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Authors: Janet Chapman

Courting Carolina (39 page)

BOOK: Courting Carolina
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I’ll hold this picture in my heart
When I’m once more alone
And cherish every moment
’Til the day that I’m called home.
Then at last the evening is ended
And we’ve exchanged a good night kiss
One day may we all meet in heaven
And not one of our numbers be missed.
Alethea
Alethea is a beautiful maiden
With a heart as pure as the snow
She fell in love with a handsome Marine
Many long years ago.
Now she wears his engagement ring
And her heart is full of joy
She counts the months ’til she graduates
Then she’ll marry her Marine boy.
With a bit of sadness
Dad looks at his little girl
He has given her to another
And together they’ll face the world.
The wedding feast has been eaten
And the guests have all gone home
Alethea and Steven run to their car
And the honeymoon has begun.
Mom and Dad wave their good-byes
With a touch of sadness in their hearts
Their little girl has grown so quickly
And from her it’s hard to part.
They head across the USA
To their little home in the west
Where we all pray they’ll live happily
Like two turtledoves in a nest.
Red School House
The little red school house
Where I went years ago
Brings back fond memories
Of the days of old.
We walked to school in winter
Although it was windy as well
Then huddled round the heater
Until teacher rang the bell.
The Lord’s Prayer was always recited
Then Pledge of Allegiance too
Then out came our reading books
To show what we could do.
When the bell rang for recess
We’d all rush out of the room
The girls all played on one side
And recess was over too soon.
Beauty
The sun shone with an unearthly beauty
On the glistering trees below
One stood in awe at their majesty
And to think that God made it so.
If God makes such beauty here below
What splendor must be up above
Why are we reluctant to leave this place
And dwell with God above.
The snow will soon be melting
Then spring will once more be here
A time to get out and enjoy the sun
And see the stars so clear.
The birds will soon be singing their song
The grass will be turning green
God has given us so much beauty
Let us open our eyes and see.
Read on for a special preview of
Janet Chapman’s next
Spellbound Falls romance
The Heart of a Hero
Available March 2013 from Jove Books

Watching through the windshield of his truck, Nicholas studied the three young men getting out of the late-model pickup on the far side of the employee parking lot at the base of Whisper Mountain. But the more the man sitting beside him explained why he’d asked him to come down here today, the more confused Nicholas became. Rowan was second in command of Nova Mare’s small security force and quite capable of dealing with this sort of problem on his own.

“And the reason you simply didn’t intervene?” Nicholas asked, darting an impatient look across the cab. He looked back at the three young men to see one of them lift a bicycle out of the of the pickup and lean it against a tree in front of the older, mud-splattered truck they’d pulled up beside. “They’re on resort property, Julia Campbell is an employee, and last time I checked, keeping our staff safe was in your job description.”

Apparently not the least bit intimidated by the growl in his boss’s voice, Rowan shook his head on a soft snort. “If I’ve learned anything living in Spellbound Falls this past
year, it’s that Mainers don’t particularly care to have strangers butting into their business—especially family business. Her brother’s the one with the peach-fuzz beard.” Rowan scowled at the young men lighting up cigarettes as they leaned against the shiny red truck they’d arrived in. “And I didn’t intervene last week because I was afraid it would make things worse for Julia when she got home. Here she comes,” he said when the bus shuttling employees down from the mountaintop resort halted in the middle of the parking lot.

Nicholas reached over and stopped Rowan from getting out. “Let’s sit and watch for a while. You say he’s here every Friday waiting for her to get off work, and that it’s obvious he’s hitting her up for money?”

Rowan nodded. “She usually has it in her pocket and just hands him some folded bills. Only last week he apparently wanted more than she was offering and grabbed her purse. They got in a small tussle, she lost, and he dug out her wallet, pulled out a fistful of money, and tossed the wallet and purse on the ground, then got in his truck and left.” He snorted again. “The punk couldn’t even be bothered to take her home, but left her to ride her bicycle in the rain. There, that’s her in the red wool jacket and black pants, carrying those empty feed sacks,” Rowan said, nodding at the workers stepping off the shuttle bus.

Nicholas saw the woman in red hesitate when she spotted the three young men leaning against the pickup, then watched her square her shoulders and head toward them—her brother straightening away when he saw her.

Julia Campbell was slightly taller than average for a woman and somewhat on the thin side, with a thick braid of light brown hair hanging halfway down her back that Nicholas suspected would spring into a riot of curls when let loose. It was dusk and starting to snow, so he couldn’t make out the color of her large eyes set in an oval face on top of a gracefully long neck. Her posture was intrinsically feminine, her stride filled with purposeful energy despite it being the end of her workday. “She’s older than I was expecting,”
he said, assuming she’d barely be out of her teens, judging by the age of her brother.

“I asked the shuttle driver her name after that little tussle,” Rowan said, “then went back up to your office and checked her employee file. She turned thirty a few months ago, has been married but is divorced. And even though I’ve since learned her mother’s dead and that she lives with her father between here and town, she listed a sister as next of kin to notify in an emergency. The empty sacks she’s carrying were full this morning. Her family owns a cedar mill, and Julia supplies the resort with kindling and pine cones for the fireplaces to supplement her wages and tips. She works housekeeping Tuesday through Saturday, and from what I’ve gathered from quietly checking around, she asked to always be assigned the same eight cottages.”

BOOK: Courting Carolina
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