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The Brides of Chance Collection

Page 13

by Kelly Eileen Hake,Cathy Marie Hake,Tracey V. Bateman


  She yanked the pins from her hair and cast them onto the washstand. None of them truly wanted her—not even Gideon. Especially not Gideon.

  She grabbed her hairbrush as her hair tumbled in disarray about her shoulders. He participated in the travesty of drawing straws for my hand?

  Ruthlessly pulling the brush through her hair, Miriam looked at her reflection in the small mirror. I’m not about to make a fool of myself, mooning over a man who figured he had to be honorable but doesn’t really want me. It’s better to discover Gideon’s obligation now rather than to continue to believe a fairy tale I spun for myself. Her hair crackled as the boar bristles raked the full length over and over again.

  God, I don’t understand why they’d do this. Thou knowest the desires of my heart. Please, Lord, change my heart. Don’t let me have feelings for a man who doesn’t hold true regard for me.

  “What happened to Miriam?” Paul whispered the words to Gideon as Miriam took Ginny Mae into the other room for a diaper change.

  Gideon winced and shrugged.

  “I told you she’d get on our nerves,” Daniel rumbled as he shoved away from the table. He cast a look at the doorway and slapped his hat on his head. Ginny Mae was in the middle of a stream of happy-sounding baby babble, and Miriam seemed to be understanding a good portion of it. Daniel turned back for a quick moment, gave Gideon a dark look, then left.

  “ ’Member when Mama used to get a bee in her bonnet?” Titus leaned forward and swiped the last biscuit. “She’d get this same way.”

  “What’s she got to be riled over?” Logan said. “Gideon’s been a regular swain round her.”

  Paul snorted. “That’s the problem.” Titus and Logan snickered.

  “She’s not riled.” Bryce splashed coffee from the pot over his cup and onto the table. “Why, Miriam is just bein’ her usual sweet self.” He tossed a dishcloth onto the table and did a slapdash mop-up job.

  “Hush.” Gideon hoped Miriam wouldn’t wonder what all the whispering was about. He raised his voice a bit. “Any more eggs left?”

  “Nope. Dan ate the last spoonful.” Titus tilted the bowl to prove his point.

  Miriam came back into the room with Ginny Mae in her arms. “I’ll be happy to scramble more.”

  “No need.” Gideon stood. “Bryce, Roland is bringing part of a steer today. I want you to fix up the barbecue pit. Daniel will bring wood over to you.”

  Miriam wouldn’t look him in the eye, and Gideon couldn’t figure out why she acted so…different this morning. She’d twisted her hair up same as always and wore one of her old, ugly dresses, so she ought to look the same, but her smile seemed forced as she started to clear the table. “Anyone have something special they’d like me to fix for Sunday supper?”

  “Chocolate cake,” Bryce voted.

  “Pudding, please,” Polly requested.

  “Since you’re asking—” Titus began.

  “Hold your horses.” Gideon glowered at them. “Miriam’s going to fix whatever suits her fancy. She’s not here to dance a jig to your tunes.”

  Miriam turned to carry the dishes to the sink. “It’s no problem for me to make what someone might want.”

  “I do have a hankering for—”

  Gideon silenced Titus with a look. “I’m sure whatever Miriam makes will be delicious. We need to get to work.”

  “Paul? Could you please bring me your blue shirt? I noticed it needs to be mended.” Miriam dipped hot water from the stove reservoir to use for dish washing.

  By supper, a platter heaped with steaming chicken-fried steaks drew the men to the table. Gideon frowned at the empty place beside him. “Come eat, Miriam.”

  “Oh, I already ate an early supper with the girls.” She busied herself, pumping water into a pail.

  “What are you doing?”

  “Saturday bathwater, right?” Paul guessed.

  “Yes.” She flashed a smile over her shoulder.

  Gideon pushed away from the table and stalked across the kitchen. He hefted the bucket of water and thumped it onto the stove, then filled another pail and placed it on the stove, as well. “Ask for help with that, Miriam. It’s too heavy for you.”

  “Nonsense.” She dried her hands off on the hem of her apron and headed toward the other room. “Come along, my little poppets.” Polly scampered in her wake, and Ginny followed with the eager, flat-footed patter only a baby in a full diaper could manage.

  Splashes and giggles from the bedroom made it clear the girls enjoyed bath time. Gideon still scowled at his full plate. Somehow, with Miriam absent, the meal didn’t appeal to him half as much. When the splashing ended, he fully expected Miriam to reappear.

  He was wrong.

  “Hey.” Logan elbowed him. “I asked for the applesauce.”

  “Oh. Here.” Gideon shoved the bowl into his brother’s hands. The meal was over before Miriam and the girls reappeared. Both girls wore nightgowns Miriam had made from feed sacks that bore little bitty chickens all over them. Ginny Mae’s baby curls fluffed out like duck down.

  “Lookit me!” Polly twirled around.

  “What happened to your head?” Bryce squinted at her.

  “Auntie Miri-Em sticked rags in my hair. I’m going to have pretty curls.”

  “I’ll tuck them in bed if you’d like to take your bath now, Daniel.” Miriam stooped down to fuss with Ginny’s sleeve.

  “No. I tuck my girls in.” Daniel cast a glance at his brothers. “They can keep an eye on my daughters for me.”

  “Not ’til after you do supper dishes.” Titus plopped down on the floor and tickled under Polly’s chin. “It’s your turn to dry the dishes, Dan. I’m washin’ tonight.”

  “Dishes are a woman’s job,” Dan said through gritted teeth.

  “You didn’t say that when Hannah was here.” Paul’s words made everything in the room go still. “We all pitched in and did dishes back then.”

  “Miriam’s done plenty enough already.” Gideon stared at Daniel. “She’s washed and ironed everyone’s clothes for church tomorrow. She’s cooked and cleaned, gardened, and minded your children.”

  “Mended my shirt, too,” Paul added.

  The door clicked shut. Gideon wheeled around and discovered Miriam had slipped out.

  “Miriam, this is Dr. Pendergast.” Reba White fluttered her fan with skill any Southern belle would admire. “Dr. Pendergast, may I present you to Miss Miriam Hancock.”

  The doctor swept off his gray bowler and bowed quite elegantly. “A pleasure, Miss Hancock.”

  Miriam watched him straighten up and wondered why a man of such noble and lucrative profession would be attired in such ill-fitting clothes. She’d been reared not to judge a man by his appearance, but something struck her as being wrong.

  “I’m pleased to have an opportunity to speak with a physician. With the girls so small, and—”

  “Oh no. That’s not it at all.” Reba giggled. “He’s a phrenologist, dear. I told him he simply must examine your head to be sure that bump you received upon your arrival didn’t cause you any harm.”

  “I’ve worried ’bout that,” Logan confessed. “I didn’t mean to brain you, Miriam. You know I didn’t.”

  “I’m fine. Truly I am.”

  “It would be wise to have a professional ascertain that.” Dr. Pendergast started to remove his dove gray gloves.

  “I don’t—”

  “It won’t take much time, and it won’t hurt at all.”

  “How much does it cost?” Bryce stuck his hand into his pocket. To Miriam’s consternation, he pulled out half a dozen screws and nails. He pursed his lips and shook his head. “Heard the jingle. Forgot it wasn’t cash money.”

  “Bryce, please don’t put those back into your Sunday-best pants. They’ll ruin the pocket.”

  He’d already started. As a nail hit the earth by his boot, a sheepish look crossed his face. “Oops. Too late.”

  “It’s not a problem, young man. I can tell from here. See
?” The phrenologist ran his fingers over the back of her head. “This is the area denoting domesticity. Miss Hancock is endowed with a veritable ridge in this location.”

  “Uh-oh.” Logan’s face turned an odd combination of green and purple. “Does that mean when I brained her, it broke her head?”

  “That has yet to be ascertained. Come now, Miss Hancock. It’s far better if you sit for your reading.”

  “Yes, Miriam. You must!” Reba half-dragged her to a chair.

  Before she knew what happened, Miriam was sitting on a bench and had her hair streaming down her shoulders and back. Dr. Pendergast’s fingers skated over her scalp. She shivered and tried to pull away. “I must insist you cease this.” Miriam wiggled. “Logan, I don’t believe in this. It’s a dark art, and I won’t be a part of it.”

  “Young lady, this is medical science.” Dr. Pendergast kept his palm atop her head and continued to slip the fingertips of his other hand along her head. “The apostle Luke was a physician.”

  “A physician, not a phrenologist!”

  “Ah, you’re displaying remarkable stubbornness—which is confirmed here, by this region of the brow.”

  “She can be a mite stubborn,” Bryce allowed.

  “I’m going to be more than a little stubborn if you don’t turn loose of me.”

  “Women are wont to be emotional. Here, the prominence over the seat of emotions tells me she’s often overwrought. My, my. Here, over the area of spiritual enlightenment—an area of concavity.”

  “That’s about where she got the lump when Logan brained her.” Bryce leaned forward.

  “Concavity means it dips in, not lumps out.” Miriam wrenched loose. “Sir, to pretend education, discipline, and salvation cannot overcome natural formations of the skull is heresy. I—”

  “What is going on here?” Gideon shoved through the knot of men who had congregated and pressed in around her. His eyes widened as he caught sight of her with her hair in disarray.

  “We was just trying to be sure the doc got a chance to make sure Miriam’s in her right mind.” Three more screws clinked on the ground by Bryce’s foot.

  “A doctor? Good. It would be better if you did this inside.”

  “He’s a quack, Gideon.” Miriam tried to twist her hair back into a decent arrangement but had no way of making it stay since the doctor had done something with her hairpins.

  “She’s overwrought and stubborn, just as I determined,” Pendergast pronounced in a stentorian voice. The men around them nodded and murmured agreement.

  Gideon tucked her by his side. Miriam dared hope he’d see reason, but her hopes disappeared the moment he started walking her toward the house. “It’ll only take a few minutes, and it’ll make me feel better to know you’re all right.”

  Pendergast trotted on their heels. Gideon didn’t just seat her. He kept hold and sat on a bench, dragging her along without any hope of escape. Pendergast kept his opinions to himself and made important-sounding hmm and aah sounds as he wiggled his fingers across her head.

  Miriam shuddered. “Gideon—”

  “It’s okay, sweet pea. He’ll be done soon. You don’t have to be scared.” Gideon looked up. “Well, Doc? What do you think?”

  “For being a woman, she has reasonable intellect and strong domestic swayings. Science never lies, and it’s plain as can be she’s spiritually lacking and a woman of dubious virtue. I—”

  Gideon let out a roar and bolted to his feet. “You ought to get your head examined if you think that opinion holds any weight here. You’re no doctor; you’re a charlatan.”

  “You owe me fifteen cents for my services.”

  Gideon tucked Miriam behind himself. “You’re conducting business on the Lord’s Day?”

  “Well, sir, the laborer is worthy of his hire.”

  Paul stood in the open doorway. “Gideon, the men are hungry. When’s Miriam going to serve up lunch?”

  “As soon as this charlatan stops insulting and swindling her.”

  Miriam watched as half a dozen men stormed through the house and carried Mr. Pendergast away. Gideon tilted her face up to his. “Well,” she said brightly, hoping to evade more than just a second of eye contact, “that’s over now.”

  “He needed to get his own head examined, Miriam. You’re the sweetest, most special woman any fellow could ever meet.”

  She forced a laugh and pulled free. “That settles that. If ever a real doctor comes by, he’ll need to check you, because you’re definitely not in your right mind!”

  Nothing is going right. Nothing. Miriam let out a sigh and decided to take a walk as the girls napped.

  Since she’d learned about the brothers drawing straws, everything had seemed to fall apart. Sunday, the so-called doctor declared her to be a woman of no virtue. Monday, she’d burned what should have been a tender roast. Yesterday, the ammonia she wanted to use to wash windows spilled and left the main house reeking. Today, Ginny Mae bit Polly’s arm, and Polly whacked her little sister back hard enough to leave a mark on her cheek. Getting both of them settled down for a nap drained the last drop of Miriam’s patience.

  The cedars beckoned her. Their scent would be a treat, and Miriam needed to indulge herself. She grabbed a pail and walked along the same path Gideon had led her along when they took that stroll—just before she’d learned the truth. Unhappy with that realization, Miriam sidestepped and wandered off a few yards and sauntered along a route of her own choosing.

  Sunlight slashed in dusty beams from the treetops. The scent of cedar and pine filled the air. Beneath her feet, pine needles crunched and twigs snapped. Miriam’s steps lagged. She occasionally picked up a pinecone to use as a fire starter for her cottage’s potbelly stove.

  It felt good to have a few minutes to herself. What once had been a comfortable, happy arrangement now felt strained. Monitoring each word she spoke, each casual touch or glance so it wouldn’t carry a hint of interest or flirtation—that drained her.

  Miriam knelt to harvest dandelion leaves—one of the few things around the ranch she knew were edible. I’m like these. I’m hearty. I can thrive here. She plucked a top that had gone to seed and upended it to reseed the patch. I’m not going to blow away. I’m setting down new roots here.

  As she walked, she kept the cabins in sight. She couldn’t be gone for long. Again, she crossed the path she and Gideon walked. Her heart twisted. A noble man, he was willing to marry though he felt no tendresse for her. Why, God? Why would these feelings for a man fill my heart when all he feels toward me is fraternal concern and obligation? How am I to deal with this?

  After picking more dandelion greens, Miriam headed back toward the house. As she passed the spot under a cedar where she and Gideon had paused to talk on their stroll, she couldn’t resist. Miriam picked some wildflowers and an armful of pretty leaves to put in her cottage. They would be a reminder to herself that she could find beauty and pleasure here—even as a spinster.

  Miriam left the bucket by the pump in the yard and peeked in to make sure the girls were still napping. Peacefully slumbering as they were, she decided to prop open the door so she could hear them, then went to the garden to do some work.

  Awhile later, Daniel startled her out of her musings by striding through the rows of vegetables. “How dim-witted can you be?”

  She blinked up at him. “I beg your pardon?”

  “The bucket by the pump is your doing, right?”

  “Yes. Why?”

  “It’s full of poison oak.” He jabbed a finger toward the bucket. “Go get rid of it and change before you get near my daughters. If your clothes brush them, they’ll get the rash. I won’t have you harming them.”

  “Daniel, I’d never knowingly hurt Polly or Virginia.” She headed toward the pump to dispose of the leaves.

  “Dump it far away,” he called. “The last thing we need is you planting that stuff close by.”

  By the time she got back, Miriam knew she’d gotten herself into a peck of tro
uble. Her hands, wrists, and face all started to itch and tingle. At first, she told herself it was just her imagination, but the feeling grew worse.

  Daniel sat in the doorway to the main house, using a whetstone to sharpen knives. He didn’t even bother to glance up. “Go change your gown. It has to be boiled, else it’ll make my girls get the rash.”

  She got into her cabin, shed her dress, and looked at herself with dismay. Hairline to throat, wrists to fingertips, she was covered in a fine red rash that felt fiery as could be. The cool water from her pitcher didn’t help—if anything, it made the itch intensify. Afraid her stockings or petticoat might also carry the rash, she changed every last garment before going back to care for the girls.

  Polly hunkered down beside Daniel on the porch, chattering like a magpie. She looked up, and her eyes widened. “Auntie Miri-Em, you is funny!”

  A lady does not scratch. Miriam clasped her hands in front of herself to resist the nearly overwhelming urge to abandon her manners. “Yes. I do look odd.”

  “Go back to your cabin.” Daniel concentrated on the edge of the knife he continued to slide along the whetstone. “We can manage just fine without you.”

  She didn’t want to admit defeat, but Miriam couldn’t stand the horrid itch much longer. She slipped back into her cottage and cried.

  Hours passed, and she thought about making supper. Standing by the hot stove would amount to pure torture. Nonetheless, the girls and men would need to eat. Perhaps she could make sandwiches just this once….

  A single, solid thump on her door sounded. “Miriam. Open up.”

  Gideon. Of all the people in the world, he’s the one I least want to see. She cleared her throat. “No.”

  “Dan’s minding the girls. Something’s up.”

  “It’s nothing.”

  “If it’s nothing, then come on out here.” She could hear his boots scuffle in the dirt. “I want to show you something.”

  “It’ll have to wait.”

  “I’m not going to shout through this door anymore. Now get yourself out here.”

  “I’m not one of your kid brothers, Gideon. You cannot order me around.”

 

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