The Substitute Bride. Janet Dean

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in New Harmony.”

      He set the brake, climbed down and walked to her side, reaching up a hand to help her from the seat. She took it and stood, wobbly on her feet. Was she sick? He looked for signs she’d be depositing her lunch in his hat brim. But all he saw was clear skin, apple cheeks and dazzling blue eyes.

      He’d never seen bluer eyes, bluer than the sky on a cloudless day. His attention went back to her skin—smooth, fair with a soft glow about it. He’d have no trouble looking across the table at that face.

      Or across the pillow.

      Why had he thought she wouldn’t suit?

      He wrapped his hands around her waist, so tiny the tips of his fingers all but touched, and lowered her with ease. With her feet mere inches from the ground, their eyes met and held. Ted’s heart stuttered in his chest. His gaze lowered to her mouth, lips slightly parted…

      “Are you going to put me down?” she said, color flooding her cheeks.

      “Sorry.” He quickly set her on her feet.

      She sneezed. Twice. Three times. Then motioned to the road. “This dust is terrible.”

      Ted looked around him, took in the thick coat of dust on the shrubs around the parsonage, further evidence of the drought that held the town in its grip. Unusual for New Harmony.

      “Is it always dusty like this?”

      “’Cept when it rains, then the streets turn to mud.”

      She wrinkled her nose. “Can’t something be done?”

      “Like what?”

      She waved a hand at the road. “Like paving it with bricks.”

      “No brickyards in these parts.”

      “Hmm. If the dust turns to mud, why can’t that mud be made into brick?”

      An interesting point, one he hadn’t considered.

      “Well, I shall have to think about the problem,” she said, tapping her lips with her index finger.

      Thunderation. She sounded like the governor. Did she mean to send him out with a pickax and set to work making a road before sundown? “What are you, a reformer?”

      She raised a delicate brow. “Would that bother you?”

      “Hardly think you’ll have time to reform much more than my kitchen.” His gaze swept Main Street, mostly deserted at this time of day. Folks were working either at home, in the fields or the town’s businesses. All except for Oscar and Cecil Moore lazing on a bench in front of Pete’s Barbershop, whittling. “Even if you did, you’ll find nothing much gets done in New Harmony.”

      “Why? Are people here lazy?”

      “For a farmer’s daughter, you don’t know much about farming. Farmers don’t have time to fret about roads and such. We work and sleep. That’s about it.”

      “What do you do for fun?”

      “Fun?” He opened the gate of the picket fence and offered his arm. They strolled along the path to the parsonage door.

      “Don’t you have socials? Parties?”

      “Some, but this isn’t the city. We’re a little…dry here.”

      The breeze kicked up another cloud of dust and she sneezed again. “That I believe.”

      He chuckled and rapped on the wooden door, which was all but begging for another coat of paint. Jacob kept his nose tucked in the Bible or one of the vast number of books he owned. And let chores slide. Maybe Ted could find time to handle the job on his next trip to town.

      Lydia Sumner opened the door, neat as a pin and just as plain, wearing a simple brown dress with a lace-trimmed collar, nut-brown hair pulled into a sensible bun. She had a heart of gold and, like now, a ready smile that she turned on Sally.

      “Lydia, this is Sally Rutgers. My mail—Ah, fiancée.”

      “Hello, Miss Rutgers. Please come in.” She stepped back to let them enter the small vestibule, then motioned to the closed door of Jacob’s study. “My husband’s working on Sunday’s sermon. He’ll only be a moment.”

      Ted doffed his hat and they followed Lydia into the parlor, where dollies and doodads covered every tabletop. “Glad we didn’t hold him up.”

      “Can I offer you a spot of tea?”

      Ted shook his head. “No thank—”

      “Oh, I’d love a cup,” Sally chimed in. “Do you have some cookies, perhaps? I’m famished.”

      “Why, Ted Logan, you didn’t think to feed her?”

      At half-past three? “Uh…”

      Lydia patted Sally’s arm. “The ladies at church vie over appeasing my husband’s sweet tooth. I’ll just be a minute.”

      Bald head shining like a beacon in the wilderness, Jacob passed his wife leaving the room. Tall, long limbed with the beginning of a paunch, most likely the result of that sweet tooth, his pastor beamed. “Sorry to keep you folks waiting.”

      Once again Ted made introductions and he and Sally took seats on the sofa, leaving a chasm between them wide enough for a riverboat to navigate.

      Jacob clapped Ted on the shoulder. “Shall we get started?”

      “Yes,” Ted said.

      “No,” Sally said.

      Ted’s jaw dropped to his collar. “No?”

      She gave a sweet smile. “I hoped to have that tea first.”

      Used to cramming every waking moment with activity, Ted reined in his desire to hurry her along. Unsure this feisty woman would comply if he did.

      Once Sally devoured two cups of tea and three cookies, she dabbed her lips with the snowy napkin. “Thank you, Mrs. Sumner.”

      Ted lowered his half-filled cup to the saucer. “Now are you ready to get married?”

      She shot him a saucy smile. “I thought you’d never ask.”

      A chuckle rumbled in his chest.

      Jacob slipped his glasses out of his coat pocket. “Do you have the license, Ted?”

      “It’s ready to go, filled out with the information Sally sent me in her last letter.” He withdrew the neatly folded paper from the inside pocket of his suit and handed it over.

      Jacob scanned the document. “Everything appears in order.”

      Sally lifted a hand, then let it flutter to her lap. “Pastor Sumner, you…ah, might want to change one teeny thing.”

      He

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