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The Rancher's Courtship

By Laurie Kingery

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CHAPTER ONE
Simpson Creek, Texas, October 1868

Jack Collier had looked up and down the main street of the little town of Simpson Creek, but try as he might, he didn't see a druggist's store. A hotel, a mercantile, a post office, a combined barbershop-bathhouse, a jail, a bank, a doctor's office, and a church, yes, but no druggist's shop. A search of the side streets and Travis Street, which ran parallel to Main Street, netted the same lack of results.
He'd been the recipient of several second looks by the townspeople, as he rode down the streets, his own horse flanked by the dependable old cowpony that didn't mind his twin daughters riding double on it. People tended to stare at twins, and yet it seemed to be his own face they focused on, not Abigail's and Amelia's.
Well, he'd always been told he looked a lot like Pete, so that must be the reason for the stares. He started to ask one or two of them if they knew where to find his brother, but he had wanted his arrival to be a surprise for Pete. He didn't want anyone running ahead of him with the news.
But where was Pete? Had he gone into some other line of work since he'd last written Jack? It was possible, Jack supposed, but it wasn't like Pete to change his mind on such a matter. Pete had always set a course, then held to it. He'd traveled up to the Hill Country town in San Saba County last year with the announced goals of meeting the lady he'd been corresponding with and opening up his own druggist's shop. Around Christmas, Pete had written that he and Miss Caroline Wallace were in love and would be married in early spring. He wanted Jack to be there.
That was the last time he heard from Pete—no letter, no wedding invite followed.
Mail went astray all the time, though. He and his daughters had probably missed the wedding, but Jack had assumed he'd find Collier's Drugs and Patent Medicines prospering, with his happily married brother as the proprietor. Pete and his bride would have a little house on one of these side streets, no doubt with a picket fence around it and the smell of freshly baked bread wafting from the kitchen.
"When are we gonna find Uncle Pete, Papa?" queried Amelia, his daughter, clutching her china-headed doll to her chest.
"Yeah, and Aunt Caroline?" her twin sister, Abigail, piped up from behind her. "Did they go someplace else?"
Jack rubbed his chin and considered the matter. "I don't know, girls, but I'm sure enough going to find out."
After riding up Travis Street, they'd passed the churchyard and headed back onto Main Street, but now he paused by the jail to look around him, wondering where the best place to make inquiries would be.
"Can I help you, mister?"
Jack looked down to see a lanky Mexican youth with black hair and dark eyes looking up at him from beside the open door of the jail. He wore a five-pointed star that had "Deputy" inscribed across its middle.
The sheriff ought to know where to find any of the small town's inhabitants, Jack reckoned. "Is the sheriff in, Deputy?"
"Sheriff Bishop is away for a few days, sir. I'm Deputy Luis Menendez—perhaps I may help you?" The last part was said with a courteous pride.
"I hope so. We're looking for Peter Collier and his wife Caroline. He's my brother. He was supposed to have started a druggist's shop here in Simpson Creek, but I don't see one, so maybe his plans changed. Would you know where they live?"
The young man's brow furrowed and something troubled the obsidian depths of his eyes. "Miss Caroline is the schoolteacher. Perhaps it is best you speak to her."
'Miss Caroline?' What in thunder? Had Caroline and Pete had a falling-out and never married? Had Pete left Simpson Creek? Why hadn't he written Jack about it? Jack had made plans based on what Pete had told him, and if the marriage was off and Pete had gone elsewhere, Jack was going to find himself in a right pickle.
He was conscious of the youth still studying him, a hand shading his eyes from the bright sun. "May I direct you to the schoolhouse, Mr. Collier?"
Jack shook his head, "No, we passed it awhile back, while we were looking for his shop, so I know where it is. Thanks."

The rapping at the door startled Caroline. Who could it be? Her pupils were all present and accounted for--two dozen in number and ranging from first to sixth-graders. Now they all raised their heads from their slates on which they were working sums and looked behind them. No one in Simpson Creek would think of knocking on the door of the one-room schoolhouse. If they had to interrupt the schoolmarm during class, they'd likely just barge right in and explain their business.
When the knock quickly sounded again, as if whoever stood outside had grown impatient, Lizzie raised her hand. "Miss Wallace, do you want me to see who's there?"
"No, thank you, Lizzie. I'll do it. Please continue your work." Rising, Caroline left her desk and walked down the aisle that separated the girls from the boys and went to the door. She hoped whoever it was wouldn't stay long. It was hard enough to keep her students working on arithmetic in the last hour of the school day, even without interruptions. Most of them were fidgeting, staring longingly out the one-room schoolhouse's open window to where fall sunshine beckoned. When would she learn to drill them in mathmatics in the morning, when they were still fresh? But she'd only been the schoolteacher for a month, having taken on the job when Miss Phelps left.
She opened the door to see two little girls standing on the uppermost step. They were alike as two peas in a pod, both dark-haired and blue-eyed, their hair each done in two thick braids with red bows at the end, their dresses blue gingham with white pinafores. Each clutched a doll with a dress that matched what its owner wore.
Beyond them she could see a man with his back to her, securing the second of two horses to the hitching rail next to the mule a pair of her students rode to school.
"Them girls is exactly the same," breathed Lizzie, peeking around her teacher from behind.
"Those girls are exactly the same," Caroline corrected automatically. "Please go back to your seat, Lizzie."
"Ain't you ever seen twins before, Lizzie Halliday?" one of the boys hooted scornfully.
"Haven't you," Caroline corrected again. "Class, be quiet while I speak to their father." She could only guess the man was here to register his daughters, though why he'd come in the afternoon, rather than first thing in the morning, she couldn't imagine—nor why a father would be bringing the children, rather than their mother. But perhaps the mother was home with even younger children, and it had been easier for the father to bring them. A closer look at the girls' dresses revealed a smudge on the hem of one, a rip in the sleeve of the other. Well, perhaps in the confusion of moving in, there hadn't been time to attend to mending and washing yet.
The two girls smiled in unison at her, and Caroline felt an instant liking for them. Already mentally rearranging the seating chart to accommodate two more students while the man was turning from the hitching rail, she now focused on his face.
And blinked. And stared, as he climbed the steps and came closer.
Like his daughters, the man had blue eyes and black hair, but the eyes that studied her were so like Pete's eyes--Peter Collier, her fiancé, who had died in the influenza epidemic last winter, and for whom she still wore mourning black. The mouth that now narrowed reminded her of Pete's mouth, a mouth that had kissed her many times, and would never do so her again.
Oh, no, she was doing it again. Right after Pete had died, she had frequently seen his face in that of strangers passing through town, and her heart would give a little happy leap before her brain realized it was not Pete. Yes, that must be the case. The man only looked like Pete. Pete's brother would have come long ago, if he was going to.
"You're Miss Caroline Wallace? I was told I would find her here," the man said. Absently she noted that while his voice was similar, it didn't have Pete's exact cadence. Pete always said what he meant to right out. This man's voice was deeper and had more of a considering drawl to it.
He continued to study her as if he found her black dress mystifying—had he never seen mourning clothes before?
"Please, come in," she said, gesturing. "You have children to enroll, sir?" she asked, with a meaningful look at them.
They did as she had bidden, stepping into the back of the classroom. The man opened his mouth to say something, but before he could reply to her question, one of his twins asked, "Are you our Aunt Caroline? And where's Uncle Pete?"
Caroline felt her jaw drop, and her heart begin to pound as she raised her gaze from the little girl to her father.
"I'm Caroline Wallace," she said slowly, realizing that she had guessed correctly to begin with. "And you are--?"
The man's gaze narrowed. "Jack Collier, Pete's brother. These are my daughters, Amelia and Abigail. Aren't you supposed to be 'Mrs. Collier' by now? Where's Pete?"
She felt the color drain from her face and leave a coating of ice behind. It was really happening. Pete's brother had shown up now, not knowing his brother was dead, some seven months after Pete's funeral.
But thinking it could not be so didn't make it any the less true, and she realized with panic she would have to be the one to break the news to him. She wondered who had told him how to find her, yet had not mentioned his brother was dead.
Determined not to tell him about Pete in front of the two bright-eyed children staring curiously at her—not to mention all the other children eyeing them with avid interest--she forced herself to speak normally.
"Why don't we let your daughters play outside with the other children for a few minutes?" she suggested.
He gave a curt nod by way of permission, his eyes still narrowed, and she bent to speak to Lizzie, whose desk was nearby. "Lizzie, will you take Amelia and Abigail with you and introduce them to the other girls? Let them play with you?"
"Yes, Miss Wallace. Are they gonna come t' school with us?"
"We'll see." In a louder voice she said, "Class, we'll take a fifteen-minute recess." The boys didn't hesitate, scrambling out of their seats and out the door almost before she finished speaking, as if fearing their new schoolmarm would change her mind. The girls were a bit slower, but clustering around the twins, made their way out the door just as happily.
Caroline turned back to the suspicious-eyed man waiting by her desk and took a deep breath.
"Please, Mr. Collier, won't you sit down?" she said, and took her place behind the shelter of her desk.
Jack Collier stared at the small desks that sat in neat rows behind him. There were larger desks for the older students, but these were at the back of the room and his long legs still wouldn't have fit under them. But at last he settled for sitting on top of one of the front desks, though he dwarfed it.
"Where's my brother?" Jack Collier demanded again. "Why are you wearing black?" His questions came like rapidly-fired bullets, but his eyes, those eyes so like Pete's, gave away his fear of her answer.
Lord, help me to tell him with compassion, she prayed. She'd wondered why she and Pete had never received an answer to the letter he'd sent his brother inviting him to come for the wedding, but Pete said his brother was sometimes a poor correspondent. Then she'd wondered again why Jack had never written back after she'd written to notify him of Pete's death.
"I'm sorry to tell you this, Mr. Collier, but your brother Peter passed away this last winter—" she paused when she heard his sharp intake of breath—"during an influenza epidemic."
She didn't dare look at him as he absorbed this news, and sensed rather than saw him rock back on the small desktop as if he'd been struck a physical blow.
"Pete's…dead?" he murmured, his hoarse voice hardly above a whisper. "But…that's impossible. I got his letter…saying he was going to be married to the woman he met from…'the Spinsters' Club,' he called it, this spring. In March. That was you he was marrying, wasn't it? When I didn't hear anything more, the girls and I just came ahead, figuring the invite got lost in the mail or something…I figured we missed the wedding, but we'd find you and Pete all settled in together…Why didn't you let me know?"
The last question was flung at her like a fist, but she heard the piercing loss contained in it.
Caroline had left her hands in her lap below the level of the desk, and now they clutched at one another so he wouldn't see them shake. She let her gaze drop, unable to face the raw grief she saw in his face, the mingled astonishment and fury stabbing at her from those blue eyes. She felt a tear escape down her cheek, and she swept it away with a trembling hand.
"I—I'm sorry, Mr. Collier. I did try. When it…became apparent that Pete was sinking, I tried to ask him your address…He had it memorized, you see, not written down anywhere. But he was delirious, and…I-I'm afraid I wasn't able to get it from him before…before he d-died." She grabbed the black-edged handkerchief she kept always within reach in her pocket, and after dabbing at her eyes, took a deep breath. "I…tried to write you," she said. "I couldn't remember the name of your ranch, only that it was in Goliad County, so I addressed it General Delivery to Goliad. I…I guess it didn't find you. I'm very sorry about that, but…I didn't know what else to do. Pete said you were his only living relative-relatives," she amended, to include his daughters. Pete had mentioned that his brother was a widower, and had a couple of daughters, but after her only attempt to contact them had borne no fruit, she was too weighed down with sorrow to spare them another thought.
"What am I going to do now?" Jack Collier wondered aloud as if talking to himself, his voice raspy and hoarse.
She lifted her eyes to his again. "I…I'm sorry you've come all this way, only to hear such awful news…I'm sure Mama and Papa would be glad to put you up until you feel able to return home." Her mind raced ahead. She could dismiss school early, and have him follow her to the little house behind the post office where she, her brother, and her parents lived. She would explain to them what had happened. Mr. Collier could sleep on the summer porch with his daughters…
"No," he muttered.
She thought he was being polite, not wanting to put them to any inconvenience since his visit had been unexpected. "Oh, it's no trouble," she assured him kindly, "and it's the least we can do for Pete's only family…"
"No, you don't understand," Jack Collier told her, his face haggard. "I can't go back. I—I sold my ranch. I'm on the way to Montana Territory with a herd of cattle, and I thought I could leave the girls here with you and Pete until I got settled up there…" His voice trailed off and he looked away, but not before she saw the utter misery in his eyes.
She was distracted by it for only a moment until she was able to process what he had said.
"You thought…you were planning…to leave your daughters with us, with Pete and me? While you went on to Montana with your herd?" She repeated his words, as if merely asking for clarification, while inside, the effrontery of it took her breath away. He'd thought he could leave two children with his newly-wed brother without so much as a word of warning, without writing to ask if it would be all right with Pete, and more importantly, with Pete's bride?
"Yes, I'm going up there to join a couple of partners of mine who bought ranch land. I figured I'd find a nice lady there to marry so they'd have a new mama, and then I'd send for them…or come back and fetch them…" He looked away, focusing on a portrait of Washington that hung on the wall as if George might have the answers.
"But….from what I understand, at least…the snow will be flying before you get halfway there, won't it?" She wasn't a cattleman's daughter, but anyone knew moving a herd of the stubborn, cantankerous critters was no quick proposition.
He shrugged, looking uncomfortable—as well he might, she thought, at announcing such a foolhardy notion.
"We got a late start, and that's a fact," he admitted. "I was going to wait to sell the ranch early next year, but…well, let's just say I got an offer that was too good to pass up, so we rounded up the herd and left. Then halfway here my ramrod—my second-in-command, that is--got himself all into some uh…legal trouble, and there was no way I was just going to abandon him and move on. We had to wait till he was freed…so we figured we'd winter in Nebraska, then travel on in the spring."
Caroline felt her jaw tightening and the beginnings of a headache throb at her temples. The muddle-headed, half-baked plans men came up with! Now she was angry, and though she was normally a circumspect and thoughtful woman, her bitter feelings came tumbling out of her mouth.
"You assumed you could dump your children with Pete and me like a couple of sacks of flour, without even writing to ask first? If you had, you would have found out then that Pete had died!"

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