An Unexpected Surprise © 2002 by Rosey Dow
Ribbon of Gold © 2002 by Cathy Marie Hake
Light Beckons the Dawn © 1999 by Susannah Hayden
The Reluctant Schoolmarm © 2005 by Yvonne Lehman
School Bells and Wedding Bells © 2005 by Colleen L. Reece
Rose Kelly © 2006 by Janet Spaeth
Print ISBN 978-1-62836-910-6
eBook Editions:
Adobe Digital Edition (.epub) 978-1-63058-540-2
Kindle and MobiPocket Edition (.prc) 978-1-63058-541-9
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.
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
An Unexpected Surprise
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Ribbon of Gold
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Light Beckons the Dawn
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
The Reluctant Schoolmarm
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
School Bells and Wedding Bells
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Rose Kelly
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
About the Authors
AN UNEXPECTED SURPRISE
by Rosey Dow
Chapter 1
Long and low, the sound of the train’s whistle reached the depot well ahead of Engine 826. Angie McDonald shaded her eyes against the glare of sun on snow to peer across the South Dakota prairie. The winter of 1872 promised to be a cold one, though it was still a month away.
“There it is!” twelve-year-old Judy Phillips cried, pointing at a growing black plume parallel to the horizon.
“Calm down,” Angie told her blond niece, who was bouncing beside her under the eaves of the station house. “It’ll be ten minutes before she gets here.”
Judy stared at the tintype photograph in her gloved hand. Her head came just above Angie’s shoulder. “I hope she’s as nice as she looks in her picture.” She rose up on her toes, anxiously watching her aunt’s face. “What if she’s mean? What if we don’t like her? What if she doesn’t like Papa?”
Angie pushed several strands of dark hair from her cheeks back under her bonnet. She put an arm around Judy and gave a gentle squeeze. “If things don’t work out, we’ll send dear Mrs. Dryden on her way.”
“But what if Papa likes her, and we don’t? I’m so scared.” She tilted her freckled face toward the sky and squeezed her eyes shut. “Why did we do this?”
Angie gave the child a little shake. “Because we’re desperate, that’s why. Don’t go weak-kneed on me now. We’ve been planning this for months. We’ve got to see it through.”
“What if she talks to Papa about the love letters she thinks he wrote her?”
“She won’t. Not if we handle it right.”
Sparks flying, the iron horse screeched to a halt next to the tiny clapboard station. Angie and her charge stepped away from the building, shivering inside their wool coats and shawls—partly from the piercing breeze and partly from sheer nervousness. It was one thing to devise a scheme and quite another to meet it at the station.
The anxious pair watched five people step down to the platform before they spotted their guest. Saundra Dryden looked just like her picture. A blond, buxom German immigrant in black cape and bonnet, she stood two inches taller than Judy. Her clothes were not expensive; yet she had an elegance about her that was hard to define.
The woman turned expectantly when Angie said, “Mrs. Dryden? We’re from the Flying P ranch. Lane had some things to do so we came to meet you. I’m Angie McDonald, Lane’s sister-in-law, and this is his daughter, Judy.”
Mrs. Dryden’s right cheek dimpled when she smiled. “How nice to meet you!” She spoke clearly, but her words held the German dip and sway. She leaned toward the girl. “I’ve heard so much about you from your father’s letters. You’re more charming than I imagined.” She gazed toward the end of the train. “I have two trunks.”
“Give me your tickets.” Angie held out her hand. “I’ll have a porter bring them to our buggy. Judy, show Mrs. Dryden where the buggy is. I’ll meet you there.”
“Please call me Saundra.” She beamed at the child. “You can tell me all about the ranch while we’re waiting. I have never been on a real ranch before.”
Angie hustled toward the baggage car. Who would have dreamed that she’d stoop to finding a mail-order bride for her backward brother-in-law? But what else could she do? She couldn’t stay around the Flying P until she had gray hair and wrinkles.
She twisted the gold signet ring on her left hand, her engagement ri
ng until Barry could afford a better one. She deserved a life of her own, didn’t she? If she waited for Lane to find a replacement housekeeper, she’d be standing at the altar smelling of liniment instead of lavender.
A tiny thread of conscience skimmed across her thoughts. Maybe she should have waited for God to answer her prayers instead of rushing ahead with a scheme.
She shoved the thought to the back of her mind. She had waited two months. That was long enough. Besides, Christmas had become a dreaded chore since Lane’s wife, Charlotte, died three years ago. Maybe Saundra would bring some light into the holidays this year.
Saundra’s trunks thunked into the back of the box-shaped buggy under the muscle power of two teenage boys. Standing nearby, Angie heard Judy chattering about the stand of timber that Lane was harvesting this winter on his new quarter-section grant. He was hoping to pay off the bank loan on the ranch with what he would make on that timber.
Angie swung inside and picked up the reins. “Get up, Sheba…Dan.” Impatient to be out of the biting cold, the gray and the black lurched ahead. Sheba was Angie’s mare and trained to both the carriage and saddle, though she rarely rode her anymore.
Five miles to the south lay the Flying P. At the edge of town, the road stretched straight ahead of them, parallel ruts in a field of white. Last week’s snow lay in drifted mounds for miles in every direction.
“What’s he like, your father?” Saundra asked Judy, her blue eyes dancing. “He never described himself in his letters.”
Angie answered first. “He’s six feet three, with wide shoulders and long legs.”
“He has dark hair and light blue eyes,” Judy added.
“He’s also terribly shy.” Angie glanced at the newcomer. “If I were you, Saundra, I wouldn’t mention his letters. He can be very eloquent when he’s putting thoughts on paper, but in person he’s painfully shy. You’ll have to draw him out.”
“The silent cowboy type?” Saundra nodded. “I have read about them.”
“That’s right,” Judy said, sending Angie a wide-eyed look, “the strong, silent type.”
“Tell us about yourself, Saundra,” Angie said, as if she didn’t already know the woman’s statistics by heart.
“While I was growing up, my father was a theology professor in Heidelberg. My mother died two months before I turned eighteen, so when my father got an offer for a position at Harvard, we came to America. There was nothing to keep us in Germany any longer.”
“You speak wonderful English,” Angie said.
“My father made me practice until I wanted to scream.” She smiled at Judy. “That’s the way with fathers, no?”
“Yes!” Judy giggled.
Angie swallowed a smile. So far, so good.
“When my father died four years ago, I married Joseph Dryden. He owned a hotel. I cooked for the guests and managed the cleaning service for him.
“Joseph had a heart attack last year. The staff problems and those mountains of paperwork were too much for me. I sold the hotel with the understanding that I could keep my job as manager.”
Her shoulders lifted. So did her shapely eyebrows. “But the new owner was impossible to please. The past six months have been nothing but misery for me. Your father’s advertisement came at just the right time.”
Beneath a sky full of wispy clouds, the thirty-year-old ranch house appeared on the horizon, a small two-story structure with a wide front porch and massive chimneys on each end. The house was twice as wide as it was deep. Rough lumber stained with dark oil covered the outer walls. The window frames and doors had last felt paint bristles five years ago. The white paint had chipped and peeled, but much of it remained to brave another harsh South Dakota winter.
The windows gleamed in the sunlight. Churned-up snow covered the yard with bits of brown grass poking through here and there. A shaggy collie barked a greeting.
“Quiet, Tip!” Angie called, pulling the horses to a halt near the back porch. She turned to Saundra. “Lane is working in the woods. He’ll be home for supper.”
“Good! I’ll have time to comb my hair and press a clean dress.” Lifting her skirts, she stepped daintily to the ground. Tip came around to sniff the stranger. Saundra tried to pat him, but he shied away.
“Tip doesn’t like anyone to touch him,” Judy told her. “He’s a cattle dog.”
Saundra bent to talk to the watchful animal. “We shall be great friends. You’ll see.”
Tip sat down and lifted his nose.
Angie hopped out and opened the buggy’s back door. “Saundra, could you unpack some things out here to lighten the trunks? Then Judy and I could lift them.”
“Why don’t I take out what I need and wait for a man’s strong arms to do the rest?”
“That’s a great idea,” Angie said, smiling. “Need a hand?”
Saundra produced some keys and reached for the closest piece of humpbacked luggage. “I’ll be fine. I only want a dress and my hairbrush.”
Leaving Judy to keep Saundra company, Angie walked across the porch and stepped inside the house to check the beans she had left simmering on the potbelly stove in the living room. In winter the potbelly served for both heating and cooking when she had to go out, because the kitchen range would go stone-cold with no one to feed it every few minutes.
The smoky scent of salted pork met her the moment she opened the door. Crossing the narrow kitchen to the wood box, she carried two split pieces down the hall and into the living room where the cast-iron pot bubbled. Grabbing a thick pad kept there for the purpose, she clanked open the door of the potbelly stove and shoved the logs inside, brushing bits of bark from her coat afterward.
Lane Phillips’s presence filled this room as much as if he were sitting here. Everywhere Angie’s eye strayed, his handiwork spoke of him. Even the thick-bottomed rocker had been born under his skillful hand.
What wasn’t Lane’s belonged to Charlotte: the hand-plaited rug, the curtains, the doilies.
Stirring beans, Angie drew in a slow breath. Stale, painful memories smothered her. She simply had to get away.
Chapter 2
The creak of the back door, then voices, reached Angie. “Your room is upstairs, next to mine and Angie’s,” Judy said. “I’ll show you where.”
Angie met them near the narrow stairs. “You can rest awhile if you’d like, Saundra. You must be exhausted. We won’t have supper for another two hours.”
“Once I freshen up, I’ll feel fine. I’ll help you put supper on the table.” She smoothed the mound of green fabric hanging over her arm. “Could I use an iron perhaps?” She winked. “I must put my best foot forward, you know.”
“Of course.” Angie lifted her bonnet and pushed at her flyaway brown hair. Pulled back into a single braid, it would never behave. “I’ll put the iron on the stove for you right away.”
Judy followed Saundra up the steep steps. Angie bustled toward the kitchen for the iron. Cold as it was outside, she wanted to get the horses into the barn as soon as possible.
Lane didn’t arrive until an hour after dark. Boots thunking on the bare wood floor, he strode into the kitchen. Behind him came Barry Kimball, Angie’s stocky fiancé, Lane’s only permanent hand. Barry had quarters in the barn and took his meals with the family.
Both men looked haggard with cold and exhaustion.
Barry’s gaze sought Angie’s, and Angie responded with a warm smile. She’d known the smooth-faced Kimball boy since they played with empty spools under their mothers’ quilting tables. He was two years older than she, but she was the taller until they were teenagers. She could still outrun him.
He took off his hat and flipped calloused fingers through sandy hair that brushed his ears and collar. Twenty-six last August, he looked eighteen.
Lane lifted his ten-gallon hat and dropped it on a peg. His short, brown hair had a widow’s peak in front and a hat crease around the back. When he spoke, his voice sounded weary beyond physical fatigue. “That stand of oak in the low
er corner is full of wood ants.”
Angie’s heart sank. “How will we make this year’s payment to the bank?”
Lane’s sagging shoulders lifted then sank. “I’ll have to go into town and talk to Crouse. Maybe he’ll let things ride until next year.”
Using two dish towels to pad her hands, Angie lifted a pot of boiling water off the stove and poured some into a metal basin on the stand near the door. She added a healthy amount of cold water to it. “This is the third year running that you’ve had to ask for more time. What if he can’t help us?”
“We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it, Angie.”
She sighed and dropped the dish towel to the counter. Untying her apron, she avoided Lane’s eyes. “She’s here, Lane.”
“Who?” He sent her a blank stare.
“My pen pal from the East. We’ve been planning her visit for weeks.”
Lane frowned, a question in his eyes. Then he nodded. “Oh, yeah. I forgot all about her.”
“Supper’s in the dining room tonight in honor of our guest. After we eat, you’ll need to carry in her trunks. They’re still in the buggy.”
“What’s she like?” Barry asked, grinning and moving closer to his intended. “Does she have warts and a hook nose?”
Angie sent him an exasperated look. “Can’t you ever be serious? Wait ’til you see her. You’ll be surprised. Believe me.”
Lane dipped into the water and rubbed his face. He reached blindly for the towel hanging on the stand in front of him. “We tramped all over those woods this afternoon and got nowhere,” he said when he finished. “I’m bushed. And I could eat the house, floorboards and all.”
“We’re having beans and corn bread. Saundra made the corn bread.”
“You mean she can cook, too?” Barry asked, raising his eyebrows.
Angie shook her head at him, a warning in her eyes. “Don’t you embarrass me with your foolish talk, Barry Kimball. Saundra Dryden is a lady.”
Lane moved aside for his ranch hand to use the washbasin. He reached for the comb on the windowsill and flicked it straight back through his hair without looking in the mirror put there for that purpose.
When Angie and the two men reached the dining room, Saundra stood behind the oak table, radiant in an emerald gown with white lace brushing her throat and wrists. Her pale tresses lay in perfect waves over her ears, high on top with a wide French twist in back.
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