Second Chance Brides (3 page)

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Authors: Vickie Mcdonough

Tags: #Christian Fiction, #Mail Order Brides, #Romance, #General, #Christian, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Love Stories, #Texas, #Religious, #Fiction, #Western, #Historical

BOOK: Second Chance Brides
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Explosions, one after another, rent the air. Miss O’Neil squealed and flew toward him, clutching his arms. Mark’s gaze swerved past her. The church bell clanged as if screaming with pain. His heart stampeded.

Fierce black clouds devoured the road at the far end of town. He scooped up Miss O’Neil and raced away from the encroaching whirlwind. She clung to his neck and buried her face in his shoulder.

The boardinghouse had a root cellar. If they could make it there, they should be safe. He didn’t stop to look over his shoulder again, but he could feel the monster breathing down his neck.

Where was Garrett? Had he taken shelter? What had happened to Luke? To Rachel and Jacqueline? They were the only family he had.

Mark ran past the Dykstra and Castleby houses, knowing they could well be destroyed by the storm. The safest place for him and Miss O’Neil was underground. Flying debris pelted them. A frantic horse pulling a buggy with no driver raced ahead of him. The storm bellowed like a locomotive barreling down on him.

Miss O’Neil continued clinging to his neck, and her tears dampened his shirt. She was light as a child, but carrying her this far was stealing his breath. He dashed around the side of the Castleby house, glad to have a barrier between them and the storm.

Garrett galloped around the back of the house with Rachel’s daughter under his arm. He reached the root cellar first, flung open the doors, and the girl ran down the stairs. “Hurry!” Garrett yelled.

Mark set Miss O’Neil on the ground and pulled her through the narrow opening onto the stairs, relief making his limbs weak.

Jacqueline lit the lantern, chasing most of the darkness from the small room. She glanced at them, then up at the door, her face pale.

“Did you see Luke and Rachel?” Garrett yelled.

Mark shook his head, his gaze dashing toward Jacqueline. “They were near the church. I’m sure they made it inside.”

Jack huddled in the shadows against the corn crib, her eyes wide and her normal spunkiness subdued. She shrugged. “I—I couldn’t find them once everybody started running around. And what about Max?”

Garrett stopped partway down the steps and wrestled the doors shut. He held tight to the handles. With the drop-down bar on the outside, there was no way to lock them from the inside. The storm screamed in rage and fought to yank the doors off their hinges.

Still on the stairs, Mark looked past the Irishwoman and watched Garrett’s struggle. He needed to get Miss O’Neil situated and then help his brother. Suddenly, she gasped and stumbled on the stairs. She fell into his arms, her momentum pushing him back. He flailed one arm, grasping for the handrail—for anything solid. His feet fumbled down the final half-dozen steps, and he fell, yanking Miss O’Neil down beside him on top of his arm. Something popped. His back and head collided with the packed dirt floor. Pain radiated through him.

Miss O’Neil cried out.

Mark squinted up at his brother. Garrett’s form blurred, then darkened, and everything went black.

C
HAPTER
2

 

 

S
hannon lay on the hard, dirt floor, Mark’s arm caught awkwardly under her back. Stabbing pain radiated through her foot and up her leg. She sat and grasped her leg, trying to catch her breath. Her ankle throbbed in unison with her pounding heart.

Jack crawled to her side. “Are you hurt?”

“Aye, my ankle.” She scooted back against the dirt wall and huddled against the potato bin, trying to get comfortable and to catch her breath. She glanced up at Garrett, who still wrestled with the doors. The wind moaned and screeched, as if angered that it couldn’t get in to devour them.

Garrett held tight to the handles, leaning back, using the full weight of his body to keep the doors shut. What had happened to all the other people? Surely there weren’t enough cellars in town for everyone.

Why had she just stood there staring at the monstrous black cloud like some befuddled ninny? If that Mark Corbett hadn’t grabbed her and hauled her off like she was a burlap bag of potatoes, surely she would have gotten hurt—or worse.

Had she thought if she allowed the storm to sweep her away her problems would finally end? That she would be reunited with Mum in heaven?

“Mark. Mark!” Jack’s frantic cries drew her attention. She shook the man’s shoulders. “Wake up!”

Shannon scooted over beside him and put her arm around the lass. Had she killed the very man who’d come to her rescue?
Please, Father, no. Let him be all right
.

Mark moaned and lifted his arm. Suddenly, he cried out, and his eyes shot open. He blinked and looked around, then reached for the arm Shannon had fallen on. “Oh, my arm. Feels like it’s busted.”

“You all right, brother?” Garrett held tight to the doors while gazing down over his shoulder at Mark.

“Do I look all right?”

Shannon’s gaze leaped to Mark’s right arm. Sure enough, his wrist had started swelling. At least the bone hadn’t broken through the skin. Could be it was just a bad sprain. She prayed it was.

Mark attempted to sit up, and Shannon reached to help even though the effort made her ankle scream. “I don’t need your help. You’ve done enough.” She let go as if he’d been a rattlesnake, and he fell back to the ground with a sharp grunt.

Jack hurried to Mark’s other side. “I’ll help you.”

“Take it slow, Jack. Besides my hand hurting like a horse kicked it, my head is buzzing.” The girl pulled while Mark pushed off from the ground, and he managed to sit. He scowled at Shannon as if she were to blame.

She carefully moved away and leaned back against the potato bin. She hadn’t meant to hurt him and felt awful that she had. Closing her eyes, she tried to remember being back in Ireland. The memories were fading, and it was getting harder to remember her mum’s face.

She’d never wanted to come to this country, but she and Mum had followed along as Da chased his dreams. Would her parents still be alive if they’d stayed in Ireland? If her da hadn’t been so insistent that they come to America?

At least she would be in a place where she had friends, friends who cared about her. But in America—in Texas—she had no one.

Her high-top shoe felt tighter than it had earlier. If her ankle swelled too much, her boot might have to be cut off, and these were the only shoes she owned. On top of everything else, she’d have to put her plans to leave Lookout on hold.

She scowled across the small cellar to the other side where Mark sat, rubbing the back of his head. His brother still clung to the doors, but they no longer rattled as if a bear were on the other side trying to get in.

Mark cradled his right arm with his other hand and winced when he shifted positions. His gaze shot fiery arrows at her. “Why did you just stand there gawking at the storm? Don’t you know how dangerous a tornado is?”

A tornado. So the monster had a name.

She’d heard of them before, even in Ireland, but she’d never seen such a vengeful storm. Fear had melted her in the road like a spent candle stuck to a plate. Shivering, she clutched her arms around her. Had Mark just saved her life?

“Can you hear me, Miss O’Neil?” Mark leaned forward and grimaced from the movement. “Why didn’t you run?”

Jack jumped to her feet. “I need to find my ma and Luke.” She headed for the stairs, but Mark grabbed hold of her arm and pulled her back.

“You’re not going anywhere until that twister passes.”

“But they might be dead. And I gotta find Max.”

Mark moved around, as if trying to get comfortable. “Your parents are safe; I’m sure.”

Jack crossed her arms and leaned against a wooden bin. “How do you know?”

Mark grinned. “It took your ma eleven years to get Luke to the altar. She’s not about to let a tornado steal him away on her wedding day.”

Shannon watched the interplay between man and girl, amazed at how gentle Mark’s voice was. She was also thankful that he seemed to be all right, except for his wrist.

“But what about Max? I saw him under the cake table just before that storm blew in.” Jack flipped her long, auburn hair, almost the same color as Shannon’s, over her shoulder, and she nibbled her lower lip. The pristine yellow dress she’d donned this morning was now covered in dirt and grime.

“Aw, you know that ol’ yellow dog,” Garrett said. “He’s scared of his shadow. He’s probably back hiding out in one of the jail cells, and not even a tornado could uproot one of those heavy iron cages.”

“I guess so.”

Shannon leaned her head back, glad that Mark had been diverted with the lass’s questions and forgotten about interrogating her. She truly hoped nothing had happened to the newly married couple. Although not marrying Luke Davis had created a multitude of problems for her, she knew Luke was the love of Rachel’s life, and Shannon couldn’t begrudge them their happiness.

She glanced down, staring at her dirty hands. She brushed off the dust from her fall, but only soap and water would remove the rest. She allowed her injured foot to relax, but just the slight movement made her nearly scream out. Her boot felt unusually tight, and she was certain her foot was still swelling.

Mark glanced at Shannon. “You never answered my question.”

She ducked her head again. “I don’t know why I didn’t run.”

She hoped he would be satisfied and leave her alone. All her life, she had tried to make herself small. Tried to remain unseen. Tried to stay out of her da’s way when he returned home from the pub. It had mostly worked—until she’d grown up and was too large to hide.

The chill of the cellar seeped into her bones, and no amount of rubbing her arms could drive it away. What was she going to do? How could she survive on her own?

A scrape and thud sounded on the stairs; then a shaft of sunlight illuminated the dimly lit room. Fresh air streamed in. Dust motes floated on the shaft of sunlight that fell through the open door. A mouse scurried under a set of shelves that held jars of green beans and jellies.

Shannon jumped up, instantly regretting her sudden movement. She held onto the potato bin, keeping her sore foot off the ground, and gazed up the stairs. How was she going to manage them?

Mark stood also, then fell back against a wooden bin that held onions. He hung his head, rubbing his brows with his thumb and forefingers.

“You all right?” Jack asked.

“Yeah, just stood up too fast. Got a tornado of my own swirling in my head.”

Garrett clambered down the steps. “Most likely, it’s from that blow you took to your head when you fell. We’d best have the doc take a look at it.”

“I’ll be fine.” Mark swatted his hand in the air. “We need to get up there and see if any of the town is left. See if anyone is injured.”

Shannon’s pulse soared. Here she’d been worrying about herself when others may have lost their homes, livelihood, and even family members. She had to find out if Leah was all right. They may have been opponents at one time, but their similar loss had drawn them closer.

“What’s wrong with your hand?” Garrett glanced at Mark’s cradled arm. “Looks like it’s swellin’ up.”

Mark wiggled his forefinger and grimaced. “Yeah. Broken wrist, I think.”

Shannon lifted her hand to her mouth and sucked back a gasp. Mr. Corbett had been trying to help her, and she’d caused him injury. She longed to creep around the bin and hide in the shadows, but her wounded foot and shame held her immobile.

“You won’t be able to help much until the doc sets your hand, so we might as well head over to his office first.” Garrett hurried to Mark’s side.

“I don’t need any help, but I reckon Miss O’Neil does. Looks like she hurt her foot in the fall.”

“Well, I’m goin’ looking for my ma and my new pa.” Jack dashed past Garrett.

He grabbed for her arm, but she slipped past. “No, wait!”

“You’re too slow, brother.” Mark grinned.

Garrett shook his head. “I wanted to keep her close—just in case.” He swallowed hard.

Mark patted his brother’s shoulder. “Yeah, I know. But Luke finally married the only woman he’s ever loved. He’s not gonna let a twister steal her away from him.”

“I don’t reckon he would, but that was one fierce storm.”

“Yep, you’re right there. Let’s see what’s left of the town.” Mark undid the middle button of his shirt and stuck his injured hand inside, using it as a sling. He winced as he relaxed his arm; then he nodded at Shannon and walked up the stairs.

“What part of you is hurt, ma’am?” Garrett ambled closer to her.

She fought the urge to hide, knowing that Garrett Corbett was a prankster, but he was still a gentleman. What part of her hurt?
All of me. My heart. My dignity
. “Just my ankle.”

“Might be easiest if I simply carried you up.”

Shannon shook her head. “I can walk.”

She lowered her foot and tried putting her weight on it. Pain ratcheted through it and up into her lower leg. She bit the inside of her cheek, and sucked in a breath. Had she broken her ankle?

Without so much as a warning, Garrett scooped her into his arms and carried her up the stairs. He was just like his brother, forcing a woman to do things she didn’t want to do. If not for the Corbett brothers, she wouldn’t even be in Texas. But she had to be honest, even if she didn’t like it in this case. Without Garrett’s help, she’d have had a difficult time climbing those stairs.

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