An Inconvenient Match. Janet Dean

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An Inconvenient Match - Janet Dean Mills & Boon Love Inspired Historical

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rel="nofollow" href="#udc8126ee-fea6-57d2-9051-194faf71800a">Chapter Fifteen

       Chapter Sixteen

       Chapter Seventeen

       Chapter Eighteen

       Chapter Nineteen

       Dear Reader

       Questions for Discussion

      Chapter One

      New Harmony, Iowa, 1901

      One glance at the rogue across the way curled Abigail Wilson’s gloved hands into a stranglehold on her skirts. She couldn’t dispute that Wade Cummings was handsome, rugged—

       Her heart stuttered in her chest. And, a ladies’ man who took pleasure in toying with a woman’s affections.

       Abigail should warn that bevy of giggling young females surrounding him, all vying for his attention. Not that they’d believe falling for the Cummings heir entailed a risk. No doubt each hoped he would bid on her box lunch and spend the afternoon, better yet, a lifetime, plastered to her side. Their plan for the future—a wedding ring.

       She’d seen how well that worked out in the best of circumstances, but tied to a Cummings that would be a jail sentence without end.

       She turned away from her nemesis and joined the throng pouring into the small park bordering Main Street. Inside the park’s gazebo a table held dozens of gaily wrapped box lunches. She handed hers to Oscar Moore, the fundraiser’s auctioneer.

       Oscar doffed his straw hat. “Afternoon, Miss Abigail.”

       Donned in his usual garb of a plaid flannel shirt and bib overalls even on this warm Saturday in May, Oscar lined her box up with the others on display, a colorful mix of paper, silk flowers and ribbon.

       “I’d give Leon a run for his money and bid on your lunch exceptin’ I make it a point to never come between lovebirds.”

       Abigail bit back a grin. Lovebirds hardly described her and Leon.

       A sudden grimace marred Oscar’s placid plump face. “Land’s sake, they’re at it again.”

       Up ahead, young people circled a commotion. Abigail rose on her tiptoes. Why, inside that ring, two of her students hunched, clenched hands reared back, ready to strike a blow. Within seconds bystanders took sides, egging them on, as if they needed encouragement. Paul was a hothead, but Seth normally had a level head on his shoulders. What had happened?

       Abigail strode toward the ruckus, using her collapsed parasol to clear a path, and pushed her way between the two glowering teenagers. Not wise considering each stood a head taller than her, and outweighed her by a good fifty pounds.

       “She’s mine, you hear!”

       “Like you own her!”

       “You two are behaving like tantrum-throwing toddlers,” Abigail said. Chests heaving, eyes sparking, knuckles white, neither boy appeared to hear. “Seth! Paul! Unfold those fists!”

       Looking slightly dazed, both boys lowered their arms and took a step back.

       Seth Collier, his dark hair curling with perspiration, dropped a sheepish gaze to his feet.

       Paul Roger’s face was contorted in anger and as red as his hair, his icy-blue eyes shooting daggers. He reached around Abigail and shoved a palm into Seth’s shoulder. Seth staggered, almost losing his balance.

       Abigail slapped her parasol against Paul’s forearm. “Stop that!” Finally both boys turned toward her. “What’s this about?”

       “Seth’s going to bid on Betty Jo’s lunch. Everyone knows she’s my girl.”

       “Then outbid him. The box social is about raising money.”

       Snarling, Paul took a threatening step toward Seth. “No one bids on Betty Jo’s lunch but me.”

       “If sharing a meal with another boy will damage your friendship with Betty Jo, then face the truth, Paul, you don’t mean much to her in the first place.”

       Betty Jo Weaver, the object of the boys’ hostility, sashayed over, dainty hands planted on hips, lips flattened in a disapproving line. “I wouldn’t share my lunch with either of you blockheads, not for all the tea in China!” She spun away, petticoats and blond curls flying.

       “As you can see, gentlemen, the way to a lady’s heart isn’t through your fists.”

       “Now look what you’ve gone and done,” Paul groused to Seth then took off at a run. “Betty Jo, wait up!”

       With the fight over before it started, bystanders lost interest and dispersed.

       Abigail took in Seth’s familiar faded shirt, the elbow she’d patched one afternoon after school. Motherless with a father who drank, the boy didn’t have an easy life.

       “You need to watch what you say to Paul. You know his temper.” She smiled to soften her words. “Plenty of other girls would like to share their lunch with you.”

       “Maybe,” Seth said but didn’t look convinced.

       Did he really care about Betty Jo? If so, he was bound to get hurt. Betty Jo Weaver had bigger pickings in mind. Already she’d joined the circle of Wade Cummings’s ardent admirers.

       Foolish girl.

       Off to the side, face downcast, Paul stood watching. Young love hurt, she knew, but dismissed the thought and turned away from such silliness.

       “Seth, the school board agreed to pay someone to stoke the schoolhouse stove this winter. Would you like the job?”

       His eyes lit. “Yes, ma’am, I sure would.”

       “It’ll mean getting up early.”

       “I can manage.”

       “I know you can. Now have a good time today. And no fighting.”

       “Yes, ma’am,” he said then trotted off.

       Seth was a good kid. A bright kid. And weighted down with responsibility. With a father who saw any act of kindness toward him and his son as interference. The best way to help Seth was to get him out from under his father’s influence and into college next year.

       “This box social reminds me of a meal we once shared.”

       At the sound of his voice and the implication in that tone, the hair on the back of

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