Rocky Mountain Dreams & Family on the Range by Danica Favorite (summer beach reads txt) π

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- Author: Danica Favorite
Read book online Β«Rocky Mountain Dreams & Family on the Range by Danica Favorite (summer beach reads txt) πΒ». Author - Danica Favorite
Annabelleβs face heated. Sheβd at least been discreet in her words. But for Maddie to be so free in front of... She stole a glance at Joseph, who winked at her.
Annabelle looked down at her bowl. Of all the...
βItβs all right, Annabelle. I have sisters. I never did see the point in those contraptions making a woman miserable.β
She opened her mouth to say something, anything, to make this man know that such talk was completely inappropriate. But Maddie was tugging her out of her chair.
βLetβs get you changed.β
If only a change of clothes was enough to fix the woes in Annabelleβs life.
Chapter Six
Joseph watched Annabelle leave with a smile. She was like a wet cat when she got all riled up. And even though he assumed he was supposed to take her seriously, it only made him want to laugh. Someday, sheβd figure out that she didnβt have to pretend with him.
Wait. What was he talking about, someday? As soon as he finalized his paβs estate, heβd be taking what he could and going back to his family in Ohio. There he wouldnβt need to worry about getting closer to Annabelle Lassiter.
Frank coughed, and Joseph looked up. He probably shouldnβt have said all that about corsets. At home, thatβs all his sisters ever talked about. But in polite company, it was highly inappropriate.
βIβm sorry. I should have been less frank with your daughter.β
Frank smiled. βNo need for apologies. When her mother was alive, she had a woman to tell her these things. Poor Maddie isnβt equipped for the society Annabelle runs with.β
βIt must be hard on her, losing her mother.β
Joseph took a mouthful of soup, pleased that the flavor was every bit as good as the aroma that had been tantalizing him since this morning.
βIβm sure itβs just as hard for you and your sisters,β Frank said in a pastorly tone.
Joseph looked around the large table. βWe at least have each other.β
He continued eating his soup, remembering Annabelleβs confession from the previous night. Yes, heβd lost his parents, but he had his siblings left. People to care for, people who counted on him, people who cared about him.
Who did Annabelle have other than Maddie and her pa?
βYou must miss them.β The knowing smile warmed him even more than the soup. How could Annabelle be devoid of the same warmth?
βI do. But Iβll wrap up things with my paβs estate, then return home.β Hopefully with enough money to get by until he could support them all. As his maβs sister, Aunt Ina would surely refuse to help their paβs out-of-wedlock child.
βI hope you find what youβre looking for,β Frank said, then continued eating his soup.
It was too bad there werenβt more men like Frank Lassiter in Ohio. He would never forget Frankβs kindness. Someday, heβd take Frankβs challenge and help someone else in need.
Annabelle returned, wearing a faded dress and an equally faded expression on her face. The wet cat look had been replaced by the look the cat would have after being dried offβslightly more comfortable, but still resentful.
βThere you are, Annabelle. And looking just as pretty.β Her fatherβs flattery did nothing to erase the scowl on her face.
βYouβll feel much better once you get some soup in you. Since Joseph is going to need help finding his fatherβs cabin, you could go with him. Itβs near Greenhorn Gulch. You know where that is.β
βOf course, Father.β
She sat down and ate the soup placed in front of her, her face expressionless and her gaze completely on the bowl.
Joseph should learn to accept Annabelle being distant, but she was like a burr under his saddle. He wasnβt going to be satisfied until he fixed it and fixed it good. His sister Mary would tell him it was his failing. Having to get to the bottom of things and solve the problem. Theyβd always thought heβd become a lawman for that very reason. But the pay wasnβt enough to support the family and run the farm.
So instead, he was here, chasing down his deadbeat fatherβs estate, and trying not to be attracted to the lovely woman sitting before him. Heβd admit it, even in the dress she looked none too happy about wearing, Annabelle Lassiter was still a beautiful woman. And when she forgot herself for a moment, she brought so much light into the room.
But those were thoughts he needed to do his best to temper. Though Margaretβs defection had hurt, sheβd been right. Joseph could barely provide for the family he had. He needed to focus his attentions on caring for his siblings, not courting a lady.
After lunch, Annabelle took him and Nugget to the livery. They saddled up her familyβs horses, then rode out of town toward a place her father had called Greenhorn Gulch.
Rocks jutted out around them, and stumps showed where trees once stood. The sure-footed paint Joseph rode had no trouble keeping up with Annabelleβs blue roan. The mare was perfectly suited to Annabelle, who seemed completely out of place in this desolate land stripped of what had probably once been a beautiful forest.
βWhat happened to all the trees?β
βCut down to make support beams for the mines and places for the miners to live.β Her voice had a coldness to it.
βYou donβt approve?β
She led her horse across a shallow creek. βItβs not my place to approve, but I think itβs a foolβs errand. People are willing to risk everything to get rich, and most of the folk who come out here never do. They abandon their families, leaving behind perfectly good lives in the vain hope that theyβll strike silver. When they get here, theyβre willing to lie, cheat, steal and do anything else to gain an advantage that doesnβt exist.β
She could have been talking about his pa. Heβd come out here with the goal of finding silver to provide what the farm could not. But
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