The Unexpected Wife. Mary Burton
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Matthias’s eyes narrowed against the sun’s glare. Holden was right. Time was wasting.
He lifted Quinn and set him in the coach. The boy turned to him as if he’d bolt when Society Miss said softly, “I promise I don’t bite.”
The boy clung to his father.
“Let loose, boy,” Matthias said.
“I’ve a mirror in my reticule,” Society Miss offered. “Would you like to see it?”
Tommy never passed on a gadget. He turned and stared at her.
She reached in her purse and pulled out a small oval mirror in a mother-of-pearl case. The mirror reflected the afternoon light, creating a rainbow on the roof of the coach.
Tommy grinned, watching fascinated as the colors danced. Relaxing, he let loose of Matthias and climbed up on the seat next to the woman. Quinn, gaining strength from his brother’s bravery, leaned forward and held out his hands. Matthias lifted him into the coach.
The woman gave her mirror to Tommy and reached out and set him on the seat beside her.
“You’ll take care of my boys,” Matthias warned, his voice coated with steel.
Society Miss met his gaze. There was no hint of fear. “I shall take good care of them until you arrive in town.”
The faintest hint of her perfume teased his nose. Roses. It had been a long time since he’d smelled the scent of a woman. In the last twelve months since his wife’s death, he’d been too busy to miss the sensation of having a woman under him.
Now, he was acutely aware of how long it had been.
Matthias cleared his throat. “Their grandfather will ride on top. When they get to town, Frank will see that they get to the mercantile and a Mrs. Hilda Clements.”
“Of course,” Society Miss said.
For the first time in a good while, Matthias felt as if he was getting a lucky break. Tommy, the little one, nestled next to Society Miss, fascinated by the pearl buttons that trimmed her cuff.
Matthias turned, ready to tackle the wheel of his wagon. He’d taken only a step when he heard the retching sound. He whirled around in time to see Tommy throw up all over Society Miss.
Abby stared down at her now-wet lap as she heard Mr. Stokes shout several oaths. For a moment she thought she’d retch.
Mr. Stokes pressed a cloth to his face. He stood so quickly he bumped his head on top of the wagon. Stepping over her soiled skirt, he pushed past the stranger to get out of the carriage. “Good Lord, I’ll bet they have cholera or measles. I’ll be riding on the top.”
Abby didn’t have to look over at the boys’ father to know he was still there. His presence filled the silent carriage. The man’s fingers tightened on the coach door, and she half expected the brittle wood to crack in his powerful fist.
She looked into the watery, sad eyes of the boy beside her. A mixture of horror and fear straightened his tiny mouth into a grim line as his eyes wavered to his father and then back to her.
Despite Mr. Stokes’s declaration, she doubted the boy was ill. She’d heard children often got motion sickness when they rode in wagons. “Let’s get this cleaned up.”
Managing her best smile, she chucked the boy under the chin and faced the man. To her surprise, the man wasn’t angry. Behind his frustration she saw sadness.
Lifting her skirt, she started to climb down.
The man instantly took her elbow.
She stared at his long tapered fingers, calloused by hard labor. His dark eyes cut into her and suddenly the idea of going anywhere with him unsettled.
“It’s all right,” she reassured the boy. “A damp cloth and it’ll be good as new.”
The stranger peered past her. “Tommy, you all right, son?”
Tommy shrugged. “I feel good now.”
The father shook his head. “That’s good. Can you sit tight for a minute with your brother while I clean up this lady?”
“Yes, Pa.”
“I’ll help her,” Frank, the old man, said from behind him. “I know you got that wagon wheel to fix.”
“Climb on up to your seat, Frank. I can handle it on my own.”
Frank exchanged glances with Holden then reluctantly climbed up top.
He took her hand in his. Through her crocheted black gloves she felt the heat and strength of his fingers. She could feel the color rising in her cheeks.
But the father was all business. Instead of cajoling, he tugged her forward and before she could react banded his long fingers around her narrow waist. Without a word, he lifted her out of the carriage and set her on the hard ground.
Abby stumbled back, shocked at her own reaction. “This really isn’t necessary.”
Still silent, he pulled a bandanna from his coat pocket and grabbed the hem of her skirt, lifting it so that her petticoats showed.
Abby searched for her voice as she yanked her skirt from his hand. “I am engaged to be married. This kind of interaction can’t be proper.” She’d not spoken of her engagement out loud before and it sounded strange, so unfamiliar as if she were talking about someone else.
“I don’t have time for niceties.” He brushed her hand away and finished cleaning the skirt.
The bite in the stranger’s tone rankled her nerves. “There’s no need to be rude,” she said, using the tone she reserved for difficult shopkeepers and surly chimney sweeps.
He looked at her as if she’d grown a third eye. “You want polite, then go back to wherever you came from. I don’t have time for it.”
“I shall tell my fiancé about this.”
He glanced up at Stokes, who still had a handkerchief pressed over his nose. “Your man doesn’t look willing to help you.”
Abby followed his angry gaze to Mr. Stokes. “Mr. Stokes is not my fiancé.”
A flicker of surprise flashed in the stranger’s eyes but was gone as quickly as it came.
Mr. Stokes shifted in his seat. “Lady, get in the carriage. I want to make town by nightfall.”
“Time is wasting, lady,” the coachman said.
Irritated, she snatched her skirt back and reached for the handle by the door with the other. Her shoe heel caught on the hem of her skirt and she cursed vanity for choosing to wear her gray Sunday best dress. At the time, she’d wanted to make a good impression on her husband-to-be. But the dress’s full skirts and high-heeled shoes, which were fine for church in the city, were completely impractical in Montana. Now she wished she’d remained in her simple calico with the streamlined skirt.
Strong hands again wrapped around her waist. Away from the stifling air of the coach, she caught a whiff of the stranger’s masculine scent. No coiling aftershaves or scented soaps like Mr. Stokes. His scent was purely masculine and not unpleasant, she realized.
This stranger had stirred more emotions and reactions in her in the last five minutes than the butcher had in a year. She couldn’t say if it were him or that all her senses had been heightened by her unknown future. She hoped her intended didn’t make her feel like this, too. She wanted safety and comfort, not passion.
He set her in the carriage and waited until she’d retaken her seat next to the boys. She could still feel his fingers on her as she straightened her skirts.
“Thank you for your help.”
“Ma’am.” He winked and