Western Spring Weddings: The City Girl and the Rancher / His Springtime Bride / When a Cowboy Says I Do. Kathryn Albright. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Kathryn Albright
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Вестерны
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781474042307
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a Cowboy Says I Do

       Dedication

       Dear Reader

       Chapter One

       Chapter Two

       Chapter Three

       Chapter Four

       Chapter Five

       Chapter Six

       Chapter Seven

       Chapter Eight

       Chapter Nine

       Chapter Ten

       Chapter Eleven

       Chapter Twelve

       Chapter Thirteen

       Chapter Fourteen

       Extract

       Copyright

       The City Girl and the Rancher

      Lynna Banning

      Dear Reader,

      After winter—often a long, cold, bleak period in nature and in life—a miracle happens: Nature regenerates and lives change.

      To me, spring signals the renewal of both living things and the human spirit. It’s a time when growth is resumed, when hope is renewed, when fear turns into courage and when the seeds of new life are sown.

       Lynna Banning

       Chapter One

      April, 1873

      “Hey, mister! Mister? Are you awake?”

      Something lifted the battered wide-brimmed hat Gray had pulled over his face. “Who wants to know?” he grumbled.

      “Me!”

      He opened one eye. “Yeah? Who’s ‘me’?”

      “Me! Emily!”

      Gray stared into a pair of wide blue eyes framed by a mop of bright red curls. A kid. A female kid, by the look of her ruffled blue plaid dress.

      “Are you sleeping?” a high-pitched voice chirped.

      “He— Heck, yeah. At least I was tryin’ my da—darndest.”

      “Are you hungry? My mama’s gone to get something to eat.”

      “Gone where?” He surveyed the other seats in the stifling passenger car. Three silver-haired ladies with big hats, two ranchers he thought he recognized and a preacher in a shiny black suit and stiff collar.

      “Gone with the conductor man. To get a sandwich for me. I hope it’s not chicken. I hate chicken!”

      Gray stretched his legs across the aisle space. “What’s wrong with chicken?”

      A frown wrinkled the girl’s forehead. “A chicken pecked me once. It hurt.”

      “Yep, a chicken’ll do that sometimes.” He resettled his hat over his face and closed his eyes.

      “Mister? Mister, aren’tcha gonna talk to me?”

      “Not if I can help it,” he said. He’d just finished a four-hundred-mile cattle drive plagued by bad weather, rustlers and no sleep. He was desperate for some shut-eye.

      “Emily!” The voice was stern and female. “What are you doing bothering that man?”

      “I’m not botherin’ him, Mama. I’m talkin’ to him.”

      “Haven’t I told you never to talk to strangers? Come away from there, honey. I’ve brought you a sandwich.”

      “It isn’t chicken, is it?” the small voice inquired.

      “I beg your pardon? Emily, what’s wrong with chicken?”

      Something swished past him. Something that smelled good, like soap. Maybe honeysuckle, too. “She doesn’t like chicken,” Gray said. He thumbed his hat back and opened his eyes. And then he sat up straight so fast his jeans rubbed the wrong way on the velvet upholstery. Holy—! The prettiest woman he’d ever seen in his life sat opposite him, a brown paper sack in her lap. She wore a stiff dark blue traveling dress and a silly-looking hat with lots of feathers on top. Partridge feathers.

      She looked up and smiled. “Oh, good morning, sir. I trust Emily was not bothering you?”

      “Uh, no.”

      “Would you like a sandwich? I wasn’t sure how long it would be before the train made its next stop, so I purchased an extra one.”

      He shot a glance at Emily. “Is it chicken?”

      “Well, yes, it is. You do not like chicken?”

      “Nope.” He winked at the girl who was sprawled on the seat next to her mother. “A chicken pecked me once.”

      Emily giggled.

      “Oh. I also have, let’s see...roast beef and egg salad. I trust a cow has not pecked you in the past?”

      Gray laughed. “Not hardly, ma’am. Fact is, I’ve seen enough cows in the past month to last me a good while, so if it’s all the same to you, I’ll take the chicken after all. And thanks.”

      “You are quite welcome,” she said primly. “I suspect my daughter has interrupted your rest.” She looked straight at him with eyes so green they looked like new willow leaves and handed him something wrapped up in butcher paper. “Emily is quite skilled at interrupting.”

      Emily unwrapped her sandwich. “Mister sleeps under his hat!”

      “I do hope you didn’t wake—”

      “Yes, I did!” Emily crowed. “And he talked to me and everything.” The girl’s bright blue eyes snapped with intelligence. He’d bet she was a real handful. He didn’t envy her mother one bit.

      Suddenly he remembered what manners he’d managed to pick up over the past thirty-one years. “Name’s Graydon Harris, ma’am.”

      “How do you do? I am Clarissa Seaforth, traveling from Boston. And this is Emily, my daughter.”

      He tipped his Stetson. “Emily and I met earlier, Mrs. Seaforth.”

      “It’s Miss Seaforth.”

      That stopped him midbite. “Miss? As in not married?”

      “That