How much did it cost a man to build a future for himself?
Sam Owens stood in the center of his future and looked around at the thick adobe walls and the handful of furnishings. Some might say it was just a houseāa house that had only been finished for two days, at that. But it was his future too. And by the end of the day, heād have the two things heād spent his entire life wanting.
A family and a home.
Provided the woman heād been writing for over a year didnāt take one look at the yellow, barren landscape of the Chihuahuan Desert and decide to go back to Michigan.
Sam stared down at the flower in his hand, the orangish-red petals flaming amid the brown hues of the adobe walls and packed-dirt floor, then headed into the houseās single bedroom.
He set the prickly pear flower on the bed beside the pillow. The petals looked even bolder against the brown linen blanket covering the bed than they had in his hand. Would Ellie think it was too bright?
Or maybe the problem was that he didnāt have enough flowers. Did he have time to pick a couple more before he had to meet the stage? His house might be sturdy, the kind of building meant to last five or six generations, but mud walls werenāt exactly pretty to look at.
What had made him think one flower would be enough to brighten up a room with brown walls and a brown floor?
Sam grabbed the bandana tied around his neck and pulled the end up to rub at the sweat trickling down his temple. Instead of riding out to check the cattle earlier, he should have headed into town and gotten a different blanket to spread over the bed. Something blue or red or greenāany color besides brown.
Maybe if he left now, heād have time to buy a new blanket before the stage arrived. He didnāt have much money to spare, but he could manage a dollar or two on a blanket if it would make his new wife feel at home. He turned and stepped through the door into the houseās main room but stopped short when he saw the table, plain and brown just like the walls and floor. Why hadnāt he thought to fancy up this room too?
Perhaps instead of buying a blanket, he should gather more cacti flowers and put them in a mug at the center of the table. Or he could buy a can of paint to brighten the entire place.
But what if Ellie didnāt like the table no matter how many flowers he put on it? What if it was too small to fit him and her plus the three siblings she was bringing? He didnāt have room for a bigger table unless he got rid of the bunkbed crammed against the wall. If he did that, then her two brothers would have to sleep in the barn, though the one-year-old could probably still sleep in the small bed heād tucked into the corner.
Sweat slicked his palms, and not because of the midday heat. What if Ellie thought the entire house was too small? What if she took one look at his land and decided sheād be better off marrying someone with more than a hundred head of cattle and fifty dollars in the bank? What ifā¦?
āHello, the house.ā
Sam jolted, the sound of the familiar male voice jarring against the desolate silence of the desert.
āSam, you in there?ā Wesās voice rang out again.
Sam took a final glance around the house that suddenly seemed too smallānever mind that heād spent the past six months building itāand walked out the door.
āHowdy, Wes.ā Sam pulled his hat lower on his head to shield his eyes from the bright Texas sun. āYou finished with spring round up?ā
āGot back last night. Thereās a handful of calves still needing branded, but the hands can handle that. Thought Iād stop by, see how your house was coming.ā Wes slid off his horse in that easy manner he had, the manner that spoke of a man whoād been raised on one of the largest ranches in West Texas. āLooks like you finished it.ā
āTold you I would.ā
āDonāt reckon I believed you.ā A small smile quirked the side of Wesās mouth.
Sam rubbed the back of his neck. He didnāt have much choice about getting the house finished, not with Ellie and her siblings due to arrive today, but the notion of telling Wes he had a mail-order-bride coming caused his throat to grow drier than the desert beneath his feet.
Wes sauntered toward the paddock holding the handful of longhorns that still needed branding. Most people who stopped by to look at a house would probably, well, go inside and have a gander. But Wes had four generationsā worth of rancherās blood running through his veins. Like a fly drawn to honey, the man couldnāt keep himself away from a cow.
āI was thinkingā¦ā Wes settled a foot on the paddockās bottom rail and leaned his arms on the top. āMight bring Minos over for a few days at the end of May. If you donāt mind breeding a little early, that is.ā
Samās heart gave a solid thunk against his breastbone. Did Wes truly mean to let him breed his cows with the A Bar Wās prize bull?
No, he couldnāt afford it. He needed the money heād saved to see him and his new family through until fall. Besides, studding Minos was probably worth four times what he had in his bank account.
But he couldnāt let a chance to breed a few of his cows with the A Bar Wās prize bull slip by.
āHow much do you want to stud him?ā What were the chances the bank would give him a loan?
āYou come along on the cattle drive with us in the fall, and weāll call it even.ā
Sam met his friendās eyes. Wes was being too generous. Breeding a bull like Bernard to his heifers was worth two decades of eating trail dust, not a single cattle drive.
Silence lingered, leaving only the empty quiet of the desert to fill the space between them. Wes didnāt move his gaze, but his dark brown eyes gave away nothing, which said just about everything.
āYou donāt plan on telling your pa,ā Sam muttered the words on a rush.
āPa canāt keep track of every last cow, not when weāve got fifty thousand head.ā
āNo, but he keeps track of that prize bull.ā
āLook, Sam, I want to help, and short of giving you cattle, this is probably the best way for me to do it.ā Wes hooked a thumb on his gun belt and stared out over the craggy peaks of the Bofecillos Mountains. āAccept my offer and let me worry about the rest.ā
āAll right.ā Sam nodded, his throat growing tight.
āGood. Now letās go see this house of yours.ā
Sam narrowed his eyes toward the cloud of dust that appeared at the crest of the next hill. Riders, two of them, by the look of it. āIāve got company.ā
Wes studied the duo, his jaw set in its familiar firm line beneath the black stubble that told of two weeks spent on roundup. āWant me to ride out with you?ā
āNaw, this shouldnāt take more than a minute, and Iāve got to get my hide into town soon.ā Sam headed to where heād tied Long Arrowās reins to the post of the paddock. āGo inside and look around the house before I go, if youād like.ā
Wes headed toward the house as Sam swung into the saddle, then he dug his heels into Long Arrowās side. The beastās muscles bunched beneath him, long and fluid as they sped across the top of the hill. Hot Texas air rushed past, threatening to tug the hat from his head. He looked out over the land, his land, and a smile crept across his face. To the untrained eye, his rolling patch of the Chihuahuan Desert might not be much to look at. The desert grass, cacti, yucca, and candelilla all blended together in varying shades of brown, rubbing out the brightness of the yellow rocks that filled the rest of the landscape. But when a man owned the land he rode across and a hundred head of cattle to go with it⦠well, the possibilities seemed endless.
Sam dropped into the valley between the two hills, then Long Arrow started up the second incline. He didnāt find strangers on his land too often, not with the road lying directly west of his property and the mountains bordering his land on the east.
When he reached the top of the second hill, the men ahead of him slowed and angled their horses to meet his.
Sam reined in Long Arrow and straightened himself in the saddle. āCan I help you?ā
Dust covered the two men, from the tops of their wide-brimmed hats to the boots resting on their stirrups, and their horses hadnāt fared any better.
The larger of the pair, with dark eyes and hair that matched the black shade of his hat, answered. āNaw, just doing some surveying.ā
āSurveying?ā Sam raised his eyebrows.
āFor the railroad.ā The shorter, blond-haired man pulled back on his horse to keep him from eating a clump of mesquite.
āThe railroadās going in sixty miles north of here, so that doesnāt explain what youāre doing on my land.ā
The shorter man sent the taller one a puzzled look.
āDonāt think this is your land,ā the tall man growled. āIt belongs to the Southern Pacific Railroad, signed over by the State of Texas itself.ā
The Southern Pacific Railroad? Sam leaned forward. āThatās news to me, seeing how I have the deed to the property. Itāll be news to our courthouse as well, since they have a copy of the deed on file there.ā
āYouāre wrong, mister. This here land belongs to the Southern Pacific railroad.ā The blond man straightened in his saddle, his eyes taking on a challenging gleam. āIf you donāt believe us, maybe you should go down to the courthouse and see for yourself.ā
āMaybeĀ youĀ should, because I know whoās going to win this argument.ā Samās shoulder muscles tightened, his hand only a breath away from the pistol strapped to his side.
āIs that your place?ā The taller man nodded toward the top of the next hill, then glanced at where Samās hand hovered near his gun. āThat house over yonder?ā
He couldnāt quite name what irked him about these men, but something set the hairs on the back of his neck to bristling, and his fingers itch for the feel of his revolver. Maybe it was the way the men kept exchanging looks with each other, or the way neither of them had a pencil or paper in sight though they claimed to be surveyors. Either way, heād had enough.
āIt is, just like this is my land. I want you off it, now. The road lies about a half mile west of here, and if you donāt stick to it, Iāll haul you into the sheriffās myself.ā Sam jutted his chin toward the road.
Hoofbeats sounded behind him, but he didnāt need to turn to recognize the familiar canter of Wesās prize stallion, Ares.
āNow get.ā Sam settled his palm firmly on the butt of his gun.
The tall man looked in Wesās direction, then flicked the reins on his horse, taking off at a gallop and leaving the shorter man scrambling to kick his horse into motion. The man shot off down the hill just as Wes pulled to a stop.
āWhat was that about?ā Wes narrowed his eyes at the strangers.
āIām not sure.ā Sam stared after the men, but they headed due west toward the road, just as heād instructed. āClaimed they were surveying for the railroad.ā
āWerenāt dressed like any surveyors Iāve ever seen.ā
No, they were dressed like cowhands whoād been eating trail dust for a week or better. āThey said this land belong to the railroad, awarded by the state.ā
āThatās ridiculous.ā Wes squinted into the sun as the men disappeared over the next hill. āOld man Griggs owned this land back when it belonged to Mexico, and seeing how he hired some highfalutinā lawyer and gave it to you when he died, itās yours.ā
āI told them to go check at the courthouse if they think otherwise.ā
āI heard of similar trouble a ways north of here.ā Wes rubbed his jaw. āSomething got mixed up in Austin, and the state gave land that already belonged to a farmer to the railroad.ā
āIf those men were from the railroad, then Iām a dancehall girl.ā
āProbably rustlers or bandits with a handy story then. We better keep an eye out for missing cattle or anything else suspicious. Iāll alert the cowhands at home.ā
Sam shivered despite the glare of the sun beating down on him. The Rio Grande was only a quarter mile south, and his land ran clear up to it. Were those men dusty because theyād been moving cattle into Mexico? His herd was too small to grab their attention, but a ranch like the Westinsā made prime picking for a couple of men looking to steal cattle and move it out of the country before the law could be called in.
āWhen I get to town, Iāllā¦āĀ Town. Ellie. The stage.
Sam pulled his watch out of his breast pocket. āIām late, and I still have to hitch up the wagon.ā
He dug his heels into Long Arrowās sides and flicked the reins. He should have left a quarter hour ago. What kind of impression was he going to make on his fiancĆ©e if he was late to meet her the very first time?
Sam swung down from his saddle in front of the long lean-to he used as a barn, but when Long Arrow spied the wagon and Bella, the sturdy paint mare, waiting in her stall, he whinnied and pawed at the ground. Long Arrow hated being harnessed with Bella, but the wagon would probably be laden with enough trunks that heād need both horses to pull it on the way back.
āThought you said you were going to town.ā Wes reined Ares in beside the lean-to but stayed atop his mount.
āI am.ā
āWith the wagon?ā
āYup.ā Sam unfastened the cinch from around Long Arrowās belly and then hefted the saddle off his horse.
āWhat are you in such an all-fired hurry for?ā Wes frowned. āThe mercantile doesnāt close until five, and if youāve a mind to report those men to Daniel, he aināt going to close down the sheriffās office before eight, and even then heāll have a deputy on patrol until the saloon closes.ā
Sam slid the collar over Long Arrowās head then drew in a breath. Heād put this off long enough. It was time to tell his best friend.
Trouble was, Wes would be furious.
But probably not as furious as heād be if he found out through the scuttlebutt around town.
Sam unhooked Bellaās bridle from where it hung on the wall then moved to open the door of the mareās stall.
āIām going to meet my wife,ā he mumbled, keeping his back to Wes while he fit the brown leather straps over Bellaās head and led her out of the stall.
āYourĀ what?ā Wesās brows drew down beneath his hat brim. āYou donāt have a wife.ā
āI will in about an hour.ā Provided she hadnāt changed her mind about marrying him at some point on the long journey from northern Michigan to Twin Rivers. āShe should be on todayās stage, and I already have an appointment with Preacher Russell.ā
āOn the stage? An appointment with the preacher?ā Wes jumped down from his horse and grabbed the collar intended for Bella, then held it away, his dark eyes narrowed. āYouāre not talking about a mail-order bride, are you?ā
Sam pursed his lips together.
āYou canāt be serious.ā Wes threw his hands in the air, loosening his grip on the collar just enough for Sam to snatch it from him. āSince when do you need a wife?ā
āYou know the verse as well as I do. āTwo are better than one.āā Sam didnāt look up at his friend as he guided the collar over Bellaās head, then fastened the traces.
āI donāt like this,ā Wes muttered as he stalked in front of the horses. āOf all the crazy, harebrained things. How much do you know about this woman?ā
āI know enough.ā Sam hooked the harnesses to the pole, then attached the traces to the wagon. āAnd youāre in no position to criticize me, not when youāve got your sister, your pa, and ranch hands to help around your place. Besides, you liked being married well enough, once.ā
Wes stopped pacing, his jaw turning as hard as an armadilloās shell.
Sam winced. What had he been thinking? He knew better than to bring up Abigail around Wes.
Silence filled the lean-to for a full minute. Sam focused on attaching the traces to the wagon, the heat of Wesās eyes boring into him, while the cattle from the paddock lowed in the distance.
āAbigail was different. Iād known her my whole life.ā When Wes finally spoke, his voice was as gritty as the earth beneath their boots. āYou donāt know anything about this woman coming on the stage.ā
āWeāve been writing for over a year now.ā Though it did feel strange speaking of Ellie aloud. That would change after they were wed, wouldnāt it? āReckon thatās about as well as any man ever knows a woman before they marry.ā
Wes gave a hard, rough laugh. āSpoken like a man who knows nothing about women. This isnāt about that bargain, is it? That pact we made all those years ago?ā
Sam sighed. It had been a foolish pact made only to cheer up Wes when Cain started harassing him after his ma died. But still, a man couldnāt rightly go back on a blood oath. āNo. Itās just⦠Iām twenty-eight and tired of being alone. Reckon Iād be looking for a wife about now even if weād never made that pact.ā
Though having a wife would also save him from getting a shaved head, because he had no doubt Cain would come back into Twin Rivers just to see him bald.
Wes shook his head. āI still donāt like it.ā
āI didnāt ask whether you liked it.ā Sam spit the words into the dry desert air. āIāve spent my whole life not knowing where I came from. And now that Iāve finally figured out where Iām going, now that I have land and cattle and a place to call home, youāre going to criticize me about getting a wife?ā
āNot about getting one, about how youāre going about it. Youāve been writing her for a year but havenāt mentioned her to me. That right there tells me you know advertising for a woman in a newspaper is no way to find yourself a wife.ā
āI need to go.ā Sam climbed the wheel up to the wagonās seat.
āYouāve got enough land that you could sell it and be half rich.ā Wes kept right on rambling as though he hadnāt said a word. āWhy tie yourself to a stranger whoāll inherit it all if something happens to you? Women have poisoned their husbands for less.ā
The muscles in his shoulder bunched into a hard, solid knot. āI should knock you flat for that, Agamemnon Westin.ā
He flicked the reins, and the horses started forward with a small lurch.
Wes stepped out of the lean-to and swung up onto Ares.
Good. Let Wes go home and rant to his sister or pa. Heād had enough scolding for one day.
Sam gave the reins another flick. The noise of a horse galloping sounded behind the wagon, but instead of the commotion disappearing into the distance, it grew louder. A moment later Wes reined in Ares to trot beside the wagon.
Sam glared at his friend. āYour ranch is in the other direction.ā
āI want to meet this bride of yours for myself. And if I donāt like her, she can find herself another husband. I donāt care if I have to pay to send her back to wherever she came from either.ā
Sam ground his teeth together. This was precisely why he hadnāt told Wes more about Ellie coming. Precisely why heād hoped to be good and hitched by the time Wes got back from spring roundup.
āI want to be alone when I meet my wife, and Iād appreciate it if youād respect that.ā
āLast I knew, the road in front of the mercantile where the stage parks is open to anyone who shows up.ā Wes kept his gaze pinned to the road, his voice flat and emotionless.
Sam set his jaw and stared at the road ahead. It was going to be a long ride into town.
But what if Wes was right, and marrying a woman heād never met turned out to be the biggest mistake of his life?
~.~.~.~.~
The life she headed toward seemed too good to be true.
Twisting her free hand in her crumpled skirt, Ellie Spritzer looked down at the sweaty face of six-year-old Janey asleep on her lap. While it might be common enough for a man to take a wife purely because he needed someone to cook and keep house, most men didnāt agree to that wife bringing along eight siblings.
Across the stage, Susanna, Lynnette, Joe, Leroy, and Martin all squished into the seat. Every one of them had a red face, sweaty forehead, and shirt plastered to their chest.
What if Sam Owens took one look at them all filing out of the carriage and changed his mind?
What if he took one look at her, in her crumpled, sweaty dress, and decided she wouldnāt make a good wife after all? What ifā¦?
No, sheād wouldnāt work herself into a panic. She needed to trust God would provide. A verse somewhere in the Bible probably said something about God providing for His childrenās needs. She was just too hot and tired to remember it.
But what if God failed them?
Again.
Like God had failed them when He let their mother die last fall.
And when their father had finally returned to Eagle Harbor and said none of them could live with him.
And when Aunt Maude changed her mind and refused to take in five of her siblings.
Ellie leaned away from the seat, sending a fresh bit of air down her back. But the movement also allowed the sweat beading at the top of her shoulders to run down, further dampening her shirtwaist where it pressed against the worn cushion.
The stage hit a small bump, and she fell back against the seat. Could a stranger truly be Godās provision after all their relatives had failed them?
āScoot over.ā Eight-year-old Henry wiggled on the seat beside her. āYouāre squishing me.ā
āSorry.ā Ellie scooted a smidgen to her right, but that nearly put her on top of a sleeping Christopher.
Theyād taken the train as far south and west as the railroad track had been laid, then the man behind the ticket counter in San Antonio had said he could sell her nine tickets for the same stage, but the little ones would need to sit on laps. But she hadnāt quite understood how small the stage would be. After being wedged between one or another of her eight siblings for four hundred miles from San Antonio to Twin Rivers, sheād never again call the bunkroom in the cargo ship theyād boarded in Eagle Harbor or the seating on the train theyād changed to in Chicago cramped.
āHow much longer until we get there?ā Henry absently twirled the string of a yo-yo. āIām hot.ā
āNot that much longer.āĀ Please, God, donāt let it be much longer.Ā She looked out the open window, not that having it open did much good when the air outside was so hot and dry.
Was there a town on the horizon? They should be coming into Twin Rivers soon. She shifted again, arching her head around Christopher so she could better see. Nothing but yellow and brown greeted her. Flat yellow open spaces, scrubby bushes with leaves more brown than green, and an occasional cluster of rockfaces that jutted up in the distance. The rockfaces werenāt big enough to be called mountains. Hills, perhaps? But these bald, craggy hills looked nothing like the hills in Eagle Harbor, which were filled with dense, green forest.
Did her fiancĆ© truly own a ranch somewhere near here? Where did the cattle graze? Certainly not in the lush green fields sheād imagined. But what cow would want to eat the scrubby bushes dotting the land?
āSheās supposed to be on your lap, not mine.ā On the other side of the carriage, Martin scowled at Suzanna, who was holding one-year-old Lynnette while she slept.
āMaybe you should take a turn holding her.ā Suzanna scowled right back at her older brother, her pert little nose tilted up in the air. āSheās getting heavy.ā
āAnd maybe you should keep her on your lap instead of mine.ā Martin slouched against the side of the carriage, his lips turned down into the frown heād worn ever since their ma died last fall.
Ellie sighed. āJust hold her for a few minutes, Martin. Suzannaās done more than her share of caring for Lynnette.ā
āGive her to Leroy.ā Martin crossed his arms, as though that would somehow prevent him from helping. āShe cries whenever I hold her.ā
Leroy rolled his eyes. āMaybe try treating her like a little sister and not a racoon youāre trying to scare off, and she wonāt cry.ā
āShove off.ā
āMartin, take your sister.ā Ellie swiped a strand of sweaty hair away from her face and tucked it behind her ear. āLeroy is already holding Joe.ā
Though Joe was technically sitting on his own, his small body had somehow ended up sprawled over Leroyās lap, and unlike Martin, Leroy didnāt seem to mind.
āFine.ā Martin grabbed Lynnette and yanked her onto his lap so quickly the child woke and let out a scream. āSee, told you she doesnāt like me.ā
āSomeone make her be quiet.ā Janey squirmed against Ellieās lap, her eyes blinking open for a moment before she closed them again.
āHow can she be crying again?ā Christopher stretched and yawned, his own drowsy eyes opening. āIsnāt she tired of that?ā
Ellie glared at Martin with a look that clearly saidĀ see-the-trouble-you-caused?
He turned his head away and ignored her, just like he ignored Lynnetteās screaming. He kept Lynnette on his lap, but that was all he did. The boy didnāt even try patting her on the back or jostling her to see if she would quiet.
āIām hungry.ā Henry patted her free hand.
WhenĀ wasnātĀ the boy hungry these days? Given how quickly heād been growing of late, sheād need to let out the hem on his trousers when they reached Twin Rivers. Ellie reached for the handbag at her feet where the biscuits were stashed.
āIām hungry, too.ā Joe yawned and straightened into a sitting position beside Leroy.
Ellie pulled out a couple biscuits that had long gone stale and held one out for Henry.
āNot another one of those.ā He wrinkled his nose.
She really couldnāt blame him. The owner of the bakery where sheād worked in Eagle Harbor had insisted she take a plethora of biscuits and cookies and bread to tide them over on their trip. But after a month of traveling, the food looked about as moist and appetizing as the misshapen yellow rocks that covered the ground outside.
āIāll take one.ā Joe leaned forward and snatched a biscuit from her hand.
āJoeās awake and Leroyās lap is free.ā Martin scowled at his older brother. āItās his turn to hold Lynnette.ā
āMy lap wouldnāt be free if you hadnāt woken her up,ā Leroy snapped.
āBoys,ā Ellie breathed, but the word was swallowed by Lynnetteās next bout of screaming.
āWill there be food when we get to Twin Rivers?ā Henry eyed the stale biscuit on her lap.
āHow much longer?ā Christopher asked from her other side.
āEllie, tell Leroy he needs to take Lynnette, now!ā Martin demanded.
āEllie, tell Martin to stop hogging the seat.ā Suzanna gave her brother a shove, which caused Lynnette to shriek even louder.
āWhenās the next stop?ā Joeās voice turned into a high-pitched whine. āI have to use the privy.ā
Ellie sank back and closed her eyes against the endless stream of voices. But that didnāt stop a bout of hot tears from scalding her eyes. What stranger in his right mind would open his home to a group of loud, complaining, sweaty children? When they got off the stage, Sam was going to take one look at them and change his mind about letting them stay.
And then what was she going to do?