After sedate greetings, Grandpa yanked him into a mammoth hug and Woody exploded into laughter. Her family congratulated and teased the new “tata,” and Woody gave and received in kind.
Pride expanded her lungs, knowing her beloved made this possible. He, who often woke up on the floor, insisting he wasn’t yet used to a soft bed after sleeping at the boys’ shack. When all along she knew he’d gotten on his knees sometime in the night and fallen asleep praying for orphan children across the city still sleeping in cobblestoned alleyways.
While Ina presented the boys to her family, Woody gathered Ella against him with a wink. “Kocham Cię kochanie.”
She pressed a kiss to his jaw, replying in English, “I love you, too.” How blessed she was to have a man who put his faith into action. Her thumb traced his knuckles. Maybe it wasn’t possible for them to rescue all the lost boys and girls in New York and New Jersey, but …
Or was it? With God, nothing shall be impossible….
Natalie Monk is a member of the American Christian Fiction Writers and is represented by Tamela Hancock Murray of the Steve Laube Agency. A country girl from the time she could shimmy under a string of barbed wire, Natalie makes her home in south Mississippi, where she proudly wears the label “preacher’s kid.” She is a homeschool graduate, piano instructor, and former post hole digger. She loves porch swings, old-fashioned camp meetings, and traveling with her family’s singing group. Her goal in writing, and in living, is to bring glory to her Savior, Jesus Christ. Come chat with her on her website: www.nataliemonk.com.
A House of Secrets
by Michelle Griep
Dedication
To the One who knows the secrets of my soul.
Acknowledgments
Thank you to those who polish my stories to a fine sheen:
Elizabeth Ludwig, Ane Mulligan, Julie Klassen, MaryLu Tyndall, Shannon McNear & Chawna Schroeder.
And a huge shout out to you, readers, who make this all worthwhile.
Chapter One
St. Paul, Minnesota 1890
He’s late. Are you worried?”
The question floated across the sitting room like an unmoored specter, haunting Amanda Carston about the constancy of her fiancé. A smile quirked her lips. Good thing she didn’t believe in ghosts.
“Come away from the window, Mags. Watching for Joseph won’t make him appear any sooner.” She rose from the settee, smoothing wrinkles from her gown. “He’ll be here.”
Maggie turned from the glass, letting the sheer fall back into place. “But it’s your engagement dinner. And the Pioneer Press photographer will be there. How can you possibly be so calm?” She drew near and pressed her fingers against Amanda’s forehead. “Are you feeling ill?”
“Don’t be silly.” Amanda batted her hand away, frowning. Being late for a dinner party was the least of her concerns this weekend. Coming up with a service project idea by Monday—her first as the new Ladies’ Aide Society chairwoman—vexed her more.
Maggie’s brow creased. “You are worried. Don’t pretend.”
Slamming the lid on her chairwoman woes, she smiled at her friend. “I am sure Joseph’s aunt is used to delaying a meal even with important guests in attendance. A city attorney’s schedule is rarely predictable.”
“Ahh, but it’s not his aunt who alarms me.” Light from the gas lamps glistened on the pity filling Maggie’s eyes. “What of your father, dearest?”
This time doubt didn’t float in. It fell heavy on her spirit like a tempest, and her smile faded. Father would be disappointed at her tardiness. But truly, they all would have been late if he’d had to swing by from the office to pick up her and Mags. Must something always thwart her efforts to please her father?
She whirled and strode from the sitting room. “Let’s bundle up so we may leave for Aunt Blake’s as soon as Joseph arrives.”
Maggie’s footsteps echoed into the foyer, and by the time they slipped into their cloaks and secured their hats with a final pinning in front of the big mirror, the knocker pounded against the door.
“No need to trouble yourself, Grayson.” Her words halted the butler’s trek down the grand staircase. “I’m certain it’s Mr. Blake. Don’t expect us until late.”
Ignoring his scowl and his “highly improper,” she swung open the door to the man of her dreams—
And a police officer.
“Joseph?” she murmured.
A smile flashed across his face, brilliant in the dark of the October eve. He reached for her hand and pressed a kiss against the back of her glove, the heat of his mouth warming the fabric. “Don’t panic, my love. Just a bit of business left over from the office. Please allow me to introduce Officer Keeley. Officer, my fiancée, Miss Amanda Carston.” He leaned in scandalously close, breathing warmth into her ear. “Soon to be Mrs. Joseph Blake.”
She arched a brow, unsure if she ought to censure him or wrap her arms around him. Instead, she nodded at Keeley. “Pleased to meet you, Officer.”
He tugged the brim of his hat. “The pleasure is mine, Miss Carston.”
Behind her, Maggie cleared her throat.
“My apologies, Miss Turner.” A sheepish grin curved Joseph’s mouth. “May I introduce you as well? Miss Turner, meet Officer Keeley. Officer Keeley, Miss Turner, my fiancée’s confidante and partner in crime.”
Amanda stepped closer to Joseph, speaking for his ears alone. “Does your aunt know to set another place?”
He winked down at her. “The officer won’t be joining us for dinner. He’s along to help me attend to an unfinished matter beforehand. Now shall we?”
He offered his arm and Amanda wrapped her fingers around his sleeve. Unfinished business? Whatever it was must be important, but tonight of all nights? She puzzled over the mystery until the feel of his muscles riding hard beneath her touch drove her to distraction. Inhaling his familiar fragrance of sandalwood and ink, she was hard-pressed to figure out which made her more weak-kneed—the intimacy of knowing his scent, or his husky voice caressing her ear.
“You look lovely tonight,” he whispered.
Her cheeks heated. Good thing Maggie and the officer walked ahead—and what a pair they made. Him tall. Her short. A canyon of difference between a suit of blue and the golden gown of a railroad tycoon’s daughter.
Joseph helped her into the carriage, and she settled next to Maggie, the men on the opposite seat. The driver urged the horses from the circular drive on to Summit Avenue, and just as she opened her mouth to ask Joseph about his unfinished business, the carriage turned left.
Left?
She peered out the window. Indeed, they headed east, not west, rolling past the old Grigg place. Despite being in the company of a strapping fiancé and a lawman, she shuddered at the eerie sight. At the front of the lot, half-burned timbers reached into the night sky, dark on dark, like blackened bones trying to escape from a grave. Beyond the remnants of the gatehouse stood the ruins of a once-grand home, bricks holding in secrets like a jealous lover, guarding rumors of foul play. If the city were going to do nothing about this blight, then maybe … perhaps …
The seed of a glorious idea took root. This just may be the service project she’d been looking for. Indeed, the more she thought on it, the larger the idea grew.
Until the carriage turned left yet again. She squinted into the darkness as they traveled farther from their engagement announcement. “This isn’t the way to your aunt’s.”
“No, it isn’t. As I’ve said, a small bit of business first. Merely a short detour.”
Joseph’s words pulled her gaze to him. “Where are we going?”
“To Hannah Crow’s.”
Amanda’s jaw dropped. Maggie gasped, her fingers fluttering to her chest. Officer Keeley took a sudden interest in looking out the window. Clearly he was in on this—whatever this was.
“Joseph Blake!” she scolded. “Why on earth are you taking us to a brothel?”
Like an arc of lightning, blue-tinged
and life threatening, the flash in his fiancée’s eyes struck Joseph—with humor. The little firebrand. He stifled a grin. He could get used to such passion, but he sure hoped not. Her fiery spirit was what attracted him to her in the first place.
“I thought you might like to see the culmination of a year’s worth of work,” he said.
“Mr. Blake.” Amanda’s friend clutched her hands to her chest, eyes wide. “Surely you’ve never set foot in such a place?”
Amanda studied him a moment more, then leaned sideways, lips twisted into a smirk. “Don’t fall for his dramatics, Mags. He’s playing us with as much finesse as his violin.”
Keeley elbowed him. “You’ve met your match in that one, sir.”
Indeed. Why was God so good to him? He folded his arms and relaxed against the seat, memorizing how the passing streetlights bathed half of Amanda’s face in golden light, the other dark. The contrast was a perfect picture of what lay beneath … pluck and humility. Softness and steel.
“I suppose she’ll suit,” he drawled.
She swatted his knee. “You, sir, are a scoundrel.”
He caught her hand before she could pull it away and kissed her fingertips. “Ahh, but I am your scoundrel, hmm?”
Color deepened on her cheeks. “Not if we never make it to our betrothal dinner. Father could always change his mind, you know.”
Joseph rapped the carriage wall, urging the driver to up his pace, then faced Miss Turner. “My soon-to-be wife is somewhat used to my unorthodox ways, but I can see you are not. In answer to your question, Miss Turner, while I am well versed in Hannah Crow’s business, I have never entered her establishment. My aim is to shut her down, and I’ve finally found a way. That’s why Officer Keeley is with us tonight.”
“Wonderful news!” Amanda beamed at him—a smile of which he’d never tire.
Miss Turner frowned, eyeing the policeman. “Are you expecting trouble?”
“Don’t fret, miss.” Keeley tipped his head at her. “I’m merely a formality, a witness to the delivery of a document.”
The grind of cobbles beneath the wheels changed to a gravelly crunch as the carriage eased off Summit and onto Washington Street. Miss Turner balanced a hand against the side of the carriage as they lurched around a corner, or did she clutch it for courage? Amanda’s gaze found his, and he searched the blue depths. Was she afraid as well?
Nothing but clear admiration blinked back. “I am so proud of you, even if your timing is a bit off.”
Law and order! With regard such as this, he could conquer more than a brothel—he could take on the world. He leapt out of the carriage before it stopped and patted his coat to make sure the injunction still rode inside his pocket. This was it. Finally. A night he wouldn’t soon forget.
He and Keeley climbed the stairs to Crow’s House of Hair. Hair products, of all things. The sign, the business, the audacity fooled no one. More went on behind those velvet drapes than the production and distribution of supposed growth elixirs—and everyone knew it. Sorrow punched him hard in the gut for the women trapped inside, chained by desperation and lost hope. He bit back a wince. The thought that Elizabeth had died as such nearly drove him to his knees.
He swallowed against the tightness in his throat and reached to ring the bell, but his finger hovered over the button. Something wasn’t right. Lifting his face, he narrowed his eyes above the doorframe. The House of Hair sign was gone.
Keeley nudged him. “What are you waiting for?”
Exactly. So what if the sign was missing? He shook off a foreboding twinge and punched the button.
No answer.
He stabbed his finger on it again.
And … nothing.
Keeley shouldered past him and pounded the door so that it rattled in the frame. “Open up! We know yer in there. Don’t make me bust down this—”
The door swung open. A glass chandelier rained beams of light onto a woman buttoned tight from toe to neck. Hannah Crow could be anyone’s saintly aunt. Prim and proper on the outside—but that gray silk encased wickedness and greed.
Joseph stared at her angular face, refusing to look past her. One glimpse of a young girl tangled in her web would undo him, despite standing on the brink of this victory. Even so, loss clenched his jaw.
Oh, Elizabeth. Would that you’d been able to escape such a fate.
“Mr. Blake.” Mrs. Crow dipped her head, a nod toward respectability—the closest she’d ever get. Then her dark gaze glittered, little lines spidering out at the creases of her eyes. “Bit late for you to be calling. Is this business or pleasure?”
“Entirely my pleasure.” He handed over the injunction.
Hannah’s eyes scanned back and forth, top to bottom, and in case she didn’t understand all the legal jargon, Joseph added, “According to a recent addition to ordinance 245.1, your conditional use variance is null and void. In essence and practicality, madam, this is the end of your business.”
“Well, well …” She lifted the paper high and released the document to the October breeze.
Keeley growled. “Even if that paper blows to kingdom come, Mrs. Crow, I seen you take it. I seen you read it. I’ll swear to that in court.”
She smiled at him as she might a mark with no money, her chipped eyetooth reminding Joseph of a sharpened fang. “No need, Officer. There will be no hearing. That ordinance means nothing to me. My home is no longer a business, just a humble abode.”
A genuine smile tugged at Joseph’s lips. “Nice try, Mrs. Crow, but that won’t help you. This property is zoned for business, so either way, you’re finished.”
Her hand disappeared inside a pocket, and she pulled out a folded document, offering it to him with a feline stretch.
What sorcery was this? He yanked the paper open. Snippets of phrases pummeled him back a step. Emergency city council meeting. Dated the previous day. Zoning changed to residential. Signed by Willard Craven.
A slow burn ignited, from stomach to throat. Craven! He should’ve known.
Wheeling about, he stalked toward the carriage and called over his shoulder, “We’ll see about this.”
And he’d have to—or he’d be out of a job by month’s end, his sister’s death still unavenged.
Chapter Two
Most of the shameless maples had already disrobed for their coming marriage to winter, but a few discreet maidens refused to shed their orange and red leaves. Amanda lifted her face and relished the spot of colorful brilliance in front of the ruined Grigg house. Surely if God created such beauty in the midst of ashes, He could do anything … like help her—for surely it would take heavenly assistance to accomplish the plan she was about to undertake.
A small flame of guilt kindled in her heart, and she closed her eyes. Forgive me, Lord. For indeed, He already had helped her at dinner last Friday night. Not a miracle of Red Sea proportions—for Father had been snappish over her tardiness. But at least he’d not made too big of a scene, especially when Joseph took full responsibility for their lack of punctuality.
Behind her, carriage wheels rolled to a stop, and her eyes popped open, pulling her back to the present. Was she ready for this?
“This is an interesting venue for our Ladies’ Aide Society meeting.” Maggie’s voice turned her around.
Her friend’s glance drifted to the burnt gatehouse. She crossed the boulevard and stopped on the drive next to Amanda. “What are you up to?”
Direct as always—which is what she loved most about Mags. No guile. No secrets. Amanda smiled. “I had a wonderful idea.”
Maggie’s lips pulled into a pout. “If it involves the Grigg house, then it might be your last idea as chairwoman. The place is positively haunted.”
A parade of lacquered carriages rolled up the street, one by one stopping to let out an array of colorful gowns. One in particular was more stunning than the rest.
Maggie shook her head. “I’m surprised Lillian agreed to meet here.”
“She didn’t … exact
ly.”
Maggie pulled her gaze from the women swarming their way. “How did you manage that?”
She shrugged. “I sent a note to her driver, along with a little incentive.”
Maggie’s brows drew together. “I hope you know what you’re doing, dearest.”
Her breath caught in her throat. So did she.
Lillian Warnbrough, one part peacock, the other lioness, led the remaining nine members of the Ladies’ Aide Society to a standstill in front of Amanda. Without so much as a ‘good afternoon,’ she started right in. “I demand to know why we are meeting outdoors like common laborers.”
This was it. Lord, give me strength. Amanda stiffened her shoulders—and her resolve—then flashed a smile. “Ladies, I have a surprise for you.”
Lillian faced Amanda with a thundercloud of a scowl. “Do not tell me you’re thinking of holding the fall festival here.”
“No, of course not.” It was a struggle, but she held onto her smile, albeit tightly. “I’ve found our next project, the Grigg home.”
Lillian sniffed, the closest she ever came to an outright snort. “I hardly think removing a blight in our neighborhood would be looked kindly upon by the”—she waved her hand toward downtown—“less fortunate.”
Her smile slipped. The only type of aid Lillian liked to supply was that which benefited her. Amanda bit the inside of her cheek lest unkind words slide out with her proposition.
Counting to ten, she smoothed her skirts before she spoke. “I suggest we renovate, not remove. While it’s true we’ve helped the poverty stricken with their housing, I feel there is more work to be done. And aid is what our society is all about, is it not?”
Of Rags and Riches Romance Collection Page 28