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Of Rags and Riches Romance Collection

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by Dietze, Susanne; Griep, Michelle; Love, Anne




  Union Pacific Princess © 2017 by Jennifer Uhlarik

  The Right Pitch © 2017 by Susanne Dietze

  A Gift in Secret © 2017 by Kathleen Y’Barbo

  For Richer or Poorer © 2017 by Natalie Monk

  A House of Secrets © 2017 by Michelle Griep

  Win, Place, or Show © 2017 by Erica Vetsch

  The Fisherman’s Nymph © 2017 by Jaime Jo Wright

  The Gardener’s Daughter © 2017 by Anne Love

  A Tale of Two Hearts © 2017 by Gabrielle Meyer

  Print ISBN 978-1-68322-263-7

  eBook Editions:

  Adobe Digital Edition (.epub) 978-1-68322-265-1

  Kindle and MobiPocket Edition (.prc) 978-1-68322-264-4

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted for commercial purposes, except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without written permission of the publisher.

  Unless otherwise noted, all scripture quotations are taken from the King James Version of the Bible.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any similarity to actual people, organizations, and/or events is purely coincidental.

  Published by Barbour Books, an imprint of Barbour Publishing, Inc., P.O. Box 719,

  Uhrichsville, Ohio 44683, www.barbourbooks.com

  Our mission is to publish and distribute inspirational products offering exceptional value and biblical encouragement to the masses.

  Printed in Canada.

  Table of Contents

  Union Pacific Princess

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Epilogue

  The Right Pitch

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Epilogue

  A Gift in Secret

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Epilogue

  For Richer or Poorer

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Epilogue

  A House of Secrets

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Epilogue

  Win, Place, or Show

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  The Fisherman’s Nymph

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  The Gardener’s Daughter

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  A Tale of Two Hearts

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Union Pacific Princess

  by Jennifer Uhlarik

  Chapter One

  Hell-On-Wheels Railroad Camp, Dakota Territory October, 1867

  Dara … are you coming?”

  At her uncle’s call, Dara Forsythe followed her cousin Becca onto the rear platform of their private railcar. The sky pressed in, cold, gray, and dreary, just like her mood. The town—if she could call it such—was a collection of dingy canvas tents of varying sizes, heavy-laden wagons, and muddy paths.

  Her new home. No paved streets. No store windows. Goodness, not even a permanent building within sight. Her throat constricted.

  This was not Boston.

  People milled about, some waiting to meet the train, others scurrying between tents. She scanned every face. Nowhere did she see the one she longed for. Her heart sank.

  Papa had begged her to come west after her mother’s untimely death, and hoping to rekindle the bond they’d once shared, she agreed to leave the comfort of Boston and brave the journey west. Yet the niggling fear that things would never be the same was only perpetuated when she saw he wasn’t there to meet them. They’d sent word of their expected arrival. The least he could have done was be on time.

  A cool wind whipped around the passenger car, and Dara took the hand her uncle, Dr. William Chenoweth, offered, and descended to the mud below.

  “Let me help you, Matilde.” Uncle William assisted the pretty young freedwoman down the steps.

  “So this is it?” Matilde stepped close and eyed the camp.

  Becca looped her arm in Dara’s. “I knew this would be an adventure, but I never imagined it would be so … primitive.”

  Primitive. Yes, quite.

  “Don’t you fret none, Miss Dara.” Matilde smiled. “The dear Lord’ll make this turn out right.”

  Mute, Dara nodded at her friend.

  “I’ll gather the trunks. Then we’ll find Connor.” Uncle William turned toward the baggage car.

  “I’ll help you, Doctor William.” Matilde trotted after him.

  Dara hoisted her skirt from the mud and followed. Thank goodness Uncle William had agreed to leave his Boston medical practice to become a frontier doctor. Having him and Becca here would help ease her transition, and she’d be lost without Matilde. Thank You for them all, Lord.

  The one she missed most was Mama. How did one continue after such a crushing loss? Dara’s aunt Mary had died when Becca was three, leaving Becca with almost no memories of her. Dara, on the other hand, had lost Mama to illness just four months earlier at seventeen.

  “You look absolutely mortified.” Becca’s grip on her arm tightened. “Don’t worry. This place has to get better.”

  “The place is only part of it. I miss Mama.”

  Grief was her near-constant companion, threatening to drag her into a dark pit and never let go. The only time it didn’t plague her was when something triggered memories of her mother’s fortitude and spirit. Always graceful. Always a lady. Yet never one to back away from what was right. Those characteristics had pushed Mama to join the abolition movement before the war, she and Dara both working for the cause. If only she could emulate Mama’s traits, keep her character and spirit alive. But how in this backward place?

  Uncle William and Matilde stopped beside the baggage car, calling to one of the handlers inside. Dara steered Becca to an out-of-the-way spot. The air sparked with chatter and busyness. Men bustled around the freight cars, unloading crates. Dara sighed as an empty ache stole through her. This might be busy for the Dakota Territory, but it was interminably s
low compared with Boston.

  The chug of a steam engine diverted her attention, and she watched as the hulking machine backed toward the caboose. Mr. Marston and Mr. Adgate, the two richly dressed, distinguished gentlemen whom she’d met on the train, called orders to a few baggage handlers. The dust-clad workers transferred several large wooden crates labeled BLANKETS from the last freight car into the backs of several wagons. Once finished, the workers drove the wagons away, and Mr. Marston released the coupling arm that joined the freight car and caboose to the train. As she and Becca watched the process, a stout, slovenly giant stepped in front of them.

  “Ain’t never seen the likes of you two before.” He reeked of sweat and spirits.

  Becca’s cheeks paled. Dara made no response except to dart a glance toward Uncle William and Matilde. Gone.

  Heart hammering, Dara turned them away from the man and searched for Uncle William. Of course, neither he—nor Papa—were anywhere to be found.

  “I said …” He stepped in front of them again. “Ain’t seen you two around these parts before.”

  Trembling, she turned. “You’re being quite rude, sir.”

  “And you’re right pretty. Where you from?”

  How could Papa not have come to meet them? If he’d been here, this drunken scoundrel wouldn’t have had the opportunity to approach them. She faced him. “I will thank you to leave us alone.”

  An average-height man ambled their way, half an apple in one hand, a large knife and an apple slice in the other. She barely breathed as he lifted the slice to his mouth then wiped the blade on his pants.

  “You gonna answer me?” The drunken man’s bawling barely registered as the other man sheathed the knife and smiled around the bite of fruit.

  His warm brown eyes captivated her. “Pardon us.” Hissing steam and grinding metal nearly drowned his words as he guided the belligerent fellow away.

  Dara stared, slack-jawed, as the men exchanged words.

  Becca giggled. “Dara, close your mouth. You’ll draw flies.”

  Her cheeks warmed, and she clamped her mouth shut. The engine coupled to the caboose and freight car and chugged away from the makeshift train stop. When she focused again on their handsome rescuer, he patted the drunken man’s shoulder and sent him on his way. The brown-eyed man, perhaps in his middle twenties, was simply dressed. His clothes were neat but patched and well-worn. He was fairly clean with dark brown hair and clean-shaven face. A tattered slouch hat topped his ensemble.

  Maybe there was a bit of civilization to be found in this God-forsaken land after all.

  Still trembling, she smiled. “Thank you, sir. That was very kind of you.” Galloping hoofbeats pounded in the distance behind her.

  A charming smile spread across his face. “My pleasure, ma’am. No self-respecting Georgia boy’d let that fella accost such a fine pair of ladies.” He flicked a glance past her, eyes narrowing.

  Her brow furrowed. A Southerner?

  “Dara-girl!” The familiar voice boomed across the distance.

  Papa.

  He marched through the thinning crowd toward them. Dara grabbed Becca’s hand and darted toward her father.

  They’d barely gone five steps when something slammed into her, and she lurched face-first into the cold mud. With a startled cry, Dara reared back, trying to get up. Beside her, Becca also flailed in an attempt to rise. A weight crushed her farther into the goo.

  “Stay down!” The Southerner’s words twanged with urgency.

  A light flashed, and an earth-shattering concussion rocked her surroundings, sucking the oxygen away. Dara clamped her hands against her ears, too late to block the deafening roar.

  Debris rained down around Gage Wells as he huddled over the two young ladies. Something sliced across his back, and he sucked down lungfuls of acrid air. Beneath him, the young ladies trembled, eyes shut and mouths agape. Their muffled cries barely registered over the ringing in his ears.

  His heart pounded as he peeked at the empty boxcar where a horseman had thrown the lit bundle of dynamite. The remains of the wooden car sat cockeyed on its huge metal wheels, thick smoke billowing from its splintered shell. The caboose had fared little better. Gage’s vision swam. Facing front, he dropped his throbbing head against one of the young ladies’ shoulders.

  Dynamite? He wouldn’t grieve the loss of any train, but who in his ever-loving mind would light dynamite with folks so nearby? Especially to blow up an empty train car …

  Muscles shaking, Gage sat back on his heels, fire racing down his back as he braced his hands against his thighs. Frigid mud soaked through his pant legs as he fought to regain his bearings. All around them, mayhem reigned. People ran, some away from the danger, some toward it. Riderless horses fled, reins trailing and stirrups flapping. Only feet away, other townsfolk lay bleeding—maybe dead. Not what two fine young ladies needed to see. He should get them up, away from here.

  Gage stumbled to his feet, snatched his hat from the mud, and again settled his hands on his knees to steady quivering limbs. The world tilted. What was wrong with him? He touched the older girl’s elbow first, and she snapped one large blue eye open. The other young lady had a similar reaction.

  Lightning surged down his spine. “Can you get up?”

  Before either answered, a man crouched over the ladies. His voice was muffled as he helped the first girl from the mud. As he reached for the second, Gage really saw the fella. Muscular, blond, well dressed. Gage’s eyes widened.

  Connor Forsythe.

  His throat constricted. He wasn’t to be seen. Not by Forsythe nor anyone connected to the railroad. His self-assigned fact-finding mission depended on getting in, gathering his information, and slipping out before anyone grew wise.

  Gage hoisted himself straight and walked away, only his body rebelled. He tottered sideways, went to one knee, pushed back to his feet. He must collect his horse and ride out before everything was ruined.

  One more step, and both knees went soft. Gage crumpled into the cold, wet earth, blinked twice, and sank into velvety blackness.

  Chapter Two

  The scent of mud and—something sharp, bitter—filled Dara’s nostrils. Her heart hammered as strong hands pulled her up, set her on her knees, and wiped away the mud covering one side of her face. She blinked.

  “Papa?” She latched on to his coat with a talon-like grip.

  He mouthed something, though all she heard was the ringing in her ears. He pried her fingers loose then turned to Becca.

  Dara gaped. People ran in all directions. Chunks of wood and debris lay strewn around them. People—bodies—littered the ground. With legs as wobbly as a newborn foal’s, she turned toward the nearest one. A man. Bloodied. Facedown on the ground. Dara’s stomach dropped. Not just any man.

  The Georgia boy.

  “No.” She stumbled toward him. “Please, no.”

  As she neared the man, Papa dragged Becca into her path and drew them into a crushing hug. A hiccuping sob boiled from deep in Dara’s belly. She clung to Papa, though she peered past his shoulder to the man. The ringing faded, allowing distant shouts to filter into her consciousness. At the sound, she burrowed deeper into her father’s embrace.

  He finally drew back and spoke, his words far off, as if her ears were full of cotton.

  “What?” She rubbed one ear to clear it.

  “Are you injured?”

  Understanding dawned, and Dara took mental stock then shook her head. “No, Papa, but the man who saved us is.”

  He turned to her cousin. “Are you?”

  At Becca’s stunned head shake, Papa clasped Dara’s arm. “Where is William?”

  She closed her eyes to order her thoughts. “I don’t know. He and Matilde were gathering our luggage.”

  Glassy eyed, Becca looked toward the Southerner and clamped a hand over her mouth.

  “Papa, the man—”

  “I must find William.” He craned his neck, looking everywhere but at the body.

>   “The man, Papa. Please …” She tried to break free, but he held her arm.

  After a moment, he called out to a man who ran by. “Vickers! Take my daughter and my niece to Morty’s tent.”

  Vickers stopped short, gulped.

  Surely he wouldn’t leave her again. Heart in her throat, Dara slid up next to him. “Papa, we’ll go with you.”

  “No.” He drilled her with a glare then turned to the man. “Did you hear me?”

  “You sure you want me to take ’em to Morty’s?”

  “Was I not clear enough?”

  “Papa, please.” Dara pulled at his sleeve. “Let us stay with you.”

  The man nodded. “Plenty clear, sir.”

  “Take them straight there, and don’t leave their side. I’ll be along as soon as I can.” He disappeared into the fray.

  He’d actually left. Just like seven years ago. Only this time, Mama wasn’t here to pick up the pieces. What would Mama do at a time like this? Dara scanned the carnage around her.

  “Didn’t know Forsythe had any kin,” Vickers mumbled.

  The words pierced her like a well-aimed arrow. Just as she’d suspected—Papa had given no thought to Dara or her mother across these last seven years.

  Vickers hooked her elbow. “This way.”

  Once more, her gaze fell on the injured man, and wrenching her arm free, she scurried to his side. She knew exactly what her mother would do. She would help.

  “We’ll see to this man before I go anywhere.”

  Floating somewhere between slumber and wakefulness, Gage slowly became aware as pain webbed through his back and skull. Minutes ticked by before he roused fully, prying one eye open. He lay on his belly in a bed softer than any he’d ever experienced. Limbs uncooperative, he struggled to roll onto his back, pain lancing him with every movement. Finally successful, he lay still until he’d caught his breath.

  Ornately detailed wood tones enveloped the room. A richly upholstered chair sat beside the bed, and a costly looking crystal lamp shone softly from a small bedside table. Winter sunlight tried to penetrate heavy drapes lining the room’s left wall. A single door with a shiny brass knob stood ajar, revealing a narrow hallway with more drape-covered windows.

  Where was he?

  He’d never set foot in such a fancy place, much less slept in one. Give him his unadorned soddy or the simplicity of the Cheyenne camp instead of all this finery. Gage fumbled to push off the heavy quilt but stalled. His clothes were missing, replaced by bandages that covered much of his torso. He tugged the quilt to his chest. Where were his pants?

 

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