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Brides of Kansas

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by Bateman, Tracey V. ;




  Darling Cassidy ©2000 by Tracey V. Bateman

  Tarah’s Lessons ©2001 by Tracey V. Bateman

  Laney’s Kiss ©2003 by Tracey V. Bateman

  Print ISBN 978-1-68322-272-9

  eBook Editions:

  Adobe Digital Edition (.epub) 978-1-68322-274-3

  Kindle and MobiPocket Edition (.prc) 978-1-68322-273-6

  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, OH 44683, www.barbourbooks.com

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

  Printed in the United States of America.

  Table of Contents

  Darling Cassidy

  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

  Tarah’s Lessons

  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

  Laney’s Kiss

  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

  Epilogue

  Darling Cassidy

  Chapter 1

  1868, Council Grove, Kansas

  The mid-April wind whipped at Cassidy Sinclair’s black muslin skirt as she stood outside the roughly hewn dry goods store, scanning the notices on the wall. Her gaze rested on a poster written in bold, black letters:

  WANTED:

  WOMAN OF MARRIAGEABLE AGE AND STATUS.

  MUST LOVE CHILDREN.

  An advertisement for a wife?

  Cassidy read it again to be sure.

  What sort of man posted an ad for a wife? Her mouth curved into a small, ironic smile at the hope rising in her heart. On the other hand, what sort of woman considered accepting the offer?

  The desperate kind of woman with a child to raise, she admitted.

  With a heavy sigh, she peered more closely at the notice. Smaller letters declared: IF INTERESTED, INQUIRE WITHIN.

  “Aunt Cass?”

  “What is it, Em?” she asked absently, keeping her gaze fixed on the post.

  Her niece yanked insistently at her skirt. “Aunt Cass!”

  Frustrated, Cassidy glanced down, hard pressed to keep the irritation from her voice. “What is it, honey?”

  Emily rolled her large green eyes to the side. “Don’t look,” she whispered, with all the dramatics only a seven-year-old could muster, “but that man over there is watching you.”

  Cassidy couldn’t resist an amused smile at the child’s vivid imaginings. “What man?”

  Emily’s face grew red, and she stomped her foot. A frown creased her brow. “I’m serious this time,” she hissed. “There is a man watching you. He could be an outlaw.”

  “Oh, honestly, Em,” Cassidy said, shifting her gaze to the possible scoundrel, if for no other reason than to prove to Emily that if there were a man looking in their direction, his interests most certainly weren’t focused on them.

  Spying the man in question, Cassidy drew a sharp breath. Wavy coal black hair topped his head, and the shadow of a beard covered his face, giving him a rugged, outdoorsy appearance. He wore a light blue shirt with sleeves rolled midway up muscular, deeply tanned arms. Cassidy’s heart did a little flip-flop. He was easily the most handsome man she had ever seen.

  Her gaze caught his, and his eyebrows shot up.

  Shame filled her at her brazen appraisal of a perfect stranger. And that particular stranger, she admitted, was about as close to perfect as anyone could get.

  Stop it! she ordered herself, but she couldn’t keep her heart from thundering in her chest.

  She held her breath as his glance swept her from head to toe and back again. When he lifted his gaze to meet hers, his cobalt blue eyes held a look of undeniable appreciation.

  He flashed her a devastating, but obviously amused, grin, and Cassidy suddenly came to her senses. With a prim lift of her chin, she shot the stranger a reproving look and draped her arm around Emily’s shoulders. “Come. Let’s go inside.”

  “Do you think he’s really an outlaw?” Emily asked in a loud whisper. Cassidy cast a quick glance back to the stranger, wondering if he had heard. He smiled, showing straight white teeth. With a chuckle, he bowed gracefully, his eyes shifting to Emily, who blushed and giggled at the broad wink he sent her.

  “Come, Emily,” Cassidy said again more firmly, steering the child toward the door of the general store.

  “But he’s coming right toward us. It wouldn’t be polite to walk away!”

  Pretending not to hear her niece’s plea for propriety, Cassidy pushed the girl through the doorway and slipped quickly inside, hoping he wouldn’t follow.

  Unable to resist the urge to venture a little peek outside, Cassidy’s breath caught in her throat as the handsome man stepped up to the store window and looked in. Catching her eye, he smiled, tipped his hat, then turned and strode away.

  “Somethin’ I kin hep you wit’, little lady?”

  Cassidy whirled around, then stepped back instinctively as a giant with a bushy black beard walked around the counter and towered over her.

  She cleared her throat. “Yes. I…um…I wondered about that notice outside.”

  “Which un ya mean?” He spit a stream of tobacco juice, missing the spittoon in the corner by a full foot.

  With great effort, Cassidy fought to contain the nausea overwhelming her stomach. “The one about a man needing a wife,” she said, dropping her voice a notch and glancing cautiously at the other customers.

  His booming laughter filled the dusty little store, and Cassidy had a strong urge to reach up and yank his beard to hush him up.

  “Well, ma’am, I never thought we’d git a taker so fastlike. Jus’ put that up today.”

  Relief filled Cassidy. No one else had applied, then.

  Listen to yourself—applying to be a wife!

  Suddenly aware that she was the object of several curious stares, Cassidy felt the humiliation down to her toes. Spinning on her heel, she turned to remove herself from the most embarrassing moment of her life. But she stopped short as her gaze rested on Emily.

  Thick, carrot-orange curls twisted into tight braids hung down the little girl’s back. Her bonnet, which Cassidy tried to no avail to keep on the girl’s head, dangled from the loosely tied laces around her neck. Her tender, fair skin had far too many f
reckles as it was without exposing it to the sun’s burning rays, but Emily hated the confinement of a bonnet and rarely kept it on.

  Cassidy’s heart sank as Emily’s wistful gaze rested on a bowl filled with brown eggs. She knew exactly how her niece felt. It seemed like forever since they’d tasted much more than beans and sourdough biscuits. Emily wouldn’t ask for them. She knew the money had disappeared long ago, spent on supplies and unforeseen repairs to the wagon. Eggs were a luxury they simply couldn’t afford, no matter how their mouths might water for a change of menu.

  Cassidy was so weary of doing without the things they’d taken for granted before William died, leaving a mound of debt and his young daughter for her to raise.

  As she observed the longing in Emily’s face, Cassidy came to a decision. Her niece would not do without, even if she, Cassidy Sinclair, had to marry a stranger to assure it.

  She squared her shoulders and faced the bear of a man. “The notice said to inquire within. Now if you have any information, please pass it along.” Crossing her arms firmly across her chest, Cassidy met his gaze, eyes blazing.

  Shifting his stance, he folded his massive arms and grinned. “So you wanna be a wife, eh?”

  Resentment coursed through Cassidy at the ill-mannered question. “Just tell me how one should go about responding to the notice.”

  Wondering if she was due another rude remark from the storekeeper, Cassidy held her breath while he assessed her. But when he spoke, all teasing had vanished. “You come in with the wagon train today?”

  “Yes sir.”

  “How long ya be stayin’?”

  “Indefinitely. Emily and I won’t be continuing with the others.”

  The man thought for a moment, stroking his matted beard. “Just gimme yer name, and I’ll pass it along to the feller whut put it up.”

  “All right, then,” she replied with a decisive nod. “I’m Cassidy Sinclair, and this is my niece, Emily.”

  Emily gave him a wide, gap-toothed grin. “Pleased to make your acquaintance,” she said with a small curtsy, then stretched out a tiny, freckled hand to the giant.

  With a twinkle in his eyes, the man wiped his hand on his dirty buckskin shirt and accepted hers. “Likewise, little missy.” He turned back to Cassidy. “One other thing, ma’am.”

  “Yes?”

  “Where kin the feller find ya?”

  “Oh.” Cassidy hadn’t thought of that. “I suppose I’ll stay with the wagon train until they pull out day after tomorrow. But if the man who posted the notice doesn’t show up by then, we’ll find a boardinghouse somewhere.”

  He nodded. “I’ll tell ‘im. Now anythin’ else I kin do for you and the little missy?”

  “No, thank you. We’ll be going now. Come along, Em.”

  With a last longing glance at the bowl of eggs, Emily followed her aunt.

  “Ma’am?”

  Cassidy stopped just before reaching the door. She turned back to the trader. “Yes?”

  He cleared his throat and shifted his huge, moccasin-clad feet. “Um, I’d like to give you a welcoming gift.”

  She raised an eyebrow. “Whatever for? You don’t even know us.”

  He glanced at Emily, his expression softening considerably. “Fact is, we don’ see many redheaded little girls with freckles, an’ I’d like to give ya a gift jus’ fer the pleasure of havin’ her in my store.”

  Emily blushed and hid behind Cassidy’s skirts.

  A rare show of timidity, Cassidy thought wryly.

  He thrust the basket containing at least a dozen eggs into her hands. “There, that’s the gift I’d like to give ya,” he said, looking quickly away.

  Emily’s eyes widened. Cassidy drew in her breath, and her mouth watered as she stared with longing at the treasure. But reason returned, and she shook her head. She didn’t know this man. What might he expect as payment?

  Regretfully, she pushed the basket back into his large hands.

  “Aunt Cass,” Emily groaned.

  “You’re very kind, I’m sure,” Cassidy said to the bewildered man. “But we can’t accept gifts from strangers. Good day.”

  She whirled around and slipped swiftly out the door with Emily in tow.

  Once outside she looked about the small town, pushing back the anxiety filling her at answering the advertisement. What other choice did she have? Her legs ached from walking all day, looking for a suitable position. From laundress to seamstress, there was simply nothing available, and she couldn’t stay in town permanently without a means of support.

  Oh, how she longed for the life she’d had before William died. When cholera claimed Cassidy’s widowed brother a few months earlier, she’d taken his daughter, Emily, to raise as her own. Cassidy’s brother hadn’t been the most practical man in the world, and he left the Missouri farm deeply in debt. Within a couple of months of his death, creditors forced her to sell off the farm and equipment to pay the bills, and Cassidy and Emily had no choice but to leave.

  Not long before the sale, an excited neighbor spoke of going west, sharing his dreams of a new land where anyone could prosper. His excitement lit a fire in Cassidy, and she decided that she and Emily needed a new start. So with as much courage as she could muster and the small amount of cash left after her brother’s bills were paid, she packed up their meager belongings and set off for Independence, Missouri, praying she would find a wagon master willing to accept her into his westbound train. By some miracle, she found a train heading to Santa Fe. The wagon master, Lewis Cross, a red-faced little man with a kind heart lying beneath his gruff exterior, agreed to let her join with one provision. “As long as you don’t hold up my train,” he’d said.

  To Cassidy’s dismay, only three weeks passed before the problems started. Her rickety wagon suffered a broken wheel caused by deep ruts in the well-worn trail. A man from the wagon behind Cassidy’s offered to fix it for her, but Mr. Cross grumbled about the hours the train was forced to stop.

  She had hoped her troubles were over but could have wept when, merely one week later, the axle split in two, once more causing a delay while repairs were made. Mr. Cross took her aside and gently suggested that she quit the trail in Council Grove and find a domestic position.

  Assessing her options, Cassidy had to admit that the wagon master was right. A thirty-five-year-old spinster with a niece to raise would never make it to Santa Fe alone. So here she was, five weeks after leaving her Missouri home, trying desperately to find a suitable way to make a living for herself and Emily. With all her options exhausted, there was nothing to do but go back to the wagon and pray someone would come to marry her.

  Cassidy slowly came to consciousness, then sat up with a start. The sun no longer filtered in through the seams of the worn canvas as it had when she’d crawled into the wagon. A pounding headache earlier in the day had sent her to her bed, but she had only meant to lie down for a little while. Poor Emily must be famished.

  The fragrance of coffee and bacon from somewhere in the wagon train wafted into the covered wagon, making her empty stomach grumble. For a moment, she wished she had more to give Emily for supper than the ever-present beans and sourdough biscuits.

  With a sigh, she pushed back the quilts. Still seated on the bed, she grabbed her boots and slipped them on, then, reaching forward, laced them up.

  From outside the wagon, she heard Emily giggle. With a slight frown, Cassidy peeked outside. A gasp escaped her lips. The man she had seen outside the general store earlier now stood over her cast-iron skillet, frying bacon. He looked large and out of place performing the feminine task, and she had the urge to shoo him away and take over. Subconsciously, she smoothed back her hair, then opened the flap wider.

  Emily turned to her with a grin and skipped to the wagon. “Evening, Aunt Cass,” she said brightly. “You sure slept a long time. Your head feelin’ better?”

  “Yes, dear,” Cassidy replied with a smile, “much better.”

  The man straightened and strode to the
wagon. “Hello. We didn’t have a proper introduction earlier.” His velvety voice nearly stopped her heart. “I’m Dell.”

  She accepted his proffered hand and gave it a firm shake.

  Looking at their clasped hands, his eyebrows shot up in surprise. She loosened her grip and inwardly cringed. Why couldn’t she be dainty like other women?

  “Let me help you down,” he offered.

  Reluctantly, she slid into his arms. The soap-scented smell of him made her pulse quicken, and she pushed quickly away from his arms—too quickly.

  He stumbled backward, grabbing at her to keep from falling. Cassidy lost her footing, and they both fell to the hard ground in a tangle of long arms and legs.

  “Get off of me,” Cassidy spat.

  Emily laughed uproariously.

  “I’m trying, woman,” he grunted. “Be still so I can get up.”

  She stopped struggling while he disentangled himself from her. Once on his feet, he held out a hand. Warily, Cassidy allowed him to help her up. He brushed at her back, but she stepped away.

  “Please,” she said, holding up both hands, palms forward. “Stop.”

  “Only trying to brush off the dust,” he replied, a crooked grin teasing the corners of his mouth.

  She raised her chin, trying to hang on to her shredded dignity. “I—I can brush off my own dust.”

  “Now let’s start over, shall we?” he said.

  “Fine,” said Cassidy breathlessly. “I’m Cassidy Sinclair, and this is my niece—”

  “Emily,” he finished, winking at the little girl. “I know. We’ve already met.”

  Emily smiled, her face turning pink.

  Cassidy scowled at their camaraderie. Emily was far too easily influenced for her own good. But just as she was about to send the little girl to the wagon while she tried to figure out what this man was doing cooking at her fire, he suddenly frowned and sniffed the air.

  Cassidy raised a curious eyebrow just as the acrid smell of smoke reached her nostrils.

  “The bacon—” He slapped his thigh and took two strides toward the fire. Grabbing the skillet, he let out a yowl and jerked back his hand.

  “Here, let me.” With surprising calm, Cassidy lifted the end of her skirt and grasped the hot handle. The pan sizzled as she thrust it into the basin of cool water. “Now,” she said, eyeing the stranger, “suppose you tell me what you’re doing here, Mr…. uh, you never told me your last name.”

 

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