Wendy: The Bewildering Bride (The Brides of Paradise Ranch - Sweet Version Book 3)

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Wendy: The Bewildering Bride (The Brides of Paradise Ranch - Sweet Version Book 3) Page 9

by Merry Farmer


  “Good.” Melinda grinned with victory. “Honoria will take your order for a dress. Honoria!”

  With a start, Honoria skittered forward, opening the ledger to show Mrs. Kline Melinda’s drawings and to write down her commission.

  “And you.” Melinda grabbed hold of Florence Milligan’s arm, dragging her away from the booth. “My father paid for half of your husband’s medical supplies, did he not?”

  “Howard Haskell paid for the other half,” Mrs. Milligan grumbled.

  Melinda pursed her lips, scowled, and said, “We’ll miss you at the tea.”

  “Hold on, hold on.” Mrs. Milligan held up her hands. “I was only looking. I haven’t seen your drawings yet.”

  “Honoria!” Melinda barked. “Show Mrs. Milligan my drawings.”

  Melinda pushed Mrs. Milligan in Honoria’s direction, then turned to see who else she could bully or drag away from Wendy. Travis still didn’t intervene. Enough women had politely lined up at Wendy’s booth that she had skipped around the corner to begin taking orders. Travis was less worried about whether she would get orders than he was about her ending up with too many.

  “Do you have help for this competition?” he asked, stepping inside of the booth to see if there was a way he could lend a hand.

  “Yes, Olga Rasmussen, the maid from the hotel, was a seamstress in Sweden. She said she’d be my assistant.” In spite of the flurry around her, Wendy kept smiling.

  “Oh, Olga is good with a needle,” Lucy said as she stepped up to take her turn putting in an order. “I had her sew a few baby clothes for me when Barrett started growing so fast we ran out.”

  “Olga Rasmussen.” Melinda bit out the name as if it were sour. “Her?”

  “She’s quite talented,” Honoria whispered.

  “I didn’t ask you,” Melinda snapped.

  Travis began to rethink his stance of not getting involved. Honoria might be a Bonneville, but no one should be spoken to like that.

  Melinda had already moved on, though. “You, Piper Strong. You need to place an order with me.”

  Piper was already standing in Wendy’s line, but Melinda attempted to drag her to the side. Piper shook her off and planted her fists on her hips.

  “I like Mrs. Montrose’s designs,” she said, point blank. “I want to see what she can do.”

  “Really?” Melinda’s eyes went wide and her color flared high. “Is that so?”

  “It is.”

  “Well, we’ll just see if your brother…” She stopped.

  Piper broke into a sly grin. “You’ve got nothing to hold over me or my family, do you?”

  Melinda balled her hands into fists and grunted in frustration. “We’ll just see about that.” She stormed away from Wendy’s line, yanking Honoria and a few other women along with her.

  Travis let out a low whistle and leaned closer to Wendy. “Boy, I tell you, people have a thing or two to say about how dangerous bulls can be, but it seems to me that the heifers are the ones to really watch out for.”

  Wendy burst into a fit of giggles that she tried to hide with a gloved hand. “It’s not polite to refer to your neighbors as heifers,” she scolded him in a warm whisper.

  “Was that what I was doing?”

  She glanced up to meet his eyes as she finished writing down Lucy’s order. The sparkle those eyes contained and the pearly white of her teeth against the dusk of her lips sent Travis’s pulse soaring. The booth was suddenly far too small and hot, in spite of only having three sides, and there they were, standing almost flush against each other.

  Piper had reached the booth’s window and cleared her throat. Travis jerked back. He hadn’t realized how close he and Wendy had gotten until he saw the teasing grin on Piper’s face.

  “Well then,” Piper said. “I was going to ask you to make me a visiting dress with a bustle and high collar, but if you two are busy…”

  “No, not at all.” Wendy smiled and cleared her throat, facing front and focusing on business. “A visiting dress with a bustle it is.”

  The flurry of activity around placing orders lasted for a solid half hour. After that, those who hadn’t already stepped away to eat lunch with their families grew too tired of pouring over dress designs to continue. Honestly or through coercion, by the time Mr. Gunn came around to count how many orders both Wendy and Melinda had secured, they were in a dead heat.

  “We’ll begin the sewing portion of the contest tomorrow morning at the hotel,” he announced. “I’ll put together a schedule for taking measurements for each of your orders. Mr. Kline has said he’ll bring all the fabric in his store over for you to use.” In an aside he added, “Howard Haskell has agreed to pay for it,” then finished with, “Each of you ladies has your assistant, and if all goes well, you’ll all be stitching away for the rest of the week.”

  “If all goes well,” Wendy murmured after Mr. Gunn had left to tell Melinda what he’d told her.

  Travis paused halfway through unpinning her dress designs. “Why do you say that? Why wouldn’t it go well?”

  Wendy raised her eyebrows at him. “Do you trust Miss Melinda Bonneville?”

  Travis blinked, then softened into a chuckle. “I’ll give you this much, Mrs. Montrose. You may not have been in Haskell long, but you’re bright as the sun when it comes to guessing people’s motives and sizing up their character.”

  She shouldn’t be so tickled that he’d called her ‘Mrs. Montrose,’ implying she was his. She chose to brush past the fluttering in her chest to give a doubtful hum. “It doesn’t take much to size up the character of some people,” she said as she finished taking down her sketches on the opposite side of the booth from Travis. “Especially when you’ve encountered far too many people with the same sort of opinions.”

  She shuffled her drawings and circled around the back of the booth and inside to add them to the portfolio where she’d been keeping them. Travis didn’t reply immediately. She was just beginning to wonder what he’d made of her gloomy statement when he stepped into the opening at the back of the booth.

  “So, you’ve run into a lot of folks who are prejudiced?” His head was tilted slightly down, though his eyes met hers like twin arrows. He handed her the pile of drawings he’d unpinned.

  In spite of the seriousness of his question, Wendy laughed. “I would very much like to say that you get used to it after a while.” She took the drawings from him and added them to the pile with the others. Turned half away from him, she said, “I’d like to say that, but you never do get used to people thinking things about you that have nothing to do with who you really are.”

  Travis thrust his hands into his pockets and inched deeper into the booth. “I hope that I’m getting to know who you truly are.”

  The intensity of his gaze and the closeness of the booth gave Wendy the illusion that they were completely alone instead of standing in a church yard with more than fifty people just a few yards away. It didn’t help her to find the right words to say how she felt, though. All she could come up with was, “And I hope I’m getting to know you for who you really are.”

  A warm smile spread across Travis’s lips. He still looked as bashful and flustered as a schoolboy walking out for the first time, in spite of being every inch the man. The booth heated up in spite of the nippy, autumn day.

  “I’m just a simple man from Oregon,” he said with a shrug. “I grew up around trees, and now I’m surrounded by cattle. All I want’s to work hard and be good.”

  The flutter in Wendy’s chest intensified around her heart. She suspected there weren’t many men out there who could state such pure intentions so eloquently.

  “We have that in common, then. I only want to work hard and be good as well.”

  His brow shot up and he straightened as if she’d handed him a prize. He slipped his hands out of his pockets as the smile he wore grew and grew. She turned to close her portfolio, but before she could pick it up, Travis’s arms slid around her waist.

  She
barely had time to gasp before he stepped close to her, pulling her into the warmth of his broad, well-muscled chest. He lifted one hand to brush his fingers against her blushing cheek, then brought his mouth slanting down over hers. A rush of tingles spilled through Wendy as he kissed her, one hand cradling her face, the other held firm at the small of her back, keeping them together. His lips were warm and gentle, exploring hers.

  He teased his tongue against the seam of her mouth. She couldn’t help but let him in. As his tongue slid along hers, she sighed deep in her throat and leaned into him. His hold on her turned more possessive, which only sent the swirls and tingles raging through her. They sank into her core, pulling with heated intensity at parts of her that had only just begun to awaken. And all the while, his mouth treated her to such delight that her good sense could only revel in the sensations he was causing in her body.

  “So what, is this a kissing booth now?”

  The snap in Cody’s voice as he approached the booth and knocked on the side was like plunging into a cold lake. Travis jerked back, tension hardening his body even further. Wendy had somehow wrapped her arms around him and felt every muscle harden before she let go. The pulsing heat and taste of Travis wouldn’t soon leave her.

  “What do you want?” Travis’s voice was rough as he stared at his brother through the booth’s window.

  Cody took a step back, holding up his hands in defense. “I just wanted to tell you that the game is starting soon, and I haven’t seen you or her eat yet.”

  “Her name is Wendy,” Travis practically growled. A heartbeat later, he shook his shoulders loose and took a breath. “We haven’t eaten. Is there anything left?”

  Cody took his time replying. His brow had furrowed into a stern frown, and he rubbed his chin as he eyed his brother. At long last, and with a tone of suspicion, he said, “Yeah. Eden Chance set aside a couple of plates for the two of you, figuring you were busy.”

  “How very kind of her.” Wendy smiled, although the air between the brothers sizzled with confrontation. “Could you tell her we’ll be right over as soon as we finish cleaning up the booth? And be sure to let her know that I’ll help her with whatever clean-up she needs to do.”

  Cody tore his eyes away from Travis and stared at her. He let his hand drop from his chin, but didn’t sound enthusiastic when he said, “I’ll let her know.” He marched off before Wendy or Travis could say another word.

  The tension left Travis’s shoulders all at once, and if Wendy wasn’t mistaken, he let out a colorful expletive. “I’m sorry about that,” he sighed.

  There was nothing to do but to put the most innocent interpretation on Cody’s behavior. “I suppose I’d be awkward too if I was faced with the woman I’d turned down and the man who rescued her.”

  Travis turned fully toward her, arching one brow. “That’s a mighty forgiving way to look at it. I was going to say that my brother is a first-rate jacka—donkey.”

  Wendy giggled in spite of herself. It was a blunt statement, one with a questionable word in it, but somehow she liked it. She didn’t even mind his cursing. It was so very Travis.

  “Small children are easier to manage when given sweets than when smacked,” she said, reaching for her portfolio and clutching it to her chest.

  “And Cody is about the smallest child you’ll find in these parts,” he finished her thought.

  “Mmm.” She tilted her head with a knowing grin, then stepped out of the booth. “Time heals all trials.”

  “I suppose it does.”

  Travis followed her out of the booth and walked by her side toward the long table where Eden Chance and a few other women were cleaning up. At some point when she and Travis had been distracted, the majority of the townsfolk had migrated across the church yard to the baseball field.

  “One last thing,” Travis continued, swaying closer to her. She turned her glance up to him, questioning in her eyes. A grin tweaked the corners of Travis’s mouth, and he lowered his voice to say, “Think I might get another kiss at some point?”

  Hot, fluttery excitement zipped through her, causing Wendy to both blush and giggle like a girl half her age. “I think that might be arranged.”

  “Good.”

  Travis straightened, and they walked on with a more proper amount of space between them. All the same, he reached out to hold her hand.

  Chapter 7

  Wendy woke bright and early Monday morning, dressed in one of her more serviceable outfits, grabbed her sewing box and portfolio full of sketches, and headed downstairs before the sun had made it all the way over the horizon. Her plan was to get a look at The Cattleman Hotel’s ballroom early. Mr. Gunn and his staff had set it up for the competition late on Sunday and during the night, before things got busy. She expected to tip-toe unnoticed into the room to survey the space she would work in, but she was in for a surprise.

  “I want that table over there,” Melinda barked to her sister. “Move these things right now. And move those bolts of fabric to my table while you’re at it.”

  Honoria clenched her jaw as she gathered stacks of fashion plates, sketches, and notions into her arms and moved them to a table five feet away from the one where they had been. “You’re not supposed to hoard the fabrics.”

  “Shut up. I’ll do as I like.” Melinda crossed her arms and tilted her nose up.

  Her youngest sister, Bebe, made a move to the table that held dozens of bolts of fabric and cards of lace and trim in the center of the room.

  “What are you doing?” Vivian stopped her with a shrill shout. She stood by Melinda’s side. The two of them together looked more like an advertisement for couture than a seamstress and her client.

  “I was helping?” Young Bebe cringed as she backpedaled and faced them.

  “That’s Honoria’s job,” Vivian snapped. “Yours is to—” She froze at the sight of Wendy standing in the doorway.

  Whatever Bebe’s job was, it was none of Wendy’s business.

  “Good morning, ladies.” She greeted them with a smile and strode fully into the room, making her way to the table full of fabric in the center.

  Two work areas had been set up at either end of the ballroom. Each contained a series of empty tables, a roll of foolscap, and folding screens that Wendy assumed were there to create private areas where measurements could be taken. She breathed in the crisp scent of new fabric as she reached the table and smoothed her hand over the bolts. Her blood surged with the drive to get started, to create and lose herself in the creation.

  “Don’t touch that.” Melinda broke away from Vivian to dash up to the table and yank the bolt of linen printed with tiny violets away from her. “It’s mine.”

  “The fabric is for both of you to use,” Honoria informed her sister, coming to stand between Melinda and Wendy. She turned to Wendy with a brief smile and said, “Hello.”

  “Well, I’m going to need every bit of this.” Melinda clutched the bolt of linen to her chest. She tilted her chin up, turned on her heel, and marched off to the far side of the room, where Vivian and Bebe were waiting to whisper with her behind their hands.

  “Sorry,” Honoria sighed. “I can get the linen back for you if you need it.”

  Wendy’s heart bled for the poor woman. She seemed sweet and genuine—totally different from her sisters, though she shared their honey-colored hair, blue eyes, and trim build. Honoria bore a weariness that the other three didn’t have, though, and it was no secret where that came from.

  “Honoria!” Vivian shouted for her.

  “Don’t worry.” Wendy leaned closer to her before Honoria could walk away. “If your sister wants to make every woman in town a dress out of the same fabric, we should let her and see how that affects her business.” She added a conspiratorial wink for good measure.

  “For the love of God, Honoria, get over here now!” Vivian shouted even louder.

  Honoria returned Wendy’s wink with one of her own, then rushed off to join the circle of her sisters.
/>   Wendy sighed and left the fabric table to take her sewing box to the empty tables at the opposite end of the ballroom from the Bonneville sisters. She could be friends with Honoria Bonneville, if her sisters would allow it. But there didn’t seem to be much chance of that.

  “Ah, ladies. I see you’ve arrived before I have.”

  Wendy had just open her sewing box and begun to arrange her sketches across one empty table when Mr. Gunn swept into the room. He was dressed in his uniform—which seemed more like a finely-tailored formal suit than simple hotel livery—and his white hair was combed back in perfect order. The Bonneville sisters gasped and jumped, spinning around and wedging together as though they were trying to hide something behind them at the sight of him. Wendy left her sewing things to meet Mr. Gunn in the center of the room.

  “The fabric is for common use, ladies,” Mr. Gunn said without a second of hesitation. “It must be kept on the center table unless you are cutting it, and then only three bolts at a time. Miss Honoria, would you bring the bolts Miss Melinda has set aside back to the center table?”

  Honoria’s lips twitched, although she kept her eyes averted from her sisters as she said, “Yes, sir,” and rushed to do what Mr. Gunn asked.

  Melinda and Vivian hissed and hummed and did everything in their power to get Honoria to stop in a way they probably assumed was subtle. Mr. Gunn didn’t acknowledge their efforts. He clapped his hands together in front of them and smiled.

  “I trust you are as excited about this competition as I am.”

  “Oh yes,” Wendy answered, sparkling with anticipation.

  Melinda, Vivian, and Bebe shuffled forward with false smiles and vicious eyes.

  “I don’t see how it is going to be much of a competition,” Melinda said. “We all know where talent does and does not reside.”

  “Yeah, and she doesn’t even have an assistant,” Bebe added.

  “I’m here, I’m here.” Olga swept into the room, right on cue, out of breath and wearing her hotel maid’s uniform. “Sorry I’m late. It was the oddest thing. I had clean clothes in my room last night, but when I woke this morning, my wardrobe was empty.”

 

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