The Cowboy Father. Linda Ford

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The Cowboy Father - Linda Ford


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“Goodness me, boy.” May Hamilton burst into a doorway on one side of the room. “Bring the miss into the kitchen where it’s warmer.”

       So the cold in Louisa’s bones wasn’t just nerves.

       She half rose then subsided, waiting to see what Mr. Hamilton intended to do.

       He nodded. “Come along then.” His eyes said far more though. They said he found his aunt both amusing and endearing.

       Louisa relaxed marginally and followed Auntie May into a warm room as crowded with furniture and odds and ends as the front room. The whole place had the appearance of many projects on the go or abandoned at some point.

       Auntie May studied Louisa. “Hello, my dear.”

       “Hello, Miss Hamilton.”

       She snorted. “Since when does anyone call me Miss Hamilton unless they are about to present a bill? I’m Auntie May. Always have been. Always will be. Now park yourself and talk to my nephew while I pour us tea.”

       Louisa “parked” on one of the mismatched chairs crowding around the table, as if Auntie May normally fed a large family instead of being on her own most of the time. Louisa had heard how she’d taken in her brother’s son after his parents’ untimely death and finished raising him. But he had left before Louisa and her family moved into the community. He’d returned a week ago with his injured daughter. Some suggested he came back so Auntie May could care for the child, but Louisa said where else would one go but back home if they needed help?

       Auntie May nudged her way through a swarm of cats to set cups of tea in front of Louisa and Emmet. “I know Emmet will have hundreds of questions to ask you before he accepts you as tutor to little Ellie, but Emmet, let me say this. I’ve watched Louisa these past few years. I’ve seen her overcome challenges and emerge stronger and sweeter and kinder for them. I’m here to say you couldn’t do much better than her.”

       Louisa’s face burned with embarrassment at the praise. But at least Auntie May hadn’t gone into detail about the challenges Louisa faced. Thankfully, only her family and Doc knew of her greatest challenge. One she must face with dignity and faith every day of her life.

       “Thanks, Auntie May. I’ll certainly take your opinion into consideration.”

       “Of course you will. Now come on, all of you.” She spoke to the cats running after her as she stepped into the porch. “I’ve got some food ready.” The meowing made conversation impossible until the door closed behind them.

       Emmet laughed. “My aunt and her cats.”

       Louisa, twenty years from now—the local cat lady. “She’d be lonely without her pets.” Auntie May was slightly eccentric but a good soul. There wasn’t a person she wouldn’t help, and the entire community knew it. The thought cheered Louisa marginally.

       “Shall we get down to business?”

       Louisa nodded, her tension returning tenfold.

       “There are things I need to know about you.”

       “I understand.” She’d tried to guess what questions he’d ask and how she’d answer them.

       “First, what sort of training and education do you have that qualifies you to teach my daughter?”

       She’d rightly guessed that would be uppermost in his mind. “I’m sure Miss Ross explained my education.”

       “I’d like to hear it from your lips.”

       “I do not have university education. Nor have I attended Normal school.” If finances and health allowed it, she would love to go to Normal school and train to be a teacher.

       “I see. And yet Miss Ross feels you are well educated. Tell me, formal training aside, what qualifies you for this job?” His voice was low, his look insistent.

      Apart from the fact that it’s the only one I’ve been offered and I need the money? “I did well in school and have continued my education since. Mostly I am self-taught, but last year my mother hired a tutor with a teaching degree and he helped me. I have a strong background in English, Greek, the arts and history.”

       “I see.”

       She wondered if he did. She must prove she could do this job. “I am also uniquely experienced for a situation such as your daughter’s. I spent three winters unable to attend school. I kept up my studies while at home. I learned how to work on my own and how to amuse myself while confined to bed.”

       He studied her, then sighed. “Unfortunately, Ellie is used to being outdoors, riding her pony, climbing trees, running across the fields. School has always been a necessary evil in her opinion. I don’t think she is going to find contentment in quiet activities.”

       “Does she have a choice?”

       “Not at the moment. What else can you tell me about yourself? How old are you?”

       “I’m twenty. Almost twenty-one.”

       “I would have taken you for much younger.”

       She squared her shoulders and tried to look wise. Realizing how silly her reaction, she had to steel herself not to chuckle.

       “I assume you are only passing time until you marry.”

       “You, sir, assume incorrectly.” He could not possibly know how his words hurt. For that she was thankful. “Marriage is not part of my plans.” No man would want her, nor would she marry if one did momentarily profess love. It wouldn’t be fair to deprive a man of children. Besides, wouldn’t he grow to resent her? Better to remain single than take such a risk.

       He gave her narrow-eyed concentration.

       She refused to blink before his study, instead choosing to try to decide what color his eyes were. Green? Blue? Just when she’d decided on one, they shifted to the other. Ah. She’d learned something that might be useful in the future, should she get the job. His eyes changed color with his emotions. He had gone from green-eyed doubt to blue-eyed relief. For some inexplicable reason, it pleased her to have learned this tiny bit of information.

       “Are you saying you have no beau?”

       “I am indeed.” She fully intended to protect herself from further pain by avoiding anything but friendship with any man.

       “Daddy. Where are you?” A young, demanding voice called from a room past the kitchen.

       The smile on the man’s face made Louisa blink. The man looked as if the sun had come out and the sky turned blue at the sound of a little girl’s voice. He was obviously very fond of his daughter. “I’ll be right there.”

       Her eyes stung. Her father had loved his daughters in such a fashion. It had been almost four years since his passing, but she missed him as though it was yesterday.

       “Would you like to meet Ellie?”

       “Yes, please.” Did this mean she had the job? Or would if she could relate to his daughter? Please, God. Give me wisdom.

       “Come along.”

       She followed him into the adjoining room. A china cupboard and sideboard, groaning under a collection of mismatched dishes, took up most of one wall, but in the middle of the room stood a bed, raised to elbow level on blocks. A blonde child lay on the bed, her chocolate-brown eyes watching Louisa with unblinking interest.

       “Who are you?”

       “I’m Louisa Morgan.” She glanced toward Emmet, but he stood back, observing her. Apparently he meant to see how she would handle the situation on her own. “And you are Ellie Hamilton.”

       “So?”

       “Ellie?” Her father’s voice carried gentle warning. “Be polite.”

       The little girl gave Louisa an unrepentant stare, then smiled at her father. “Okay,


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