Gold Rush Bride. Shirley Kennedy
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“If he was such a good friend, why didn’t he come himself? Why did he send his employee with the news?
“I don’t know. Come on, you need to lie down.” As Letty helped her mother to the bedroom, she wondered the same thing. If he was such a good friend, why hadn’t Garth Morgan delivered his sad news in person? Did he not care? Was he so rich and important he couldn’t be bothered with an ordinary family like the Tinsleys? Probably so, but she should put such an unpleasant assumption out of her mind. Mr. Garth Morgan was just another rich man without a heart, and she shouldn’t give him another thought.
Chapter 2
Only one, very small dark cloud hung over Garth Morgan’s horizon as he stood before the ornate mirror in his bedroom. He liked what he saw. The cut of his wool frock coat emphasized the broad width of shoulders. The matching trousers, rust silk waistcoat and high-collared shirt made him a six-foot-two picture of handsome elegance. Mother would be pleased, although in the end he was bound to disappoint her. At tonight’s dinner party in his honor, she’d no doubt plotted to have one of her friends’ daughters sit beside him and so dazzle him with her charm and beauty he’d propose on the spot. Her blatant strategy had never worked and wouldn’t now. Despite the annoyance, he looked forward to an evening of fine food and chatter with old friends, especially after a trip across the Isthmus of Panama that had been the usual nightmare, and the trip to Boston on a storm-battered ship that kept passengers’ stomachs in constant upheaval. He missed San Francisco already, but on the other hand, how truly enjoyable to be back in the city where he was born. Boston seemed so dignified now, so quiet and safe compared to the rollicking, dangerous, ever-changing city by the bay.
If only…
Mother had mentioned she had a “small favor” to ask. That meant something major. No doubt something he wouldn’t want to give, or do, but because she was his mother, he could not say no.
“Before dinner,” she’d said, “meet me in the library.”
So he’d go downstairs right now, get her small favor out in the open, tell her yes, whatever it was, and enjoy the rest of the evening.
He found his mother, Mrs. Lenora Sternfield Morgan, waiting in the library. If this were England, she’d surely be royalty with her stout figure encased in a gown of elegant black lace, a sparkling diamond tiara perched atop her upswept white hair. That she was one of the acclaimed leaders of Boston society, there could be no doubt.
“You wanted to see me, Mother?”
“No sooner do you get here than you’re leaving again.” Her disapproving expression reminded him she rarely wasted time on trivial conversation. She was always quick to express her grievances.
“You know the reason for that.” Garth lowered his long body into a Louis XVI walnut armchair. “I have a hotel to run in San Francisco, and elsewhere, too. I only came home to see to your investments, as well as mine. Also, I wanted to keep an eye on that considerable shipment of gold I just put in the bank.” He lifted his eyebrow. “Surely you have no objection to that.”
She gave him her contemptuous stare, an expression with which he was quite familiar. “Will you ever sell those wicked saloons?”
Why did he try? There was no pleasing her. He’d never convince her gambling was considered a highly respectable occupation in the west. “You had a favor to ask?”
She was easy to read. Part of her wanted to launch into a lecture about the evils of gambling. Another, more practical part, well understood such lectures were useless, and she might as well move on. “Actually, it’s a big favor but nothing you can’t handle.”
Ah, good. The practical part had won. He sat straight. Better be on the alert. If his mother called it a big favor, it was bound to be something he would be loath to do. “So tell me.”
“You know Sally Walters.”
“Of course I do. She’s one of your oldest, dearest friends.”
“And you are well acquainted with her daughter, Honoria.”
Garth gave a wary nod. What was she up to? Anything involving Honoria could not be good. The same age, they’d played together when they were growing up. To this day, he remembered the mean little girl who’d got him into trouble more than once with her lies and sneakiness.
“As I’m sure you will recall, Honoria married Arnold Leffington, who is now a Major in the United States Army.”
“Of course. I went to her wedding.” No need to recount how he and some of his friends had rejoiced at the happy news that the obnoxious Miss Honoria Walters was finally off the marriage market. They’d had a merry time at her wedding and wished her well.
His mother wasn’t done. “Major Leffington is now stationed at the Presidio in San Francisco.”
“Oh? And Honoria is with him?”
“No, she’s still in Boston. He wants her in San Francisco, though. That’s where you come in.”
Oh, no. No. No. “We were never close, you know. She was spoiled when she was little, and she’s spoiled now.”
His mother ignored his comment and skewered him with a flinty, merciless gaze. “Honoria cannot possibly make that dreadfully long journey by herself. She will need an escort. Since you’ll be leaving for California soon, across that Isthmus, or around the Horn, or whichever way you plan to go, I think it would be most fitting if you accompany the daughter of one of my dearest and oldest friends.”
Words failed him, which perhaps was for the best. What a horrible thought. No way around it. If he said yes, he’d be spending months with a woman whose main topic of conversation was herself, and who totally bored him to distraction. And yet… How could he say no? This was his mother asking. A childhood memory popped into his head. He couldn’t have been more than four when he had those awful earaches, and she’d walk the floor with him half the night. She could easily have had the nanny do it, but she chose to care for him herself. So he had no choice. Above all else, she was his mother, and he’d always be grateful for the warmth and comfort he’d felt in her arms. Ah well… No use fighting a battle he was bound to lose. “Of course, Mother, I’d be delighted to escort my old friend, Honoria, to California.”
“No, you wouldn’t.” She gave him another shrewd gaze. “You think I don’t know Honoria’s a pain in the neck? I shall write Major Leffington immediately and let him know you’re coming.” She broke into one of her rare, warm smiles. “I truly appreciate your generosity, Garth. God will remember this.” The smile faded. “By the way, I’ve placed Eugenia Becket’s daughter next to you at dinner. Beatrice is a lovely girl. She paints the most beautiful water colors and sings like a lark.”
He smiled back. “You’ve just won a major victory. I suggest you quit while you’re ahead.”
She heaved a weary sigh. “You just won’t listen, will you? Always so sure of yourself. Such confidence leads to a touch of arrogance and conceit.”
“What? You think I’m arrogant and conceited?”
“Of course I do.” She tilted her head back and gave him a cool stare. “The trouble with you is you’ve