Courting Miss Adelaide. Janet Dean
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Adelaide looked at the clock on the wall. “In less than an hour, Mary will be coming to my shop to quilt.”
“Wonderful. That’ll give me time to speak to her before she leaves. Whoo-ee, it is indeed my lucky day!” Mr. Evans turned toward Adelaide. “And yours, too, Miss Crum.” He gave her a jaunty wave. “See you this afternoon.”
Then he and Mr. Graves were gone, leaving Adelaide with an uncomfortable feeling that this was not her lucky day. Not her lucky day at all.
Adelaide laid out scissors and thread, and then prepared a sandwich for lunch. While thinking about the odd meeting with the lawyer, she layered ham and cheese on two slices of bread. With so much on her mind, she had no interest in food or quilting. But company might take her mind off the one o’clock appointment.
At exactly ten o’clock, the “Snip and Sew” quilting group, carrying lunch pails and sewing baskets, pushed through the shop door, the four women clumped together as if they’d been stitched at the hips. They chattered and laughed, except for Mary, who gave Adelaide an encouraging smile.
Tension eased from between Adelaide’s shoulder blades. At least, Mary didn’t appear disturbed that she’d be at the reading of Adam Graves’s will.
Bringing up the rear came a fifth woman, the one person Adelaide had least expected to be interested in quilting.
Fannie Whitehall.
Sally pulled Fannie forward. “Fannie’s joining our group. She’s not a quilter, but she can stitch a fine hem.”
“How nice of you to help, Fannie,” Laura said.
The others greeted Fannie, friendly as birds on a branch.
The news thudded to the bottom of Adelaide’s stomach. From seeing Fannie at The Ledger, Adelaide knew the girl hankered to play husband archery, and Mr. Graves was the target. Still, money raised from the sale of the quilt would buy supplies for the Sunday school. Only a selfish woman would resent another pair of helping hands. She swallowed her reservations and offered a smile. “Welcome, Fannie.”
“Well, shall we get started?” Laura said.
Adelaide led the ladies to where she’d assembled her frame and had attached the Dresden Plate quilt. The pastel petals and yellow centers looked pretty enough to attract bees.
Adelaide grabbed a chair for Fannie, then she and Mary put away the ladies’ lunches.
“Charles brought Mr. Evans by,” Mary said in a low voice. “He told me you’re one of the heirs.”
“I can’t imagine why.”
“We’ll find out soon enough.”
Adelaide’s stomach knotted. Whatever happened at the reading of the will, there’d be consequences.
By the time Mary and Adelaide took their places around the frame and threaded their needles, the chatter had ebbed and all heads bent over their work.
Fannie sewed beside Adelaide, taking each stitch with care, surprising Adelaide, who’d expected the girl’s workmanship to be shoddy. At the thought, Adelaide’s needle pierced the layers of fabric, pricking both her finger and her conscience.
Pausing in the middle of a stitch, Fannie looked at Mary with big, innocent eyes. “I’m hoping you can help me, Mary.”
Mary tied a knot in her thread. “You’re doing a fine job.”
“I don’t mean help with quilting.” Fannie sighed. “I mean help with men. Well, not all men, only one. Charles Graves.”
Adelaide missed the eye of the needle with her thread.
Mary shrugged. “I can’t be much help. My brother-in-law is a mystery, even to me.”
“Adelaide, you were talking to Mr. Graves.” Fannie whisked her gaze over Adelaide either sizing her up as the competition—or fitting her for a very tight seam. “You—” Fannie hesitated “—don’t have designs on him, do you?”
Adelaide’s pulse skipped a beat. “Designs?”
Every hand hovered over the quilt, all eyes riveted on her and Fannie. Adelaide shook her head.
“I didn’t think you did. I told Mama, ‘Adelaide Crum is too levelheaded for a man like Mr. Graves.’ I can’t imagine you two courting.” Fannie’s eyes narrowed. “So you were at the paper on business. Nothing else?”
Heat filled Adelaide’s veins. “Yes, business for the shop.”
Fannie beamed. “Oh, I’m glad. I’m mad about Mr. Graves. Mama says he’d be quite the catch.”
With her teeth, Sally broke off a length of thread. “Are you doing a little fishing, Fannie? Over at The Ledger?”
The women chuckled.
Fannie sighed. “I’m not sure you noticed, Adelaide, but Mr. Graves didn’t seem all that eager to try my b-biscuits.” Her voice quavered. “I don’t understand what I’m doing wrong.”
As much as Adelaide didn’t want to, a thread of sympathy tugged between her heart and Fannie’s. The girl meant well, even if she didn’t see the consequences of her words or actions.
“Maybe your reputation as a cook is scaring him off,” Laura said, one brow arched.
“Well, it’s hard to get the temperature right in that huge cookstove of Mama’s. But how would Mr. Graves know that?”
“You told him,” Adelaide reminded her.
“I did?” Fannie thought a second. “Oh, I did!” Her green eyes filled with tears. “I’ve ruined my chances with him, exactly like I ruin my biscuits.”
Adelaide laid down her needle. “That’s no reason to cry.”
“I’m sorry.” Fannie dashed away the tears slipping down her cheeks. “It’s just that I’m getting…well, desperate.”
Martha harrumphed. “Desperate? How?”
“In three months, I’ll be twenty. I’ve always planned to be engaged by my twentieth birthday. I’m getting old!” she wailed.
Fast losing sympathy for the girl, and with her own birthday looming, Adelaide bit back a retort.
Laura shook her head. “Fannie, dear, I’m sure you don’t intend to, but you have a way of making me feel ancient.”
Fannie gasped. “Oh, chicken feathers, Laura. I’m sorry.”
“Why are you in such a rush anyway?” Martha asked, smoothing her dress over her bulging belly. “If you ask me, men are like flies. You trap yourself one, only to learn he can be a pest.”
“Appears to me, yours has been pestering you plenty,” Sally said and the room once again filled with laughter.
Fannie