ROMANCE: Billion Dollar Question (BWWM Billionaire Bad Boy Romance) (African American Alpha Mail Order Bride New Adult) (49 page)

BOOK: ROMANCE: Billion Dollar Question (BWWM Billionaire Bad Boy Romance) (African American Alpha Mail Order Bride New Adult)
13.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

 

Chapter 4: Sometimes You Need A Second Chance

 

Matt stood on the road just outside the fence that surrounded Em’s house with his hat in his hands. As Belle stepped of the porch, she looked him over for the first time. Earlier at the train station, she had been so preoccupied with her new surroundings that she had barely noticed him at all. She thought that he looked quite handsome in the dying light of the Arizona sun. The quintessential western type. Tall, with broad shoulders and narrow hips from riding horses. Eyes that had been closed by years of working in the sun, yet were sharp as those of an eagle and constantly alert for trouble. His walrus mustache was well-groomed and his hair was slicked back over his head despite the fact that he had worked all day.

 

He must have stopped somewhere and freshened up before he came here
, she thought. She also noted the gun on his left hip. He wore it not as a gun, but as an extension of himself. His hand never strayed far from it as he waited for her at the end of the walk.

 

He gave her a smile as she walked down the path and stopped at the gate. She returned it with as much confidence as she could muster and hoped that it didn’t look as fake to him as it felt to her.

 

“Good evening, Ma’am.” He bowed like he had before at the train station with one leg outstretched.

 

“Please call me Belle and thank you for being so understanding about before. I am afraid that I was not feeling well, but I am much better now.”

 

“I’m glad to hear it Ma’ . . . Belle. I was right worried about you all day today.”

 

“Thank you for your concern, Mr. Thorn.”

 

“Welcome, Belle. If you’ll allow it I’ll accompany you to the house where you’ll be staying.”

 

“That would be lovely, Mr. Thorn.”

 

He offered her his arm and she took it. He was much taller than her and at first, she had to walk fast to keep up with his long strides, but he seemed to notice and slowed down. She breathed a small sigh of relief as he pointed to a small house up ahead. She wasn’t sure what she had expected, but she was for certain that it wasn’t that nice. The house was painted white and even had a small garden out back. A rose bush grew near the porch and another bunch of flowers near the small fence that went around the yard. She let him lead her up the path to the house. He unlocked the door and guided her inside.

 

A few moments later, he had a lamp lit and was showing her around the house.

 

“As you can see it isn’t much, just the bedroom, the sitting room, a small kitchen, and the cellar below that, but it’s mine and I like it.”

 

“I think it is a fine house, Mr. Thorn.”

 

“If I’m going to be calling you Belle, I reckon you ought to just call me Matt.”

 

“Okay. Matt it is.” They had been through this before, but she felt weird calling a man she had just met by his first name.

 

“I reckon I’m bushed. If there isn’t anything you need, I guess I’ll get some shuteye on the couch there. You can have the bedroom. The bed ain’t much, but it’s warm and off the ground.”

 

“Thank you Matt. I believe I will retire for the evening.”

 

“Goodnight, Belle.”

 

“Goodnight, Matt.”

 

She went into the bedroom and closed the door behind her. Even though she didn’t feel like sleeping, she thought that it would be best if she tried to get as much sleep as possible.

 

Em had promised to come over in the morning and teach her as much as she could about life on the frontier and what she would need to do. Belle knew little to nothing about cooking and hoped that Em could teach her how. She changed out of her clothes and into the only nightgown she had. It felt strange and uncomfortable as she lay down in another person’s bed, but the events of the day still weighed heavy on her and she was asleep minutes after her head hit the pillow.

 

She awoke the next morning long before the sun was up. For a while, she laid in the bed and thought about her life before, but she soon realized that all she was doing was making herself sad, so she got up and changed into the only other dress that she had. “I will have to find a way to make some money so that I can buy new dresses. Dresses that are more appropriate for this place,” she thought.

 

She looked at herself in the mirror and grimaced. Dark circles had formed under her eyes from too little rest and too much stress. There was nothing she could do about those, but her hair was another story. She fiddled with it for a while and decided to leave it down. She had grown to like the way her hair looked when it was down and hoped that Matt was the same.

 

As the sun rose over the horizon, she padded as quietly as she could into the kitchen in the hopes that she wouldn’t wake Matt. She might as well have run for he was already up and making coffee and breakfast. He smiled at her as he stood over the stove in his socked feet. He didn’t have his hat on this morning and even though it was early, his hair was slicked back on his head.

 

“Morning, Belle. Did you sleep well last night?”

 

“Good morning, Matt. I slept quite well thank you. How about yourself?”

 

“Snug as a bug in a rug. Would you like some breakfast?”

 

“Yes, please.”

 

“Coming right up. If you’ll have a seat, I’ll have your breakfast done in just a moment. Meanwhile the coffee is done if you want a cup. I’ll warn you first off. I make a pretty strong cup of coffee.”

 

“I like my coffee strong.” She had always preferred her coffee to be strong when she ordered it at a restaurant, so she thought she could handle anything he could have possibly made. She poured herself a cup, nearly burning her fingers in the process and took a small sip. The coffee nearly blew off the top of her head. “Goodness. It is strong.”

 

“My Pa always said that good coffee could float a horseshoe in it.”

 

“I believe that this could dissolve one.”

 

He laughed heartily and set a plate down on the table in front of her. “Eat up.”

 

She ate the runny eggs and the chewy bacon that sat before her. In her old life, she would have shoved the food away and demanded that it be cooked properly, but she was starved and it looked too good not to eat. Once breakfast was finished, she helped him wash the dishes and put them away. That seemed to be simple enough.

 

“I’ve got to be going.” Matt told her as he pulled on his boots and hat. “I’ll just be down to the jailhouse if you need me. Em’s right next door as well if you need her.”

 

“I’ll be fine. Have a good day.”

 

“You too, Belle.”

 

She stood in the door and watched him walk away up the street. Dust rose in tiny clouds from his feet with each step. Matt had just disappeared from sight when Em came out of her house with a basket under her arm. She turned and headed straight toward Belle with a smile on her face. Em raised an arm in greeting.

 

“Good morning!” she called.

 

“Good morning, Em.” Belle let her in the house.

 

Em went straight to the kitchen and sat her basket down on the table. Before Belle had a chance to ask what was in it, Em started taking things out of it and placing them on the table. There were flour, eggs, and a small side of beef.

 

“Do you still want to learn how to cook?”

 

“I do.”

 

“Then take that flour and pour some out on the table. We’ll start with biscuits. Every man I’ve ever known loves biscuits—any food at all, for that matter. The way to a man’s heart is through his stomach.”

 

For the next three hours, Em showed Belle everything that she knew about cooking. Belle picked up on it fast and in no time had made a batch of biscuits that were presentable. She fried up a half a dozen of eggs and cooked a steak under Em’s direction. Once it was finished, Em handed her the basket with the cooked food in it.

 

“Take this down to the jailhouse and give it to Matt. He’ll be right grateful of the meal and you’ll show him that you know how to take care of yourself.”

 

“Okay. What if he expects me to cook something tonight?”

 

“Then cook.”

 

“But I only know what you have taught me.”

 

Em barked one of her harsh laughs. “We don’t vary our meals too much around here. Most of the time, it’s the same thing for weeks at a time. The men don’t mind as long as it tastes good.”

 

“Alright. Thank you, Em. I’ll see you after while.”

 

“Go get ‘em girl.” Em whispered as Belle walked out of the door with the basket of food under her arm.

 

As she walked up the street, Belle tried to think of what she would say when she got to the jailhouse, but her mind wouldn’t work like it was supposed to. The buildings around her held her attention. There weren’t many of them. Just the livery, the post office, the train station, a general store, the surveyor’s office, a hotel, and a couple saloons. The houses of the people that lived in town were all on the south side of town near Matt and Em’s houses.

 

An older man thumped down the boardwalk toward the hotel as she neared the jailhouse. He tipped his hat to her and offered her a kind smile. She returned the smile and gave him a wave as she mounted the steps to the jailhouse. The door was closed, so she rapped on it with her hand. The sound of a chair scraping against the floor drifted to her through the door. The door swung open and Matt appeared in the doorway.

 

“Belle! Is something wrong?” Worry crossed his face, but when she smiled at him his brow unfurrowed.

 

“Nothing is wrong. I brought you something to eat for lunch.”

 

“You did? I was just fixing to head down to the restaurant in the hotel and get something to eat.” He took the basket from her hands and ushered her inside. “Come in. We’ll have a seat and eat this together.”

 

She hadn’t thought of eating with him, but now that he had mentioned it, she thought that it might be nice to have a meal with him. He moved a chair to the opposite side of the desk as his and held it for her until she had sat down. Once he had taken his own seat, she uncovered the basket and began pulling out the food.

 

“My goodness. There’s enough here to feed an army,” he exclaimed.

 

“Maybe, but I don’t know how good it will be.”

 

“If it tastes as good as it looks I’m sure it will be fine.” Matt grabbed up a biscuit and took a bite. As he chewed it, a smile broke out on his face. “Why, these are the best biscuits I’ve had in years!”

 

“Really?” Belle grew excited. “Do you mean it?”

 

“I surely do. These are right good, Belle. Right good.”

 

As they ate, she explained to him about Em teaching her to cook. “I’m afraid that I can’t take all the credit. It was Em who taught me how to cook.”

 

“She may have taught you how, but you certainly took to it like a duck to water. This steak is delicious. Are you sure you don’t want some of it?”

 

“Quite sure. You should have seen the first batch of biscuits I made.” She uttered a little laugh. “They were so hard that you could have thrown them through a wall.”

 

They laughed together and chatted the rest of the meal. When they had finished, Belle gathered up the dishes and placed them back in the basket. Matt walked her to the door and leaned against the frame.

 

“That was real nice, Belle. I’m glad you brought it down.”

 

“Thank you. I’m glad that you liked it.”

 

“So you wouldn’t be in need of any new clothes or anything would you?” He gestured to the general store across the street. “Mac runs a line of credit for me at his store. If you need anything for yourself or the house, just go in and tell him who you are. He’ll put whatever you get on my bill and I’ll pay him at the end of the month.”

 

“I just might stop by there and pick up a few rolls of material. I could use a few new dresses.”

 

BOOK: ROMANCE: Billion Dollar Question (BWWM Billionaire Bad Boy Romance) (African American Alpha Mail Order Bride New Adult)
13.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Schroder: A Novel by Gaige, Amity
The Broken Shore by Catriona King
La tierra olvidada por el tiempo by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Iron Council by China Mieville
Strider's Galaxy by John Grant