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The Substitute Bride

By Janet Dean

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CHAPTER ONE

Chicago, spring of 1899

Elizabeth Manning had examined every option open to her. But in the end she had only one. Her heart lurched.
She had to run.
If she stayed in Chicago, tomorrow morning she’d be walking down the aisle of the church on Papa’s arm. Then, walking back up it attached to Reginald Parks for the remainder of his life, which could be awfully long, considering Reginald’s father was eighty-two.
Papa said she had no choice, now that their circumstances had gone south like robins in winter. He’d reminded her that as Reginald’s wife, she’d be kept in fine style. Probably what the keepers said about the tigers at the zoo.
She scooped her brush and toiletries into a satchel, then dropped it beside a valise crammed with clothes. No, she couldn’t rely on mortality to get her out of the marriage.
And as for God...
Martha had promised God would help her. Well, Elizabeth had prayed long and hard and nothing had changed. Perhaps God had washed His hands of her. If so, she could hardly blame Him.
The time had come to take matters into her hands. Once she got a job and made some money, she’d return—for the most important person of all.
She dashed to her four-poster bed, threw back the coverlet and yanked off the linens, then knotted the sheet around the post, jerked it tight and doubled it again for good measure. That ought to hold her weight.
A light tap. She whirled to the sound.
“Lizzie?”
Elizabeth flung open the door. Skinny arms and legs burrowed into her skirts. “I don’t want you to go,” her brother said, his voice muffled by tears.
“I don’t want to either. But I’ve explained why I must.”
Robby’s arms encircled her waist, hanging on tight. Her breath caught. Could she do this? Could she leave her brother behind? “I’ll be back, as soon as I find a job. I promise.”
With few skills, what job could she find? Could she support them? How could she come back for Robby without being forced into marrying Reginald? All those uncertainties churned inside of her. Refusing to give in to her fear, she straightened her shoulders. She would not fail her brother.
“What if you can’t?” Robby’s big blue eyes swam with tears. “What if—” He twisted a corner of her skirt into his fist. “—you don’t come back?”
Looking into her brother’s wide eyes filled with alarm and hurt, Elizabeth wondered if he feared she’d die like Mama had. She knelt in front of him and brushed an unruly lock of blond hair out of his eyes. “I’ll be back. We’re a matched set, remember?”
Robby swiped at his runny nose, then nodded.
“We go together like salt and pepper. Like toast and jam. Like—”
“Mashed potatoes and gravy,” Robby said, voice quavering.
“Exactly.” The smile on Elizabeth’s face trembled but held. “In the meantime Martha and Papa will take good care of you.”
“But, but when we move, how will you find us?”
One month until the bank tossed them out on the street. One month to forge a new life. One month to save her family. Her stomach dropped as if it had at nine when she’d slipped on the stairs and scrambled to keep her footing. She hadn’t fallen then and she wouldn’t fail now. “I’ll be back before the move.”
Tears spilled down his cheeks. “I want to come with you.”
If only he could. But she had no idea where she’d go. What conditions she’d face. “Eight-year-old boys belong in school,” Elizabeth forced the words past the lump in her throat.
Tugging him to her, she inhaled the scent of soap, thanks to Martha’s unshakable supervision. A sense of calm filled her. She could count on Martha who’d raised her brother since Mama died, doting on him as if he belonged to her.
Robby’s eyes brightened. “Lizzie, can you get a job on a farm? So I can have a dog?”
His request pressed against her lungs. What kind of a father gave his son a fluffy black-and-white puppy for Christmas, then turned around and sold it in January? Reversals at the track, he’d said. As always with Papa, luck rising then falling, taking their family and their hearts with it.
A chill snaked down her spine. What if Robby caught Papa’s fever for gambling? If she didn’t get him away from here, her brother might spend his life like Papa, chasing fantasies.
“I can feed the pigs and chickens,” Robby pleaded, his expression earnest.
“I don’t have the skills to work on a farm, sweet boy, but once we’re settled, you’ll have the biggest dog I can find.” She kissed his forehead. “I promise.”
Yet another promise Elizabeth didn’t know how she’d keep.
A smile as wide as the Chicago River stretched across Robby’s face. “You mean it?”
“Have I ever failed to keep a promise?” She ruffled Robby’s hair. “Now promise me you’ll be brave while I’m gone.”
His head bobbed three times. “I will.”
She wrapped her brother in one last lingering hug. “I love you.” She blinked back tears. “Now, tiptoe to your room and crawl under the covers.” She tapped his nose with her fingertip. “Sweet dreams.”
His lips turned up in a smile. I’m gonna dream about a black-and-white fluffy dog.”
She forced up the corners of her mouth as Robby took one last look back at her then slipped out the door.
No longer able to hold back her tears, Elizabeth leaned against the wall, fingering the cameo hanging from the delicate chain around her neck, the last tie to her mother. She would miss her room, her home, the place she’d lived all her life. Her watery gaze traveled the tiered moldings, crystal chandelier, and wood-planked floor. Once, this bedroom had held a mahogany writing desk, hand-carved armoire and handsome Oriental rug.
Here one day, gone another.
Like her life.
“Elizabeth, we miss your company.”
Papa’s booming voice was followed by the muffled mumblings of her want-to-be groom.
She swiped the tears from her cheeks, then hustled to the half-open door and caught snatches of Reginald’s conversation. “Tomorrow...at my side...ceremony.”
“I assure you, Reginald, she’ll be there,” Papa said, his voice carrying up the stairs, putting more knots in her stomach than she’d tied in her linens.
He’d promised her to Reginald Parks much as he had the armoire he’d sold to Mrs. Grant last week and the cherry breakfront he’d shipped to the auctioneer the week before. He expected her to bail him out as Mama’s fortune had, until he’d squandered every dime and worried poor Mama into an early grave.
How could Papa believe Reginald was the answer? She couldn’t abide the man. He had no patience with Robby, even hinted at sending her brother to boarding school, as if losing his mother hadn’t been enough upheaval in his young life.
Surely God had another answer.
She sighed. If only she and Robby could have a real home where a family shared their meals and the day’s events at a dining table that stayed put, where a man considered his family first, where love didn’t destroy.
“Elizabeth Ann!” Papa’s called. “Reginald is waiting.”
She heard the familiar creak of the first step—Papa was on his way up. With her heart thudding in her chest, she eased the door shut and turned the key until the lock clicked. Then she jammed her hands into her kid gloves, grabbed her handbag and the small satchel stuffed with necessities and tore to the open window.
She looked down. Way down to the lawn and shrubbery along the back of the house. She gulped at the prospect of following her possessions out that window. Now was not the time to lose her nerve. She dropped the satchel. It bounced but stayed shut. When the valise hit, the latch sprung, scattering clothing across the lawn. Praying she’d hold up better when she alighted, Elizabeth flung the rope of sheets over the sill.
A rap on the door. “Be a good girl and come downstairs.”
She grabbed the footstool and set it below the window.
“Reginald promised you a lovely matched team and gilt carriage as a wedding present,” Papa said, his tone cajoling.
Elizabeth hiked her skirts and took a step up.
He pounded on the door. “Elizabeth Ann Manning, I’m doing this for your own good!”
Papa might believe that, but in reality, her father had one goal—prosperity. Through the door, she heard him sigh. “Sweetheart, please. Don’t embarrass me this way. I love you.”
Her fingers fluttered to her mouth as tears filled her eyes. “I love you, Papa,” she whispered.
How could she abandon him? She stiffened her spine. He’d made the choice to gamble away their money, not her. Perhaps years of watching him take them on this downward spiral had closed off her heart, but in her mind, he had only himself to blame.
Well, she and Robby wouldn’t go down with him. Together they’d start a new life. She’d find a job somewhere, then return for her brother. After they got settled, she’d find a way to help Papa. She’d find a way to save them all, a way that didn’t involve marriage to Reginald Parks. To anyone.
Papa slammed his body into the door. Elizabeth gasped. The hinges quivered but held, thanks to Mama’s well-built family home, a home far enough west to have survived the great fire. A home they’d soon lose.
With one leg in and one leg out the window, she clung to the sheet and somehow managed to get a knee up on the ledge. Soon both legs dangled from the second-story window. Gathering her courage, she lay on her belly, ignoring the metal stays of her corset pinching her ribs.
The pounding stopped. She heard a creak on the stairs. Papa must’ve gone in search of Martha and her ring of keys. He’d soon be back.
Holding her breath, Elizabeth relaxed her fingers, and down she went, faster than a sleigh with waxed runners—until her palms met a knot and broke her grip. She landed on the boxwood with a thud, and then tumbled backward onto the lawn.
For a moment, she lay sprawled there, dazed, then gathered her wits and scrambled to her feet. No time to collect her clothing. She snatched up her satchel and purse, and darted for the cover of the carriage house. Slipping inside, she tore through it and out the back, easy to do since Papa had been forced to sell their carriage.
Out of sight of the house, she sprinted down the alley past the neighbors’, no small feat in silk slippers. By the time she reached Clinton Street, her breath came in hitches.
Once Papa found a key and got her door open, he and Reginald would be out searching for her. Two doors down, a hack rounded the corner and dropped off a passenger. She slid two fingers into her mouth and let out one of the peace-shattering whistles that had sent Mama to her bed with a cold compress draped across her brow.
The hack pulled up beside her. “Where to?”
Robby’s words marched through her mind. Can you get a job on a farm? So I can have a dog?
Her brother yearned to live in the country, a good place for a boy. Perhaps a farmer’s wife would want help with... whatever a farmer’s wife did. Not that she knew the first thing about the life, but a farm would be far from Reginald. Elizabeth was strong. And she could learn.
She gave the driver her destination. Then she settled into the corner of the coach and wiggled her hand into the slit she’d made in the lining of her purse. And came up empty.
A moan pushed past her lips. Papa had taken the small stash of money she’d hidden for just such an emergency. How low would her father stoop to feed his compulsion? She dug to the bottom of her bag and found enough coins to pay the driver. She wilted against the cushions.
How would she buy a ticket out of town?
Well, she’d face that later. Knowing she had no money, Papa wouldn’t look for her at the depot, at least at first.
She wasn’t going to walk down an aisle tomorrow morning, so how bad could her situation be?
# # #
Right before dawn, Elizabeth woke. She’d tossed and turned most of the night, as much as the bench would allow, listening in the dark to every sound. But Papa and Reginald hadn’t come. In fact, no one had paid the least bit of attention to her.
She twisted her back to get out the kinks, sending three sections of the Chicago Tribune sliding to the floor. Thankfully the news that she’d bedded down at the depot wouldn’t make the Society Page. Not that anything she did these days merited a mention.
Carrying her possessions, she tossed the newspapers into the trash and strolled to the lavatory. Through the window, the rising sun lit the sky with the promise of a new day. What would this day bring?
In front of the mirror in the large, tiled room, she pulled a brush through her hair, twisted it into a chignon, and then pinned her hat in place.
The distant shriek of a whistle shot a shiver along Elizabeth’s spine. She grabbed her belongings and hustled to the platform. Porters hauled trunks and hatboxes to baggage carts while soon-to-depart travelers chatted or stood apart, sleepy eyed. Her heart thumped wildly in her chest. A ticket. She needed a ticket. But tickets cost money. What could she do?
Smokestack belching and wheels squealing, the incoming train overshot the platform. Amid clangs and squeaks, the locomotive backed into position. Soon passengers flowed from the doors to retrieve luggage and hail hacks.
Elizabeth had to find a way to board that train. Her stomach piped up. Oh, and a spot of breakfast.
Near one of the station’s exits a robust, plainly dressed young woman huddled in the corner weeping. Passersby gave her a brief glance then moved on. The stranger met Elizabeth’s gaze. Her flawless skin glowed with health, but from the stricken look in her eyes, she was surely sick at heart.
Some inner nudge pushed Elizabeth toward her. “Can I help?”
“I...I can’t go through with it. I can’t marry him.”
Another woman running from matrimony. “Who?”
“The man who sent this.” Out from the woman’s hand stuck a ticket, a train ticket. “Eligible bachelors are few and far between, but...” Tears slid down her ruddy cheeks. “...I’m homesick for my family already and I’ve only come as far as Chicago.”
Pangs of longing for Martha and Robby, even Papa, tore through Elizabeth. She’d left a note, but that wouldn’t stop them from worrying. Worse, Papa and Reginald might appear at any moment.
“That’s my train.” The stranger pointed to the rail cars across the way. “I feel terrible for spending his money on a trunk full of clothes, then leaving him in the lurch. He’s a fine Christian man and doesn’t deserve such treatment.”
Elizabeth’s stomach tangled. A twinge of conscience, no doubt for neglecting church since Mama died. For not heeding the Scriptures that Martha read each morning while Papa hid behind the headlines and she and Robby shoveled down eggs. No doubt the reason God hadn’t heard her prayers.
Her gaze latched onto her means of escape. “I need to leave town. What are you going to do with your ticket?”
Brushing at her tears, the young woman’s sorrowful eyes brightened then turned thoughtful. “The ticket is yours—if you want it.”
“You’re giving your ticket to me with no strings?”
“Well, not exactly no strings.” The woman gave a wan smile. “More like a tied knot.”
“What do you mean?”
“My groom’s expecting Sally Rutgers...me. If you’re up to starting a new life, take my place.”
Elizabeth took a step back. “I couldn’t.”
“If you don’t like his looks, use this round-trip ticket to take the next train. That was my plan.”
As Elizabeth scanned the throng milling on the platform, her mind scampered like hungry pigeons after a crust of bread. Marry a stranger? There had to be another way to take care of Robby without marrying anyone.
Her heart skipped a beat. Not fifty yards away, Papa, looking handsome, vital and, by all outward appearance, prosperous, stood talking with Reginald. From under Reginald’s bowler, white tufts of hair fluttered in the breeze.
Twisting around, Elizabeth grabbed Sally’s arm. “Tell me about this man.”
“He lives on a farm.” Sally sighed. “Oh, I doubt that appeals to a fine lady like you.”
A farm. Robby’s dream. And her nightmare was in the depot. Was this God’s solution? “How will I know him?”
Sally removed a stem of lily of the valley from the collar of her traveling suit and pinned it to the bodice of Elizabeth’s dress. “Wear this, and he’ll find you.” She checked the nearby clock. “Better hurry. Your train leaves in ten minutes.”
Elizabeth glanced over her shoulder. Papa and Reginald had stopped a porter, probably giving her description. She had nowhere to go except back to Reginald. She’d rather ride a barrel over Niagara Falls.
That left one alternative. Wear the lily of the valley and take a gander at the groom.
“Where to?” she asked.
“New Harmony, Iowa.”
Iowa? Where in Iowa? Did it matter? In Iowa was a farm, the answer she sought.
Clutching the ticket in her hand, Elizabeth thanked Sally, then dashed for the train. She boarded and found her seat, careful to avert her face. Within minutes, the engine worked up steam and lumbered out of the station. Once she’d presented her ticket to the conductor, she lost the hitch in her breathing.
The seat proved far more comfortable than the depot bench and she nodded off. Her last thought centered on the man who had sent for a bride.
What would she find in New Harmony, Iowa?
# # #
Pickings were slim in New Harmony.
One last time, Ted Logan started down the list of the single women in town. There was the schoolmarm who’d bossed him like one of her errant pupils before they even made it out the door. He wouldn’t let himself be pulled around by the ear. Or subject his children to a mother who wore a perpetual frown.
And then there was Ellen, Elder Jim’s daughter, a sweet, docile creature who quoted the Good Book at every turn. With the church and all its activities at the center of her life, he doubted she possessed the gumption to live on a farm.
Strong as an ox, the blacksmith’s daughter could work alongside any man. But Ted couldn’t imagine looking at that face for the rest of his life. Well, he might’ve gotten used to her face, if she’d shown the least bit of interest in his children. From what he’d seen, she preferred the company of horses.
Then there was Agnes, the owner of the café, who came after him with the zeal of a pig after slop and appealed to him even less. Something about Agnes set his teeth on edge. Maybe because she forever told him he was right and perfect. Was it wrong to hope for a woman with a bit of vinegar? One who wasn’t afraid to set him straight when he went off on some tangent? And how could Agnes handle his home, family and the run café?
All godly women, but most weren’t suitable mothers for Anna and Henry. And nothing about any of them drew him.
That left his bride-by-post.
God’s solution. A woman of faith who loved children and life on the farm.
Ted tugged the brim of his hat lower on his forehead and scanned the passengers leaving the train. A young woman stepped to the platform, wearing the sprig of lily of the valley pinned to her clothing. His pulse kicked up a notch. Sally, his bride.
Gussied up in a fancy purple dress, not the garb of a farmer’s wife. Even gripping a satchel, she carried herself like a princess, all long neck and straight spine and when she moved, as she did now, her full skirts swayed gracefully. He could hear the petticoats rustle from here.
She turned her head to sniff the flower, putting her face in profile. The plumed hat she wore tilted forward at a jaunty angle, revealing a heavy chignon at her nape.
He swallowed hard. Sally was a beautiful woman. He hadn’t expected that. She didn’t have a recent likeness. And he couldn’t have sent the only picture in his possession—of him and Rose on their wedding day. In the three letters he and Sally had exchanged, he had described himself as best he could, even tried to be objective, though he hadn’t told her everything.
It appeared she’d taken liberties with her description, too. Light brown hair, she’d said. Well, he’d call it more blond than brown, almost as blond as his.
Blue eyes, she’d written, though from this distance, he couldn’t confirm it.
Tall and robust, she’d promised. Tall, all right, but slender, even fragile.
He noticed a nice curve to her lips.
And a jaw that said she liked having her way.
Sally didn’t look strong enough to handle even part of the chores of a farmer’s wife. Well, he’d prayed without ceasing for a suitable wife and God had given him this one. He couldn’t send her back like he’d ordered the wrong size stovepipe from the Sears and Roebuck Catalogue.
His stomach knotted. When a man prayed for wisdom, he shouldn’t question the Lord’s answer. Still, he found the prospect of marrying what amounted to a stranger unsettling.
But Anna and Henry needed a mother to look after them. This morning, and countless others like it, left no doubt in his mind. He didn’t have what it took to manage the farm, the livestock and his children. Never mind the house and cooking.
Even if Sally couldn’t handle heavier chores, she’d said she could cook, clean and tend a garden, as well Anna and Henry. That’d do. With all his qualms forming a lump in his throat, he moved out of the shadows. Might as well get on with it. The preacher was waiting.
He strode across the platform, nodding at people he knew. New Harmony was a nice town, though folks tended toward nosy. The news Ted Logan was seen greeting a woman down at the depot would spread faster than giggles in a schoolhouse.
When he reached his bride, he stuck out a hand. “I’m Ted.”
Not a spark of recognition lit her eyes. Had he scared her? He was a large man. Still, he hadn’t expected the blank stare.
“The flower...in the letters, we agreed—” He clamped his jaw to stop the prattle pouring out of his mouth. “You’re Sally, aren’t you?”
Her eyes lit. He gulped. They were blue all right. Like forget-me-nots in full bloom.
“Oh, of course.” She offered her hand. “Hello.”
He swallowed it up with a firm shake. She winced. He quickly released his hold then held up callused palms. “Sorry, chopping wood, milking cows and strangling chickens have strengthened my grip.”
Her rosy skin turned ashen, as if she might be sick. How would he manage if he married another woman in failing health?

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