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Cheryl St.John
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Hallie raised a brow in question. Letter to Reader Title Page About the Author Dedication 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 Chapter Fifteen Chapter Sixteen Chapter Seventeen Chapter Eighteen Epilogue Copyright

Hallie raised a brow in question.

“Come.” Cooper gestured and led her outside the door with one hand on her upper arm. “There are the other men, Hallie. Once they know you’re alone at night... ”

She saw the picture. Remembering the way they’d ogled her at the trading post with lecherous eyes, she didn’t need any more convincing. “I’ll take a few things and stay with Chumani.” The warmth of his hand burned through her sleeve. “Thank you,” she said. “You always think of my safety.”

His eyes dropped to her mouth, and she caught her breath at the heat she read in their depths. His other hand raised her face to his.

Hallie’s heart set up a flutter. “What—?”

“You could talk a man blind, Hallie.”

Her eyes widened and his face lowered.

“I don’t think—”

“I don’t care if you think or not. Just don’t talk....”

Dear Reader,

Since her outstanding debut in our 1994 March Madness promotion of brand-new authors, Cheryl StJohn has been delighting readers with her unique brand of historical romance. This month’s story, Badlands Bride, is about a newspaper reporter who goes west pretending to be a mail-order bride, only to find herself stranded in the Dakotas for one long cold winter. We hope you enjoy it.

Margaret Moore’s new medieval novel, The Baron’s Quest, is the captivating story of a rough-edged Saxon who falls in love with the refined gentlewoman whom he has inherited as part of his new holdings. Pearl, from Ruth Langan, is the next in her new Western series, THE JEWELS OF TEXAS, featuring four sisters who are brought together by their father’s murder.

Liz Ireland rounds out the list with Millie and the Fugitive, a lighthearted Western about a spoiled rich girl and an innocent man on the run.

We hope you’ll keep a lookout for all four titles wherever Harlequin Historicals are sold.

Sincerely,

Tracy Farrell

Senior Editor

Please address questions and book requests to:

Harlequin Reader Service

U.S.: 3010 Walden Ave., P.O. Box 1325, Buffalo, NY 14269

Canadian: P.O. Box 609, Fort Erie, Ont. L2A 5X3

Badlands Bride

Cheryl St.John


www.millsandboon.co.uk

CHERYL ST.JOHN

is the pseudonym for Nebraska author Cheryl Ludwigs. Cheryl’s first book, Rain Shadow, 1994, received award nominations from Romantic Times, Affaire de Coeur and Romance Writers of America for their RITA.

She has been program director and vice president of her Heartland RWA chapter, and is currently a liaison for Published Authors’ Network and a conference committee chairman.

Married mother of five, grandmother of three, Cheryl enjoys her family. In her “spare” time she corresponds with dozens of writer friends from Canada to Texas, and treasures their letters. She would love to hear from you.

Send a SASE to:

Cheryl St.John

P.O. Box 12142

Florence Station

Omaha, NE 68112-0142

This book is dedicated with appreciation and

recognition to the distributors and booksellers who

promote romance and romance authors, especially:

Nelson News, Omaha/read all about it! bookstores:

Kim Huebner, Terri Foster, Rosie Christensen,

everyone in the book room and all the drivers;

read all about it! bookstores, Nebraska and Iowa:

Karen Lafler, Jennie Mathisen, Clay Nottleman,

Robbi Pozzi, Matt Rohde, Laura Tadlock,

Linda Theile, Sue Turner, Kirk Utley, Pam Williamson

and the staff at each store.

Debi Jo Miner, 3 R’s, Omaha

Linda Mullet, Waldenbooks, Sioux City

Terry Showalter, Lee Books, Lincoln

Sherry Siwinski, Waldenbooks, Grand Island

Penny Spoerry, Waldenbooks, Des Moines

Kathy Uttecht, The Book Center, Norfolk

Jo Lent, Waldenbooks, Mall of the Bluffs

my friends at Baker Place, Omaha

Donita Lawrence, Bell, Book & Candle, Del City, OK

To all of you who order my books and recommend

them to the readers, keep my backlist in stock and host

signings, this doesn’t begin to cover it, but here it is:

Thank You

Chapter One

Ignoring the reflection of the businesses across the street behind her and the words The Daily meticulously painted in gold and black lettering on the glass, Hallie Claire Wainwright observed herself in the window of her father’s newspaper office. She adjusted the jacket of her carefully chosen two-piece fitted dress and smoothed a hand over her dark hair, fashioned into an uncharacteristically neat bun.

“I think I’ve earned the responsibility of reporting on the boxing matches,” she said to her reflection. The sporting event would make the front page every day for weeks, and Hallie could think of nothing more exciting than seeing her name beneath the headline.

“I’m sure I could get interviews with the participants,” she said convincingly. “Perhaps they’ll share insights with me they wouldn’t give the men.” Forest green curtains obscured the interior of the newspaper office, but she didn’t need to see in to picture her oldest brother, Turner, setting type and her father in the office beyond.

“I’ve been doing the menial jobs without complaint. It’s time you gave me a chance. I’ll do my best.” Hallie gave her likeness a last confident nod and opened the door.

The reassuring smells of ink, paper and grease, which she’d grown up with, boosted her confidence. Turner didn’t glance up as she strode pass the Franklin press to her father’s office. She rapped twice and opened the door.

Samuel Wainwright glanced up and immediately returned his attention to the papers on his desk top.

“Father, I —”

“No.”

Her mouth dropped open. “How do you even know what I was going to say?”

“You have that stubborn look on your face.”

“I want to cover the boxing matches.” She placed her fists on her hips. “Evan—” her lip curled around the name of the new apprentice “—gets all the good stories.”

Samuel shifted his smoking cigar stub from one side of his mouth to the other and leaned back in his creaky leather chair. “Now, Hallie,” he cajoled. “Don’t get in a huff. You know it wouldn’t be acceptable — or safe—for you to take up with that rowdy crowd in the Piedmont district. Any female in Boston with half a brain in her head wouldn’t set foot within a mile of the place.”

She rolled her eyes. “That’s all the brain you give any woman credit for having.”

He harrumphed, then shuffled through a stack of papers, finding one he wanted and ignoring her while he checked the list in his other hand against the sheet.

“Hello, Precious,” Turner said, entering.

Hallie winced inwardly.

He’d rolled his white shirtsleeves back, and his dark hair stood up on his head in finger-combed waves. He handled the office work, overseeing the typeset and presses. “I want to check this against your copy,” he said to their father.

Samuel extended a paper, and the two men concurred. Used to being ignored, Hallie sat on the corner of the ink-stained oak desk and crossed her arms over her chest, unwilling to acknowledge her father’s wisdom in this particular case. So what if he was right for once? Her father and brothers, Charles and Turner, always came up with some inane reason that she couldn’t handle a story, and ninety-nine out of a hundred times the real reason—the infuriating reason — was that she was a female.

Turner reached for a strand of Hallie’s hair that had fallen loose. “You’re a sight.”

She batted his hand away.

“What are you pouting about now?”

“I’m not pouting.”

He laughed. “You’re mad as a March bare. Still in a fix over Evan? He says he can’t sleep nights for the ringing in his ears. For the last week at supper, you’ve managed to discredit everything about the man, including his parentage.”

Hallie uncrossed her arms and shot a glance at her father. He wore a smile of bored amusement. “I keep hoping someone around here will notice that he’s not any more capable than I am.”

“And as we’ve told you a thousand times,” Turner said, raising a superior brow, “Father needed Evan.”

She tried her best to swallow her resentment. Her father did need help, and she’d worked so hard to prove herself. Samuel had hired the young man to assist Charles with the reporting, so he could devote himself to the book work and editing. It hurt immeasurably that none of them had considered her for the position. And it frustrated her beyond words that they refused to listen to her reasoning.

It was one thing to constantly defer to her brothers, but now an outsider had displaced her! “Perhaps if I put on a pair of trousers, the lot of you will notice I have a whole brain in this head.”

Turner scowled. “If you put on a pair of trousers, the men around here will notice more than that. And I’ll have to turn you over my knee and discipline the object of their attention.”

Hallie resisted the urge to stick her tongue out. Just because they treated her like a child didn’t mean she’d give in and behave like one.

“Did you turn in the piece on the quilting society?” Turner asked.

“Now that was an unequaled challenge,” she replied, tracing a worn scar on the desk top with an index finger. “Think it’ll make the headlines tomorrow?”

“Look,” her father said, interrupting. “Remember those classifieds we ran a while back? Here’s more of the same.”

Turner bent over the desk and read aloud. “‘Bride wanted.’ Another one—‘Wife wanted to cook, do laundry and care for children.’”

“What kind of self-respecting woman would answer an ad like that?” Hallie asked, frowning her distaste.

“A woman who wants a husband,” Turner replied, directing a pointed glance at his sister. “Unlike you.”

She ignored the familiar taunt. “It’s barbaric.”

“But newsworthy,” her father added. He caught his cigar between two fingers and squinted at her through curls of blue-gray smoke. “Some of the young ladies at Miss Abernathy’s Conservatory answered the last ads. Why don’t you do a story on them, Hallie?”

“Really?” she asked, jumping up.

“I haven’t seen anything in the other papers,” he continued. “Maybe, for a change, we can print a story before they get the idea.”

The assignment filled Hallie with a new sense of importance. The Daily was always trying to get the jump on the bigger papers, and even though the other newspapers always managed to edge them out, the Wainwrights had increased circulation over the past year. Any newsworthy story that first appeared in The Daily was a feather in their journalistic cap.

“I’ll work on it right away.” She kissed her father on the cheek and smugly tilted her chin on her way past Turner.

Samuel and Turner exchanged conspiratory grins. “How long do you think that will keep her out of our hair?” Turner asked.

Samuel ran a hand over his balding pate. “Let’s hope until Evan has a foot in the door. It’s hard enough being a cub, without having to deal with Hallie when she’s got her hackles up.”

“Well, then, we’ll just have to keep her busy.”

“Isn’t it just the most romantic thing you’ve ever heard?” The young woman with golden hair and ivory skin ignored the cake and tea on the tiny table and stared vacantly across the front of the lace-decorated establishment where the ladies of Boston came to socialize over afternoon tea.

Hallie thought traveling to God-only-knew-where to marry a man she’d never laid eyes on was the most asinine thing she’d ever heard, but she politely refrained from saying so.

“Where are the northern Dakotas, anyway?” Tess Cordell asked, coming out of her dreamy-eyed trance. “One of the girls said up by the North Pole.”

“I don’t think it’s quite that far.” Hallie tried to recall her geography lessons. “It’s far to the west and up north. Quite remote, I’m sure.”

Tess took an envelope from her reticule and carefully removed and unfolded a letter. “His name is Cooper DeWitt. He has a stage line and a freight company, so he must be very wealthy.” Her pale blue eyes took on that dreamy quality again. “The only thing he requested in a wife was that she be able to read and write. I think that’s good, don’t you? He doesn’t sound like a demanding sort of fellow.”

“Or discriminating,” Hallie added.

“Right,” Tess agreed, the comment apparently sailing over her head. “He’s not superficial like most young men who care only that a woman be from a good family.”

Hallie heard the resentment in her voice. Obviously Tess was not from a well-to-do family, or she wouldn’t have responded to an ad from a desperate frontier man. “Does he say how old he is?”

Tess frowned at the paper momentarily. “No.” Her expression brightened. “But he does mention that he’s never had a wife, so he must be young.”

Or uglier than a buck-too!hed mule, Hallie thought more realistically. What was this poor girl getting herself into? She almost wanted to offer her assistance if the girl needed someone to provide for her so badly she was willing to do this. But she held her tongue. Her family had told her often enough that her thinking was not that of a typical twenty-year-old woman. Tess was obviously delighted with her plan. “What else does he say?”

“Only that the country is beautiful and that I would have everything that I need.”

“How romantic.” Hallie made a few notes on her tablet. “Are you worried about being so far from anyone you know?”

“Well...” Tess chewed her lower lip. “I don’t have family, but a couple of the other girls have accepted positions in the same community, so we’ll be traveling together. I’m sure Mr. DeWitt will see that I can visit from time to time.”

Hallie noted the term accepted positions for later reference. “Are the other girls as excited as you?”

“Oh, yes!” Her pale eyes sparkled. “This is an adventure of a lifetime!”

“I want to speak with the others, too. Can you give me their names?” Hallie scribbled a list and thanked Tess for the interview.

Hallie met the other young women, then hurried home to write her article. The enormous, masculinely furnished house was quiet, as usual. She slipped into her father’s study and seated herself in his oversize chair, arranging paper, pen and ink on the desk top. She loved the room, did her best thinking among the familiar heavy pieces with the Seth Thomas mantel clock chiming on the half hour.

Nearly three hours passed before Hallie noticed the time. Double-checking the information, wording and neat printing, she blotted the pages. Her father would undoubtedly cut it in half, but, pleased with her work, she delivered it to his office.

He read the pages while she waited. “This is just what we wanted, Precious,” he commended her.

Gladdened at the acknowledgment, she ignored the patronizing nickname.

“Keep on this,” he said.

“You mean...?”

“I mean follow up. Go with them when they shop for the trip, watch them pack, all that. We’ll run a series on the brides, right up until you wave them off at the stage station.”

Surprised and more than a little pleased, Hallie nodded. “All right.” She patted the edge of the desk in satisfaction. “All right.”

Hallie read her articles in print each day, delighting in the fact that her father hadn’t cut more than a sentence or two. She was so delighted, she didn’t allow the fact that her father’s new apprentice was covering the boxing championships and making headlines nearly every other day upset her—too much.

The day before her subjects were due to leave, she stepped into the office early. On the other side of the partially open mahogany door her brothers’ voices rose.

“I’ll take this sentencing piece,” Charles said. “I’ll be at the courthouse this morning, anyway.”

“Right,” Samuel said. “Evan?”

“I still have the lawyer to interview and, of course, the matches tonight. I’ll try not to take a punch myself this time.”

Male laughter echoed.

“That’s some shiner!” Charles said.

“Great coverage, son.” Samuel added. “You’ll do anything to get an unusual angle. That’s the stuff good reporters are made of.” The aromatic scent of his morning cigar reached Hallie’s nostrils, and she paused, a hollow, jealous ache opening in her chest at her father’s casual praise of Evan Hunter. “How many more matches?”

“Another week,” Evan replied.

Hallie reached for the door.

“What’re we gonna do with Hallie?” Turner’s voice carried through the gap beside the door. “Her brides leave tomorrow.”

Hallie stopped and listened.

“That turned out to be an excellent piece,” Charles commented. “We’ve had good response.”

“Plus we got the jump on the Journal,” Samuel agreed.

“Who’d have thought that when you came up with something to keep her off Evan’s back during the matches, we’d actually get a good piece of journalism?” She recognized Turner’s voice.

They laughed again.

A heavy weight pressed upon Hallie’s chest. Hurt and self-doubt squeezed a bitter lump of disappointment into her throat. Of all the patronizing, condescending, imperious—

They’d handed her the story like presenting a cookie to a toddler they didn’t want underfoot! And now they gloated over their own superiority. Hallie had never felt so wretched...so cheated...so unimportant.

“Do we have any sources in the Dakotas?” Charles asked.

“Why?”

“The real story is on the other end of that stage line.”

A moment of silence followed Charles’s comment, wherein Hallie imagined them nodding piously at one another.

“Yes, when the men who sent for those gals set eyes on them,” Samuel agreed. “No. We don’t have anyone that far west.”

“Too bad,” Turner said.

“Too bad, indeed,” Charles said. “We could have had a real follow-up story there.”

“Let’s just hope the Journal doesn’t think of it.” Samuel added.

Heartbroken, Hallie gathered her skirts and trod stealthily back out the front door. She walked the brick street without direction. It never entered her mind to go home. Her mother would only tell her as she always did that her father and brothers did such things for her own good. Clarisse Wainwright had been born and bred to be a genteel wife and a mother to Samuel’s sons. The fact that Hallie had come along had been an inconvenience to all of them, or so Hallie saw it.

Hallie hadn’t been born the proper gender to take a prominent place at the newspaper, as much as she wished to, as much as she knew the same amount of ink flowed through her veins as her brothers’. They’d patted her on the head and sent her on her way since she’d been old enough to toddle after them.

The truth lay on her crushed heart like lead. They would never see her as good enough, as equal, as valuable or necessary. Even Clarisse had been necessary only to the point of bringing Charles and Turner into the world. Now her mother lived the life of a pampered society wife, spending her days with her gardening club, at the tearoom and playing the latest vogue card game, bridge.

Hallie would never accept an invalid life like that. Surely there was some way to prove herself to her father. If only he would give her a chance, he’d see she was as capable as Charles and Turner—and more so than Evan Hunter—because she’d been born to the life.

If only she’d been born a man.

Her mother had forced her into dresses and threatened her with Miss Abernathy’s if she didn’t take an interest in her hair and clothing. Hallie had conformed to their expectations—to the world’s expectations—and resigned herself to her unchangeable, unappreciated gender. But she could not accept the role they wanted her to play. Hallie wanted more.

Should she give up or go on printing the same outdated page of her life over and over? Neither of the choices appealed to her.

Finding herself across from the tearoom, Hallie stared dismally at the brownstone facade beside the hotel and recalled her interview with Tess Cordell. Charles had said the real story was where Tess was going. There must be some way Hallie could keep in touch with her. Perhaps, even though the mail took weeks, she could convince Tess to correspond with her for future articles. Maybe Tess would send information about the other young women, too. It wouldn’t be anywhere close to as in-depth reporting as she needed, but it was the only answer she had.

She set out for Miss Abernathy’s, realizing she’d answered her own question. She couldn’t give up. Not when the result meant settling for a superficial existence.

She found Tess Cordell hurriedly packing, arranging and rearranging, discarding items she couldn’t fit into the two small bags open on the bed. Hallie surveyed the disarray in the small room. “Whatever are you doing? Yesterday you were all packed except for your overnight valise.”

“I’ve changed plans, Miss Wainwright.” Cheeks flushed, her fair hair atumble, she tucked a cotton night rail into the battered valise and clasped her hands together. Her blue eyes sparkled with excitement. “I’m going to Philadelphia.”

“Philadelphia!” Disappointment sank in Hallie’s stomach. “What about the Dakotas?”

Tess managed to look a little sheepish. She busied herself stuffing items back into the trunk against the wall. “I was engaged until a few months ago. Eric—he’s my fiancé—well, his family put pressure on him to call the engagement off. He did, and I was devastated.”

The strength left Hallie’s legs and she wilted onto a wooden chair.

“Mr. DeWitt’s ad seemed the only thing for me to do at the time,” she explained. “But last night Eric came to see me. He’s taken a position in a Philadelphia law office, and he realized he couldn’t go without me. You know that expression ‘smart as a Philadelphia lawyer’? Well, that’s Eric. Rich, too. And he loves me. So you see there’s nothing else I could do but go with him.”

“But this DeWitt fellow...”

Tess reached toward the bureau and turned back, tossing two envelopes on the bed. “Eric gave me money to replace what I spent. Of course, it must be returned to Mr. DeWitt.... Will you be a dear and see to it for me?”

Hallie stared at the envelopes, her plans dashed.

Tess buckled two leather straps around the last case. “I’ve asked Miss Abernathy to store my trunk until Eric can send someone for it.” She tidied her hair and settled her bonnet on her head. “I hope I didn’t rum your story, Miss Wainwright, but this is the best opportunity I’m ever going to have. Please understand.”

In disbelief, Hallie watched her pick up her bags and hurry through the doorway. “Good luck,” she said to the empty room.

She sat in the silence, absorbing yet another wash of disillusionment. As far as she knew there were still three other women planning to leave on the stage the following day. Perhaps one of them would agree to help Hallie with her articles. None had been as young or as personable as Tess, but she would have to make do.

She moved from the chair to the rumpled bed and picked up the envelopes. One contained the letter she’d seen Tess with. Hallie unfolded it and read the scrawled handwriting.

Dear Miss Cordell,

My wife must be able to read and write. Enclosed is a cashier’s check to purchase whatever you will need. There are no women’s shops here. The Territory is far from the life you are used to, but the land is beautiful and you will have everything you need. I’ve never been married. I trapped for many winters and now operate a freight company and stage line. A justice will meet us at the Stone Creek Station next month.

Sincerely,

Cooper DeWitt

Hallie tucked the letter back into the envelope and picked up the other, pulling out a stage ticket and two hundred dollars. No wonder Tess had been impressed.

She fingered the ticket, took it out and turned it over a couple of times. The real story’s on the other end of that stage line.

With a little thrill of excitement, she realized what she was thinking. No. It was too dangerous! She slid the ticket back into the envelope. She would cash it in, buy a cashier’s check for the amount plus the cash and return it to DeWitt.

We could have had a real follow-up story there. The voices from the other side of her father’s door haunted her. Get Hallie off our backs...let’s hope the Journal doesn’t think of it... Turner’s condescending tone came to her. What are you pouting about now, Precious?

What if she did it? What if she used this ticket to get her to the Dakotas? She could interview the men who sent for wives. She could get the follow-up story on the other women—the real brides.

But what about this DeWitt person? He was expecting a wife. Hallie turned that question over a few times before a solution came to mind. She could simply explain the situation to him, give him his money back and call it square She could get her story, and he could send for another wife. He’d have to anyway, since Tess had backed out.

Enthusiastic now, she planned her departure. She couldn’t tell her family. They’d never allow it. Her mother would have a conniption fit. It would most likely take them a day to notice she was missing, and by then she’d be long gone. She’d write from the first station.

Satisfied with her plan, Hallie tucked the envelopes into her reticule and stood. She had packing to do if she was going to catch that stage tomorrow.

Cooper paced the dusty expanse of hard-packed earth surrounding the stage station and surveyed the broad horizon, temporarily forgetting its stark beauty. He saw only the barrenness of the land...the lack of people and buildings. He’d told her in the letter, but seeing was believing. And by now, wherever the coach was, she’d had time to see plenty.

Cooper frowned at the vista before him. The stage should have arrived sometime that morning. It was now early afternoon and there was still no sign of it. In his mind the delay signaled only one thing: trouble.

“Sky’s clear here,” Stuart Waring, another of the impatient grooms, said from behind him. “But that don’t mean they didn’t run into rain or mud.”

Cooper turned to the two farmers sitting on crates against the log wall. Stuart wore a faded shirt with a string tie cinched around his scrawny neck. His scarred boots had been polished and shined. The ever-present wind snatched at his hat, and he secured it quickly.

“Coulda had a horse go lame,” Vernon Forbes said. His jacket bore threadbare spots at the wrists and elbows, and he held a small, battered package. A gift for his bride? Cooper hadn’t thought of that.

Angus Hallstrom, the station operator who worked for Cooper, leaned against the doorframe and picked his teeth with a piece of straw. “Fact that the stage’s been robbed three times in as many months ain’t sittin’ well with me.”

Cooper had been thinking the same thing. He didn’t like the uncomfortable feeling that tiptoed up his spine and settled on his shoulders. Having money stolen or losing a month’s mail was one thing... harm coming to the woman he intended to marry was another.

George Gaston, the portly justice, sat in the only chair and sipped black coffee from a dented metal cup. Cooper observed the motley group of men and imagined what the city women would think of them.

A strange uncertainty rippled in his chest, and he glanced down at his clean buckskin pants and fringed shirt. What would Tess Cordell think of him?

Fifteen years ago, even ten years ago, content living, hunting and trapping with the Oglala, he’d never have imagined he would pair himself with a white woman. Time had changed that, as it had the existence of his people—rather, the people of his heart—and most of them were surviving on reservation land.

Buffalo no longer roamed the grasslands in great herds, like rippling black seas. The Oglala, Santee, Yankton and other Sioux had been forced to make treaties in order to receive food.

Cooper paced to his team of horses, waiting in the shade of a wind-bent tree. He ran a hand down the black’s hide and noticed his own skin, callused and rough, sun-darkened nearly to a shade like that of his Sioux family.

His white skin had given him an advantage over the men he called his brothers. He’d taken a land grant offered only to whites. He’d traded and sold years’ worth of furs for wagons and tools, caught his own horses and purchased everything else he’d needed to start his business.

For now, he could only take food and winter supplies to the reservation, but someday, and he hoped it would be soon, he would be in a position to really help his people. And Tess Cordell would help him do just that.

Hallie covered her mouth and nose with her damp handkerchief and tried not to choke on the thick dust gusting in around the drawn shade. The wheels hit another gully and her groan was drowned out by the other women’s cries.

Zinnia Blake held her wilted, green-feathered hat in place on her head with a dirty-gloved hand and Hallie tried not to laugh at the way the flesh beneath her chin jiggled. They hit another indentation and Zinnia flattened the hand over her enormous bouncing bosom. Even in the dim interior, her face glistened as red as a freshly washed tomato. “Isn’t it awfully hot for this late in the fall?”

“It can’t be much farther,” Olivia Mason predicted. She pounded on the roof with the heel of her hand and peeled back the shade. “Mr. Tubbs, is it much farther?”

The monotonous sounds of the creaking coach and the horses’ hooves were the only reply.

The wind stuck a coil of red hair to Olivia’s pale cheek and she dropped the shade back into place. “He promised we’d be there this morning.”

Бесплатный фрагмент закончился.

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Возрастное ограничение:
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Дата выхода на Литрес:
31 декабря 2018
Объем:
301 стр. 2 иллюстрации
ISBN:
9781408988367
Правообладатель:
HarperCollins

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