Melissa And The Cowboy (Western Night Series 1)

Read Melissa And The Cowboy (Western Night Series 1) Online

Authors: Rosie Harper

Tags: #Mail-Order Bride, #Western, #Historical, #Romance, #Victorian, #Adult, #Forever Love, #Bachelor, #Single Woman, #Wild West, #Texas, #Stephenville, #Small Town, #1800's, #Cowboy, #Courageous Women, #Rugged Men, #Drunken Gambler, #Orphaned, #Odious Stepfather, #Newspaper Ad, #Neighbor's Fiancée, #Troubled Life, #Mistakes, #Western Frontier, #Wild World, #Adversary, #Marriage Of Convenience

BOOK: Melissa And The Cowboy (Western Night Series 1)
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©
Copyright 2016 by Rosie Harper- All rights reserved.

 

 

In no way is it legal to reproduce, duplicate, or transmit any part of this document in either electronic means or in printed format. Recording of this publication is strictly prohibited and any storage of this document is not allowed unless with written permission from the publisher. All rights reserved.

 

Respective authors own all copyrights not held by the publisher.

 

 

 

 

 

Melissa & The Cowboy

 

A Mail Order Bride

 

 

 

 

 

By: Rosie Harper

 

Introduction

IMPORTANT MESSAGE

 

Before you get started reading,
Click here
to discover the ridiculous bonus I have contained in this book for you!

 

This message is extremely important and you should read it before getting started.

 

You have my word I am not trying to sell you anything.
Click here now!

 

 

To go directly to the table of contents
click here

 

 

Can you solve this riddle?

"What tastes better than it smells?"

 

 

Show Answer

 

 

Melissa & The Cowboy

 

 

Prologue

 

Melissa gazed, unseeing, out of the carriage window at the sights and sounds of the busy streets, lost in her sadness and bereft from her loss. Chicago had seemed to be such an exciting city, so full of potential when she and her dear Mama had arrived here just five short years ago. She dabbed at her eyes, and smoothed down the skirts of her tasteful black mourning gown. The Colonel sat perfectly upright on the seat opposite. He had not, as far as she was aware, shed so much as a tear for the wife he had just buried in a cheap coffin with the minimum of ceremony.

“My dear, your Mama wanted me to care for you until you reach maturity, or of course until you find yourself a fine young man to marry,” he said in his bluff and hearty voice. “As a good Christian man I would do no less, but I am not a wealthy man, and cannot afford to have members of my household be idle. I will continue to clothe and feed you, and give you a comfortable place to call your home.”

Melissa was sure he had intended the words to sound reassuring, but his cold stare and impatient tone, and the perpetual lie he told of his not being a man of means told her that he felt most imposed on by being left to have to provide for a child not his own. “But I shall expect you to earn your keep. I shall no longer pay for your lessons, or for you to attend society events other than when I need a companion to attend with me,” he finished sharply.

It took a moment for his words to sink in, but when they did she turned and stared at him. She didn’t deny he had the right to do whatever he wished in his own household, but she felt sure that he could have chosen a more appropriate moment than mere seconds after the burial of her beloved Mother to make his announcement that her position in the household had now changed from that of loved daughter, to one of fully indentured servitude – if that was indeed what he was saying.

Melissa had to admit that she had never liked him though. His eyes seemed to follow her around the house in a way that was certainly not befitting of a stepfather, and his kisses tended to linger overlong, and his caresses often too intimate. But in the beginning he had seemed to care for her Mother in his own way. They had been left penniless when her dear Papa had been killed in the Battle of Big Dry Wash in July of 1882. Melissa had been just eleven. She had barely known her soldier father. He had been so often away fighting in the Indian Wars that had taken so many lives on both sides. He had insisted that his beloved girls stay in Boston where they would be safe.  But when the letter had arrived, in the hands of his commanding officer they had been left with nothing but his final quarter’s wage.

Her Mama had taken the only route open to her, had found a second husband to provide for them as fast as she could. She had been the daughter of a soldier, and as the widow of one as well, she had searched within the world she knew. A chance meeting with Colonel Grantchester at a ball had led to a short courtship. He was lonely, having lost his own wife to disease some five years previously, and Mama was desperate - having to beg their kindly landlady for credit to keep the roof over their heads, and food in their bellies as their funds had dwindled down to nothing. He had paid their debts and shown care and occasionally even affection to both her and her Mama. The wedding ceremony had been a quiet one, as befitted a second marriage, with every expense spared, and they had joined the Colonel in his large townhouse in Chicago, leaving behind friends and everything Melissa had ever known behind.

The cheap nuptials were the first indicator they had of the Colonel’s miserly ways and stubborn moods. He had, up until then, been generous – both of his time and his money. He had lavished gifts upon them both, and Mama had been reassured herself that she had made the right decision. But it had turned out to be a false promise, like gilt edging on a cheap wooden frame. The Colonel was indeed rich and he did have a fine home, but he was not a kind man, nor a patient one. He had expected his wife to run his huge household, with only the support of a timid scullery maid, a young boy and a Cook to assist her. Mama had not been the strongest of women, she wasn’t used to the endless and sometimes back-breaking work that cleaning and maintaining such a mansion entailed with so little assistance.

Melissa had wanted to be her constant support and help, but Mama had been insistent that she learn her letters, to become knowledgeable in literature, music and art. In short, to have the accomplishments of a young woman of society. She had even been adamant that the Colonel fund Melissa’s Coming Out when she had turned sixteen. He had grumbled incessantly at the cost of the gowns and other expenses that a successful launch into the best of Chicago society entailed, but her Mama had stood firm. She had no intention of her daughter not having the opportunities she needed to make a good marriage.

Sadly, she was now nineteen and no suitor had presented himself at her door, to whisk her away from the life she feared was now to be hers. She would be wife in all but name. She just prayed that the Colonel would be able to keep his hands to himself, now there would be nobody else around to protect her from his advances. She had nowhere else to go, but she knew that if he so much as laid a finger on her that she would have to find a way to escape him. No man would ever want to marry her if she came to them as soiled goods.

 

Chapter One

 

The kitchen was finally warming and the fire was building nicely as Melissa sat at the old pine table, her head in her hands. She still missed her Mama every single day, but the Colonel had certainly stuck to his word. He had even surpassed her expectations of his miserliness and lack of empathy for the plight of others - had dismissed Mrs. Braithwaite, the cook, and Emily the scullery maid as soon as they had returned from her Mama’s funeral. She stared at her red, raw knuckles and the dry skin on her hands. Her back ached constantly. Nothing she did was ever good enough for him; despite the fact she was up before dawn every single day and did not fall into her bed in the servant’s quarters in the attic until past midnight every night.

She stared at the newspaper that lay on the table in front of her. She was supposed to press it, to ensure it had nary a wrinkle before it headed upstairs to be placed beside Colonel Grantchester’s breakfast tray. She never had the time to read any more or to practice the pianoforte, and had lost any inclination to sing, but as she glanced up at the large kitchen clock she saw she had, for once, plenty of time before she had to deliver it upstairs.  She began to flick through the pages, marvelling at the advertisements for gadgets and potions that would make life perfect, aghast at the news of the continuing wars in the West and the many men and women who continue to lose their lives in numerous raids and battles.

But she stopped in her tracks when she came across a column that spoke eloquently of a happiness and joy that had surpassed the writer’s wildest imaginings. The words were those of a Mail Order Bride, a woman who had taken a risk and moved to South Dakota – despite her fear of the local Sioux tribes, and the hardships she knew that would lie ahead. It seemed that the woman had indeed been blessed. The unknown miner she had responded to sounded good and kind and Melissa found herself envious of this lucky woman and her brood of three children, and her happy home.

A number of advertisements surrounded the column, of men who were looking for wives themselves. A year ago Melissa would barely have read the article, let alone considered the strange men who shopped for a bride in such a way, but she figured no amount of hardship could surpass her life now. Even if her husband had bad breath and was ugly as sin, she would at least be in charge of her own home, would be able to have children, and have someone to love. Here, she had no free time, no freedom to even find a husband, and a further five years until she came of age and would be able to make decisions about her own life. If she wanted to escape, marriage was her only chance.

She looked at the advertisements carefully, trying desperately to read between the lines. She so wanted to have a proper marriage, and to be as happy as the woman in the article despite her pragmatism. Finally, she whittled them down to one:

Matrimonial –
A gentleman of Texas, wishes to open a correspondence with a young lady with a wish of holy matrimony; she must be warm and caring, a fine cook, and would value and desire a contented and happy home and the attentions of a fine and upstanding man above the excitement of society. The subscriber is a gentleman of some wealth and taste, and though widowed, believes that he would have qualities that would make him attractive to such a woman as described above. Address in sincerity E.T.C., Box No 7038

Melissa was a little concerned that he sounded somewhat like the Colonel, in that he wanted a wife to prize her home and please her man over herself, but she figured that most men probably wished for that in a wife. It didn’t automatically mean that they wouldn’t offer the same qualities in return. She wondered what this mystery gentleman did out there in the wilds of Texas, and decided that the only way to answer her questions was to write to him. She pulled out a piece of paper, pen and ink from the drawer, and began to compose her response.

When the bell rang to alert her that the Colonel was waiting in the dining room for his breakfast she jumped out of her skin. She had gotten so lost in the moment, and not even the kettle was on for the blasted man’s morning coffee. She bustled around, her haste making her clumsy as she spilled over the jar of jam onto the newspaper, and slopped coffee all over the tray. Thankfully, she missed the toast, so she carefully wiped everything down, tucked the un-ironed newspaper under her arm and rushed up the stairs as the bell continued to clang loudly every minute.

The Colonel’s face was puce red by the time she reached the dining room. “I don’t see what could possibly have taken you so long,” he bellowed. “I have a meeting at the Club, and I shall now be late because of your incompetency.” Melissa simply nodded and laid out his things just as he liked them. She moved swiftly to the door. “And what the hell do you call this?” he demanded, as he brandished the wrinkled newspaper at her. She sighed and turned on her heel.

“I am sorry Sir, but the newspaper arrived late this morning. I decided that you would probably rather have it a little rumpled than not at all,” she decided to try to avoid the subject of the jam that he would find when he opened its pages. If she could convince him that it wasn’t her fault that the newspaper was not in pristine condition, then maybe he would blame the jam on somebody else as well.

“Harrumph,” he trumpeted disbelievingly. “Don’t blame others for your own incompetency my girl. Take it away. I shall read at the Club instead. Do not let it happen again!”

“Certainly not Sir, I have already spoken quite sternly to the delivery boy.” Relieved beyond measure, she gathered the newspaper and rushed back down stairs.

“Well,” she said to the plump, black cat that had made her kitchen its home. “I think that makes up any vestiges of my mind. I shall mail this to the newspaper immediately and will pray so very hard that whoever this man may be that he responds to me quickly and I can leave this place forever.” The cat stared at her, purring loudly. She ruffled its head affectionately. “Don’t worry Puss, I won’t leave you here. I shall take you with me, that way I know I will have at least one friend when I begin my new life.”

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