Harlequin Historical November 2015, Box Set 2 of 2 (7 page)

BOOK: Harlequin Historical November 2015, Box Set 2 of 2
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I would like to give him a wedding gift, but do not know what would be appropriate. Perhaps you will have some ideas.

One of my patients, a farmer by the name of Peter Jensen, is holding a winter dance in his barn on Saturday. He wants me to come in case a fight breaks out. Why not the sheriff, I wonder? But Sam is urging me to “get out of house.” The weather will be crisp. I have given up brandy so must make do with hot cider.

I wonder what you will think of New York City, and Rochester. It should be snowing by then. I also wonder if you can ice-skate. It was my greatest pleasure in the winter when I was growing up, and it cost little so it was no strain on Mother's finances.

Zane

PS: Sam has adopted a stray kitten “for mice in the pantry,” which I don't believe for one minute.

Chapter Seven

A
snowy November passed slowly, with nothing for Winifred to do but practice for her next concert and teach. She thought she would go mad cooped up inside until the trip to Rochester with Millicent. But the week away from her duties passed quickly, and now nothing could assuage her restlessness.

Her piano students performed flawlessly at the winter recital the conservatory held each year, and in mid-December the term ended. As soon as she could escape the endless faculty meetings to plan for next term, she purchased her train ticket and wired Zane.

Just think! Rosemarie might be crawling by now. She shopped for a frilly dress for her and tiny soft slippers to match, then on impulse bought a handsome quilted comforter for Sam and his new bride and had it shipped via Wells Fargo. It should arrive before she did. And, she hoped, before Sam's new bride from China made her appearance.

The night before the train departed for the West she found she couldn't sleep. Rosemarie would be almost five months old by now. She missed the baby's grip on her forefinger. She missed holding her in her arms and singing nonsense songs to her. Missed seeing her grow and change. She even missed Zane.

He wrote that he swam in the river right up until the first frost. It was a wonder
he
didn't catch influenza. Or perhaps he had, and that was why there had been no answer to her telegram.

At four in the morning she could lie still no longer. She climbed out of her narrow bed and began to pack her valise.

* * *

The train from the East was late, held up in Colorado by an avalanche across the tracks, Charlie, the stationmaster, explained. Zane hoped Winifred had a warm winter coat and gloves or a muff to protect her hands. He paced back and forth on the platform, then went inside for hot coffee and the latest news, then began pacing again.

He guessed he was nervous. He hadn't been this nervous when Winifred had first arrived in Smoke River last August, but he hadn't known her then. He shouldn't be nervous now, but there it was; his heartbeat wouldn't calm down and his palms were damp.

When at last the arriving locomotive sounded a warning whistle, Zane stepped forward. The train chuffed to a stop amid a cloud of white steam and sat huffing on the track while the passengers debarked. He held his breath until he saw her, swathed in a long black coat and wearing a black fur hat. She looked so beautiful his chest ached.

“Winifred!”

She spotted him and waved one hand. They fought their way toward each other through a throng of people, and by the time they were within shouting distance both spoke at once. Steam puffed out of their mouths.

He stopped a scant foot in front of her and started to laugh. “We look like smoke-eaters,” he said.

“Or polar bears. Oh, Zane, I'm so glad to see you!”

He said nothing, just stepped forward and wrapped his arms around her. She spoke, but her voice was muffled against his overcoat. Then she raised her face and smiled at him.

“I am dizzy with the altitude again. But this time my corset is not so tight because I do hate your smelling salts!”

“Good,” was all he could say.

She rubbed her gloved hands together. “Out here in the West you have weather that is too hot and weather that is too cold. Is there nothing in between?”

“Yes, we have fall. But you went away before that. And spring is nice. Just right for swimming.”

She laughed. “You mean you don't swim now, in the ice and snow?”

“Only if I've had too much hard cider.” In one hand he hoisted her valise—larger this time—and grasped her elbow with the other, steering her toward the waiting buggy.

When they arrived at the house Zane walked her to the front door, then drove the buggy around back to the barn. Sam met her with Rosemarie in his arms.

“Welcome back, missy.” He held the baby out to her.

Her heart stuttered as she gathered her niece in her arms.

“Oh, you've grown so big! And teeth! Let me look—why, you have three, no, four front teeth.”

“Another come soon,” Sam announced with a dimpled grin. “Much smart baby. Chew on toes.”

Winifred buried her nose in the child's soft neck and breathed in the sweet scent of her skin. “Now that I am here, little one, you can chew on my fingers. Would you like that, my darling girl? Would you?”

“Of course she would,” a masculine voice said. “She even likes
my
fingers, which must taste of alcohol or iodine.”

Sam whisked her valise upstairs and Zane helped her out of the heavy winter coat, laid it over the banister and turned to her. “Are you hungry? Or thirsty?”

“Both,” she said.

“A sandwich? Or some hot soup? There's leftover tomato soup from dinner and some cold chicken.” He shucked his own coat while he spoke and laid it over hers.

“Both,” she said again. “Oh, it is so good to be here!”

He lifted Rosemarie out of her arms and propped her against his shoulder. “Where did you get that hat, if I may ask?” He reached out and ruffled the dark fur.

“From a fancy store in downtown St. Louis. Do you like it?” She took it off and offered it to him.

“Makes you look like a Russian Cossack.”


Da
.” She gave him a mock salute.

He laughed. “March,” he ordered. “To the table.” He took the chair opposite her, the baby nodding against his shoulder. “Sam,” he said, when the houseboy padded down the stairs. “Could you warm up the soup?”

She felt giddy all of a sudden. From the altitude? From the enveloping warmth in the room? From...

Oh, Lord. She dared not think what the cause might be.

Sam set a bowl of steaming tomato soup before her, then brought chunks of warm bread and a plate of butter. “Make chocolate cake, too. And special cookies.”

“Why, Sam, I didn't know you could make cakes.”

“Bride come day after tomorrow.” He beamed with such joy Winifred prayed that whoever the girl turned out to be she would be deserving of this unusual man.

Zane chuckled. “I never saw a more nervous groom. Unless,” he added with a sigh, “it was me, when I married your sister.”

As Winifred watched, the smile on his face faded, replaced by an odd, puzzled expression.

“You eloped with Cissy, as I recall. She never told me where you were married.”

“In the chapel at the medical college. She was afraid to tell you beforehand.”

Winifred said nothing. Cissy must have been blinded by love. “Were you happy, Zane?” The question popped out before she could think.

“Yes,” he said simply.

All at once she felt drained. Four days on the train had tired her more than she realized. “Sam?” she called. “Could you make me some tea and bring it up to my room?”

“Try the mint tea,” Zane murmured. He shifted a fussing Rosemarie to his other shoulder. “Bring her some mint tea,” he called to the kitchen. “And it's time for Rosemarie's bottle.”

She preceded Zane up the stairs to the same room she had occupied last summer, and Zane disappeared into his adjacent bedroom with Rosemarie. No doubt the bassinet still rested by his bed. Heat spread through her chest like warm molasses. Zane had loved Cissy. And he loved his daughter.

Rosemarie had four new teeth, she marveled. And Sam was bringing a new bride all the way from China! Life moved on. And she...well, she was playing seven concerts this coming year and increasing her teaching hours. She would be so busy she wouldn't have time to think, but it was the life she had wanted.

She sank down onto the yellow quilt and closed her eyes. Her life at the St. Louis conservatory and on the concert stage was what she'd dreamed of ever since she was five years old and playing on her first piano. And later, with Cissy, they planned for such exciting things—concerts abroad and tours throughout the United States.

Sam tapped on the door, set a tea tray on the dresser and stole into the hallway as silent as a shadow. Then she heard Zane's bedroom door open and a happy gurgle from Rosemarie.

Oh, Cissy, I am so sorry you are missing this. So very, very sorry. You gave up so much to be with Zane, and then bear his daughter. If there is a heaven, dearest sister, I hope more than anything that you are at peace.

* * *

The next morning Winifred found herself studying the dining room, then moving into the library and assessing it as well. Nothing suggested that it was Christmas, not a decorated tree, no festive ribbons festooning the doorways or winding up the banister, not even a single sprig of holly. She had brought presents, but there was no Christmas tree to put them under. She decided to do something about it.

After breakfast she asked Sam to find a tree she could decorate.

“Will ask sawmill man,” he said. “Bring in afternoon.”

Sure enough, during Rosemarie's nap, the Chinese man dragged a fragrant Douglas fir into the library and set it up on a wooden stand. Winifred stared at it for a full half hour before deciding how to adorn the bare branches.

That afternoon, while Zane was at the hospital, she paid a visit to the dressmaker, Verena Forester, and returned with seven yards of red ribbon. Quickly she cut it into short lengths and tied pretty red bows onto each tree branch. When she finished, it looked so beautiful her throat hurt.

Then she fashioned a lacy star from four white paper doilies and spread a red tablecloth beneath the tree. On top she laid the gaily wrapped presents she had brought from St. Louis.

“Much pretty,” Sam observed, then turned a worried look on her. “Boss won't like.”

True, Zane might not appreciate it, but she didn't care. Rosemarie would love it!

At supper that evening Zane didn't say a word about the tree until she asked him about it point blank. “Do you like the Christmas tree I decorated?”

“What tree?”

“In the library. Go look.”

He returned a few moments later, his eyes shiny. “That was good of you, Winifred. Celeste had boxes of fancy ornaments stored up in the attic, but I never liked them much. And after she—Well, I like your red ribbons. Very original.”

His words brought a rush of heat into her chest. If she didn't know better she'd think she was moved by his approval.

But she
did
know better. Winifred Von Dannen was too old to be moved by Christmas trees or red ribbons or a busy physician's approval or anything else. Still, she found herself smiling at him.

And later, when Rosemary gurgled and pointed a finger at her creation, Winifred felt her own eyes fill with tears.

* * *

Zane drove Sam to the station to meet the train bringing his houseboy's new bride. They arrived two hours early because Sam was fidgeting so much he kept the house in an uproar and Zane couldn't stand it any longer. The houseboy had changed Rosemarie's perfectly dry diaper twice, spent an hour combing and rebraiding the long black queue that hung down his back, pressed and re-pressed every dress Winifred had brought with her and even steamed her green velvet gown and hung it in the empty hall closet, so nothing would wrinkle it. Unconcerned by all the bustle, the kitten curled in the corner, asleep.

Now, even bundled in a wool cape Sam had unearthed from a mysterious box he kept under his bed, the Chinese man shook in the frosty air. It was three in the afternoon and still the ground sparkled with frost.

At last the train from Portland pulled in and with a yelp Sam leaped from the buggy and raced onto the station platform.

Zane followed at a discreet distance.

Travelers stepped off the passenger car and one by one were whisked away or drifted into the station house to get out of the cold. But there was no sign of a young Chinese woman. Sam jigged from one foot to the other, squinting at the crowd.

“You think she maybe get lost?” The crestfallen houseboy clasped his arms across his body. “Maybe she not come?”

The locomotive gave a prolonged whistle and began to roll on down the track. Sam looked at Zane, his black eyes anguished.

“Not come,” he said softly. He turned away, wringing his hands.

But across the tracks stood a small figure dressed in a high-collared yellow jacket and baggy black trousers. A piece of white paper was pinned to her chest, but Zane was too far away to read what it said.

“Sam,” he said slowly. “Look.”

Sam pivoted, his gaze following Zane's pointing finger.

The man's eyes grew wide and then the most beatific smile broke over his face. He lifted one hand toward the girl and started across the tracks.

Zane stayed put. He'd let them meet for the first time with no onlookers. He watched Sam stop before the girl, bow low and say something.

She looked up and Zane caught his breath. Sam's bride was exquisite, slim as a reed with straight black hair and skin like alabaster. The top of her head reached just to Sam's chin.

Then the Chinese man Zane thought he knew so well surprised him. Sam stepped forward and scooped his bride up into his arms, then made his way carefully across the tracks to where Zane waited.

“Slippers thin,” he explained. “Not good for cold, so I carry.”

He spoke a few words in Chinese and the girl nodded at Zane. The sign pinned to her blouse read “Dougherty. Smoke River.”

“This is Yan Li,” Sam said, his voice reverent.

Zane inclined his head and led the way to the buggy. Sam deposited Yan Li onto the seat, then stripped off his cloak and wrapped it around her. He sat shivering as the horse trotted all the way up the hill to the house.

When they arrived, Sam leaped to the ground, motioned Yan Li to the edge of the buggy seat and snatched her up once again. He carried his bride up the porch steps and into the house. Zane remembered carrying Celeste the same way.

Winifred had hot water ready for tea and some soup warming on the stove. Sam set his burden down in the front hall and lifted the cloak away from the slim figure.

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