwash, do you?” Samantha declared with an incredulous shake of her head. She had been kidding, but Beth seemed to have taken her joke literally.

  There was a defensive tilt of Beth’s chin. “These forecasts are quite accurate.”

  “It depends on how you read between the lines,” Samantha muttered, a little surprised that someone as efficient and practical as Beth could be superstitious about astrology forecasts. Most of them were turned out as haphazardly as pieces of paper in a fortune cookie.

  But she wasn’t about to become embroiled in any discussion about the facts or fantasies of astrology. With a dismissive shake of her head, Samantha turned back to the paper in her typewriter and began punching away at the keys. Beth said no more, slightly offended by Samantha’s openly skeptical attitude toward something she half, if not completely, believed to be gospel.

  When the column was typed, Samantha removed it from the carriage and began double-checking the spelling of the names with her notes. The street door opened and Samantha glanced up automatically. The tall, dark-haired stranger who walked in caught and held her attention.

  Although Samantha had been living in the small town less than a month, intuition told her positively that the man was not a local resident. He was dressed casually in a forest green blazer and plaid slacks, nothing flashy nor overly affluent. His easygoing air wouldn’t attract attention, yet Samantha couldn’t shake the feeling that word would have reached her if there was such a man around. He wasn’t the kind anyone ignored.

  He walked directly to Beth’s desk, which, besides being a reception desk, doubled as the classified advertisement section. Behind his relaxed attitude, Samantha sensed an uncanny alertness. The smooth suppleness of his stride suggested superb physical condition. Beneath the jacket, she guessed that the breadth of his shoulders tapering to a lean waist would confirm it.

 

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