Free Read Novels Online Home

Heart on the Line (Ladies of Harper's Station Book #2) by Karen Witemeyer (9)

8

Grace finally managed to draw a full breath after the last lady turned to leave the church. Only Emma and Victoria lingered, and Grace knew they wouldn’t pester her with unanswerable questions. Would Haversham harm them to get to her? Please, Lord, don’t let that be the case. Why couldn’t she contact the missing heiress directly and turn the documents over to her? Because I don’t know the name of the woman or where she resides. Why hadn’t she asked her father where the documents were hidden before he left?

That one haunted her. She should have pressed him for details, but he’d been so focused on trying to anticipate every possible eventuality regarding the meeting with the Pinkerton agent that he’d had little patience for her questions. He’d been distracted, short-tempered, all because he loved her and was trying to protect her while still doing what he believed to be right. So she’d simply trusted him. He was her father. If he said he had proof, he had proof. He had no reason to lie. In fact, he had more reason to deny finding anything. They both would have been safer if he’d pretended not to recognize the significance of what he’d found.

But her father was not that type of man. Integrity ran thick in his veins, nourishing every thought and action. He could no more hide from what needed to be done than she could ignore a message sounding over the wire. Both situations demanded a response, and the Mallorys responded.

“Are you all right?” Victoria’s soft voice gently extricated Grace from her memories. Tori placed a hand on Grace’s shoulder, her blue eyes full of empathy.

Grace nodded and even managed a small smile. “No one tried to run me out of town, so I guess the worst is over.”

Emma moved to Grace’s other side, her brows raised. “You’re an even bigger optimist than I am if you truly think the worst is over. We won’t even know what the worst is until Haversham or whomever he hires arrives.”

“I don’t know.” Grace gave a small, self-deprecating laugh. “I think I’d rather face Haversham than speak in front of such a large group again. At least then I could use my derringer.” She patted the pistol in the garter holster beneath the right side of her skirt. A pistol she never went anywhere without. “I felt helpless against all those eyes staring at me.”

Emma’s eyes widened in disbelief. “You know all these ladies care about you.”

“Yes, but not all of us have your gift of leadership.” Grace met Emma’s gaze. “I’ve always envied how at ease you are whenever you address us as a group.”

Emma shrugged. “I never really thought about it. I just get up and say what needs to be said.”

Grace smiled. “I know.” Emma ran the town, the local bank, and pretty much any other project that required guidance. Her astounding capability would be annoying if she wasn’t also the most compassionate, caring person Grace had ever met.

“Ben will be stopping by the store tomorrow to prep for a couple big deliveries,” Tori said as the three of them wandered through the church door. “I’ll ask him to keep an eye out for anyone suspicious in the area. If anything snags his attention, he’ll get word to us.”

Grace clutched the railing by the stairs, feeling adrift and in need of an anchor. For the last few months, she’d actually allowed herself to feel safe. To believe that she could have a normal life. Even a suitor—at least an anonymous one safely removed from her troubles.

Now look at her. Treading water in the middle of a maelstrom, afraid that every friend who offered her a line would be dragged down into the vortex with her. Yet without their help, she would drown.

Grace forced a smile to her face. “Thank you, Tori. Having Mr. Porter’s help will be a blessing.”

Emma wrapped an arm around Grace’s shoulders, and Grace turned to face her. “You’re not alone in this, Grace. You have allies. An entire town full of them. And we’re all ready to help in whatever way we can.”

Grace blinked back the embarrassing moisture suddenly blurring her vision and ducked her head as she leaned briefly into Emma’s embrace. “Thank you.” She straightened and looked at Tori again. “I couldn’t ask for better friends.”

“You’ve been there for us,” Tori said, her voice ripe with conviction. “We’re just returning the favor.”

Emma nodded. “That’s what sisters do.” She squeezed Grace a final time then traipsed down the steps as if her simple statement hadn’t just set off an earthquake beneath Grace’s feet.

Sisters?

She’d never had a sister. Or a brother. And now, when her problems threatened to bring harm upon their own lives, these women surrounded her with a level of acceptance and support that truly superseded the boundaries of ordinary friendship. Only God could bring about such a blessing.

“‘A friend loveth at all times, and a brother is born for adversity,’” Grace quoted softly, the familiar proverb speaking to her heart with a depth she’d not experienced before today.

Emma twisted around on the stairs and grinned. “As Aunt Henry would say, change that brother to a sister and you’ve got a promise to hang your hat on.”

Grace shook her head in amusement as she made her way down the steps. She could hear those very words coming from Henrietta Chandler’s lips. In fact, it wouldn’t surprise her in the slightest to learn that Aunt Henry was secretly writing a suffragette version of the Holy Scriptures, replacing all the mankind and brethren terminology with words more suited to readers of the female persuasion.

“Although,” Tori said as the others caught up to her on the path, “Grace seems to have a brotherly friend interested in assisting her as well.”

“That’s right.” Emma neatly maneuvered Grace into the middle of the trio, ensuring she couldn’t escape. “Why is it that I’ve never heard of this man before? You didn’t even mention him last night when you came by to talk to Mal.”

Grace stared at the ground. It looked dry enough to absorb her if she could just find a way to liquefy herself and melt into the dust. How could she explain that she’d been carrying on intimate conversations with a complete stranger? That she’d not even known his true name before today? They’d surely think her foolish, if not an outright loon. Yet these were her sisters. And sisters shared secrets.

“Amos and I have been corresponding for a few months. In the evenings, over the telegraph wire. We were chatting last night when the message came through from Colorado. He overheard. I didn’t expect him to show up, though. We’ve never actually met.”

Emma threaded her arm through Grace’s. “And yet he rushed immediately to your aid.” She glanced past Grace to meet Tori’s eye. “If you ask me, there’s something stronger than friendship motivating his actions.”

Heat rushed to Grace’s cheeks. Yet even as she squirmed under Emma’s assumption, she couldn’t stop a little thrill from shooting through her chest. She’d had much the same thought. After all, Amos had admitted to caring about her when she’d questioned him earlier. He said he wanted the chance to get to know her. That alluded to a possible future, didn’t it?

“I agree,” Tori said. “Ben found countless excuses to visit my store during the months he was trying to convince me to let him pay court. He says he was letting me get used to the idea of having him around. Something about cooking a frog in cold water that slowly warms instead of throwing the creature into boiling water and having him jump out.”

Grace sputtered on a suppressed laugh that threatened to choke her. “Did he really compare you to a frog?”

Tori cocked a wry grin. “I’ve learned to look past the object of the analogy to the meaning behind it when talking with Ben. Otherwise I’d be constantly offended by how many times he compares me to a horse.”

“Well,” Emma said, leaning across them, “Ben does love his horses, so coming from him, such a comparison is probably high praise.”

“True.” Tori lifted her face toward the sun, a smile of pure contentment eliciting a twinge of envy in Grace’s belly. Then the moment passed and the shopkeeper turned her attention fully on Grace. “No man is perfect,” she said. “But if he loves you and respects you and treats you with kindness, the flaws fade away.”

“Unless you’re in the middle of an argument,” Emma said. “Then they seem to magnify.”

Grace and Tori chuckled. It was well-known that the town founder and the town marshal had occasional differences of opinion over how things should operate in the community. Differences that could become rather boisterous.

“Of course, it’s a temporary condition.” Emma ignored their laughter, injecting her voice with schoolmarm precision as she shared her vast wealth of married knowledge with her companions. “Those flaws shrink back down to near invisibility as soon as he says something sweet or holds you in his arms or kisses you.”

Grace nibbled her lower lip. She didn’t know what Mr. Bledsoe’s flaws were. She didn’t know him. Over the past months she’d built up an ideal, a fantasy in her mind of what her Mr. A would be like. An unrealistic standard impossible for any man to live up to.

She’d envisioned a tall man with midnight hair and skin tanned from working outdoors, which was ridiculous, since she knew Mr. A worked in a Western Union office. Yet that hadn’t stopped her from dreaming of him having rugged masculinity, swagger, and confidence. A man with a physique that would make one’s mouth go dry. A man not unlike Malachi Shaw or Benjamin Porter.

Amos Bledsoe had not been blessed with such attributes. He had his own, more subtle type of handsomeness, centered around his eyes—piercing blue, yet not in a hard way. They were honest and open and seemed to look straight into her. Even through the spectacles. His personality was just as sweet and clever as it had been over the wire. And the fact that he had rushed to her rescue did make her heart flutter.

But it also raised doubts. What kind of man left his job and his family to ride to the rescue of a woman he’d never met? It seemed a bit extreme. Perhaps he was too invested in her. Would allowing him to stay put her in a different kind of danger? Hadn’t it been an obsessed admirer who killed that saloon singer down in Tarrant County? The wires had been abuzz with the gossip for weeks.

Grace gave her head a little shake. She needed to get a grip on her imagination. The man she’d met in the jailhouse earlier had been perfectly normal. Gentlemanly, sincere, and candid regarding his intentions. Intentions that still made her blood pump a little faster when she thought of them, despite the fact that he hadn’t quite matched the image she’d built up of him in her mind.

A sudden thought scurried across her mind. What had he expected her to look like? And how far short had she fallen? Had he pictured her as a statuesque blonde like Tori, or perhaps a fiery, take-charge dynamo with dark curls and vibrant green eyes like Emma? He probably hadn’t expected a short, shy, secretive female with a murdering mine tycoon on her trail.

A sigh slipped silently through her parted lips. She was certainly no great prize. Yet he’d said he wanted to stay. That he was glad he’d come. Even after she’d left him locked up in Malachi’s jail. Surely that was worth more than a pair of broad shoulders and a wagonload of muscles.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Piper Davenport, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

The Billionaire's Challenge - Final Google by Elizabeth Lennox

This Isn't Fair, Baby (War & Peace Book #6) by K Webster

Dangerous to Know & Love by Jane Harvey-Berrick

The Billionaire From New Jersey (United States Of Billionaires Book 13) by Sherie Keys, Simply BWWM

Chasing Wishes (Capturing Magic Book 1) by Jessica Sorensen

The Surrogate Omega: M/M Non-Shifter Alpha/Omega MPREG (Three Hearts Collection Book 1) by Susi Hawke, Harper B. Cole

Forbidden Prescription 5: A Stepbrother Plastic Surgeon Romance (Forbidden Medicine) by Brother, Stephanie

Cross My Heart by S.N. Garza, Stephanie Nicole Garza

Mayhem Under The Mistletoe by Nina Auril, Abby Gale

Until Harmony (Until Her/ Him Book 6) by Aurora Rose Reynolds

Riding Rough (Rough Rider #2) by Aria Cole

Shalia's Diary Book 12 by Tracy St. John

Eventide of the Bear by Cherise Sinclair

Alpha's Heart: An M/M Shifter Mpreg Romance (Northern Pines Den Book 1) by Susi Hawke

Reluctantly Married: Interracial Romance by Miss Brandy K

American Hellhound by Lauren Gilley

Slow Dancing (The Second Chances Series Book 4) by Isobelle Cate

Those Whose Hearts (Vampire Assassin League Book 34) by Jackie Ivie

Memories with The Breakfast Club: Double-Edged Sword (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Avery Duran

Sassy Ever After: Sassy Ink 2: The Hunter's Mate (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Christina Benjamin