Love Inspired December 2014 - Box Set 1 of 2: A Rancher for Christmas\Her Montana Christmas\An Amish Christmas Journey\Yuletide Baby (16 page)

BOOK: Love Inspired December 2014 - Box Set 1 of 2: A Rancher for Christmas\Her Montana Christmas\An Amish Christmas Journey\Yuletide Baby
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The Shaws had graciously insisted that her parents stay with them at the ranch. They, too, were family, after all, and Sheila and Gary seemed suitably impressed with their quarters. The Shaws and, therefore, Jasper Gulch had risen considerably in their estimation.

The groom would wear his ministerial collar, at Robin's insistence. The pastor who would conduct the ceremony came from L.A. with Ethan's sister, niece and aunt, who had hit it off with their hostess, Mamie, as if they were all old friends. Robin was delighted to meet the famous Pastor Rick, who had come prepared with full ecclesiastical robes for the wedding. Ethan's niece, Erin, would serve as flower girl, though the only flowers were to be the white roses in Robin's bouquet and the petals in Erin's basket.

In deference to the weather, they kept it short and sweet. No music, no poetry, no candle lighting or long processions. Just a couple in love, a minister and their witnesses standing on a bridge beneath a winter sun in the sight of God. Livvie attended as matron of honor, but it pleased Robin that both Julie Shaw Travers and Faith Shaw Massey offered to do so. Jack stood up with Ethan, grinning at his wife the whole time Robin and Ethan repeated their vows.

Pastor Rick had a few surprises up his ecclesiastical sleeve. While Ethan kissed his bride, Rick sent a discreet text message. Suddenly, bells pealed across the valley floor, filling the air with their joyous music.

Those residents of the town who did not brave the cold to stand out on the bridge during the brief ceremony waited back at the church until the happy couple arrived for a cake-and-punch reception. Amidst the gaiety and laughter there, Ethan's cell phone rang.

Robin watched emotion wash over her husband's face as he softly said, “Hello, Dad.” Then, “Yes, I wish you could've been here, too. She's a wonderful woman. You'll love her.”

Colleen stood nearby, and she looked away, but Pastor Rick quickly positioned himself so he stood directly within her line of sight. Robin knew then that Rick had arranged the call. The burly, middle-aged pastor stepped forward, bent and whispered something into Colleen's ear.

She shook her head and pushed past him, but as she brushed by Ethan, she said, “Wish the old man a happy new year from me.”

Ethan's expression contained such joy in that moment that Robin could not resist the impulse to take his hand in hers, as she would so often over the coming years. She recalled then the words that he had quoted to comfort and encourage her when her faith had been weak and lacking.

They were the very words that would be carved above the door of the lovely stone chapel erected on the campus of the Mountainview Church of the Savior, one that never closed: a place for prayer, a shelter in time of storm, a shade in the heat of the day. Built with Robin's share of the Shaw-Massey gold, the chapel would become a popular place for small weddings and other ceremonies. These timeless words from Isaiah 41:10 would be there through the generations to strengthen all who worried and wondered:

“Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.”

So had learned the pastor's wife with her first—but not by any means her last—Montana Christmas.

* * * * *

If you liked this
BIG SKY CENTENNIAL
novel,
make sure you read the entire miniseries:

Book #1: HER MONTANA COWBOY
by Valerie Hansen

Book #2: HIS MONTANA SWEETHEART
by Ruth Logan Herne

Book #3: HER MONTANA TWINS
by Carolyne Aarsen

Book #4: HIS MONTANA BRIDE
by Brenda Minton

Book #5: HIS MONTANA HOMECOMING
by Jenna Mindel

Book #6: HER MONTANA CHRISTMAS
by Arlene James

Dear Reader,

While it's true that not all secrets are equal, secrets
can
be poison. They can destroy friendships, marriages, families, entire communities, even governments. Even well-meaning, well-reasoned secrets can become heavy burdens and require substantial “upkeep.” What was simply meant to go unsaid may soon have to be covered up, and that means obscuring the truth or telling a lie. One lie begets another and another and... You get the picture.

For a Christian, keeping a secret long-term can have the same effect as an infection in the bloodstream. The longer that secret is there, the worse the “host” feels.

That's what Robin and Ethan each learn as they find their way together. Thankfully, they don't have to deal with it all on their own; thankfully, neither do we. Our Lord can be trusted with our every secret, because He knows it all—and loves us—anyway.

God bless,

Questions for Discussion

  1. The Shaw family invested heavily in the community of Jasper Gulch from its official founding, helping to build and support the town, through the church, the bank, the city government and the economy. However, did they have too much influence in the town?
  2. Lucy Shaw's staged accident on the Beaver Creek Bridge caused that bridge to be closed for nearly ninety years, shutting off one of only two routes of access into and out of Jasper Gulch. This is an example of a secret that impacted an entire community. Can you think of any secrets that have impacted entire communities or even societies in real life?
  3. Robin's parents doubted her great-grandmother's confession. Why would they do that? Can you think of true instances when people confessed to having other identities and faking their own deaths and were doubted?
  4. Robin's “proof” for her great-grandmother's confession consisted of the details of the story (some of them not widely known), the corroboration of a witness (Rusty Zidek), her own middle name—which was the same as her supposed great-great-grandmother's—and her amazing likeness to that same great-great-grandmother as seen in an old photograph. Would that be enough for you to make your case? Would it be enough for you to accept her claim? Why or why not?
  5. Jackson Shaw knew well that Silas Massey had looted the Jasper Gulch bank in retribution for Ezra's not allowing him to reclaim his share of the gold buried in the time capsule when Silas's investments had gone awry. Because the Shaw family had then struggled for years to cover the bank's losses and keep its depositors and, thereby, the community afloat, Jackson felt justified in taking the gold for himself and his family. Was this reasonable? Why or why not?
  6. Robin feared that Jackson would reject her claims and possibly even force her out of town. She knew that the Shaws had managed to keep the bridge closed for decades, had kept secret the looting of the bank by Silas Massey and had “owned” the mayor's office since the city's founding. She had seen Jackson in action. Did her fear seem reasonable? What did her fear say about her faith?
  7. Robin's need for family connection drove her great-grandmother to confess her secrets on her deathbed and led Robin to seek the truth in Montana. Some say the need for family connection is a basic human drive. Do you think that is true? If it is true, why do you suppose we have so many broken families?
  8. Ethan had his own secrets. We all have pasts, and we all have difficulties, but do we hold pastors to a different standard? Why?
  9. The former pastor counseled Ethan not to immediately reveal his past. Instead, he advised Ethan to give himself time to settle in and let others come to know him better before revealing his past. In a real-life situation, have you ever given such counsel?
  10. Had Ethan not had his own secret, would he have been so sensitive to and understanding of Robin's situation? Did his family's estrangement make him more sensitive to and understanding of her reason for coming to Jasper Gulch? In general, is it not our shared experiences that make us better friends, more able servants, sincere condolers, wise advisers?
  11. Secrets, secrets, secrets! But are all secrets bad? The Shaws kept the looting of the bank a secret so the bank wouldn't fail. This saved depositors from losing their money, but it gave Jackson a motive for stealing the gold in the time capsule. Good or bad?
  12. Lucy Shaw faked her own death via an accident on the bridge so she could marry the man of her choice. Robin was the ultimate result, but so was the closing of the bridge. Good or bad?
  13. Robin came to Jasper Gulch under the guise of writing a paper on genealogy so she could investigate her great-grandmother's story and possibly find family. Good or bad?
  14. Ethan kept quiet about the death of his girlfriend in a gang shooting and his father's incarceration, hiding the depth of his own turnaround in the process. Good or bad?
  15. Rusty Zidek kept Lucy's secret for eighty-eight years. Then he went on a secret campaign of sending mysterious notes. Good or bad?
  16. In the end, Jackson Shaw saw the error of his ways, confessed all, stepped aside as mayor, made restitution (and then some) and generally played a part in fulfilling Ethan and Robin's faith. Does this ever happen in real life? Can you share an instance of it?

We hope you enjoyed this Harlequin Love Inspired story.

You believe hearts can heal.
Love Inspired
stories show that faith, forgiveness and hope have the power to lift spirits and change lives—always.

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Chapter One

B
reezy Hernandez stood in front of the massive wood door on the front porch of her brother's Texas Hill Country home. When she'd met Lawton Brooks two months ago, he had filled in the missing pieces of her life.

Now he was gone. In one tragic accident Lawton, his wife and his mother had been taken. The lawyer in Austin had given her this address. He'd told her in Martin's Crossing she would find Jake Martin, executor of the estate.

She knocked on the door and then looked out at the windblown fields dotted with small trees, waiting for someone to answer. No one did. There was no muffled call for her to come in, or footsteps hurrying to answer the door. She leaned her forehead against the rough wood, her hand dropping to her side. Her heart ached.

After a few minutes she wiped away the dampness on her cheeks and reached for the handle. It wasn't locked. She pushed the door open, hesitating briefly before stepping inside. Why should she hesitate? Nothing would change the reality that Lawton and his wife had been killed in a plane crash two weeks ago. She'd missed the opportunity to see him again. She'd missed the funeral and the chance to say goodbye.

But she could be there for his girls.

As she stepped inside she flipped a switch, flooding the stone-tiled foyer in soft amber light. The entryway led to a massive living room with stone flooring, textured walls in earthy tan and a stone fireplace flanked by brown leather furniture.

Enveloped by silence and the cool, unheated air, she stood in the center of the room. There were signs of life, as if the people who had lived here had just stepped out. There were magazines on the coffee table, a pair of slippers next to a chair. Toys spilled from a basket pushed against the wall. Her throat tightened, aching deep down the way grief does.

“It isn't fair,” she said out loud, the words sounding hollow in the empty space.

She should have come to Texas sooner but she'd needed time to come to terms with what Lawton had told her. His father, Senator Howard Brooks, had an affair with her mother, Anna, a drug addict from Oklahoma City. Breezy was the result of that brief relationship. She'd known for years that she wasn't the true granddaughter of Maria Hernandez, the woman who had taken her in years ago. Maria had given her that information shortly before she passed away.

Now she knew who she was. But what good did that do her?

She left the living room and walked to the kitchen. The room was large and open, with white cabinets and black granite countertops. She moved from that room, with sippy cups in a drainer next to the sink, to the dining room.

A table with four chairs and two high chairs dominated the room. On the opposite wall were family portraits. She stopped at the picture of an older man in a suit, a flag of Texas behind him. Her father, Senator Howard Brooks.

In the next picture his wife of over forty years stood next to him. They looked happy. Evelyn Brooks hadn't known about her husband's brief affair or his daughter. He'd confessed the secret on his deathbed one year ago.

Breezy drew in a breath and fought the sting of tears. She'd never been one to cry over spilled milk. Not even if that meant she might have had a real family.

This was different, though. This was a family lost. Her family. She had a habit of losing family. It had started more than twenty years ago, after her mother's death, when she and her siblings were all separated. Mia was adopted by the Coopers and Juan went to his father's family. Breezy had been taken in the night by Maria because she had worried they would eventually learn the truth, that Maria's son wasn't really Breezy's father.

Out of fear, Maria had kept them moving from town to town, living in cars, shelters and sometimes pay-by-the-month hotels.

Breezy brushed off the memory. It was old news.

A wedding photo hung on the wall. She studied the image of her brother and his pretty bride, both wearing identical looks of joy. At the last picture her heart stilled. Lawton, his wife, their two baby girls.

Just then, a sound edged in, a door closing. Footsteps, heavy and booted, echoed in the empty house. She held her breath, waiting.

“Who are you?” The deep male voice sent a shiver of apprehension up her spine.

Breezy turned, not quite trembling in her shoes, but nearly. The man filled the doorway. His tall, lean frame in jeans and a dark blue shirt held her attention, and then her eyes connected with pale blue eyes in a suntanned face. His dark hair was short but messy, like he'd just taken off a hat. She let her gaze drop, almost expecting a holster, Old West style, slung low on his hips.

Of course there wasn't one.

“I'm Breezy. Breezy Hernandez.” Chin up, she swallowed a lump of what might have been fear.

His eyes narrowed and he frowned. “The missing sister.”

She wanted to argue she hadn't been missing. She hadn't known she was lost. She'd needed time to process that she had this brother. She'd needed time alone to figure out what it meant to find out who her father was. The ache in her heart erupted again. She'd been on the run for most of her life; it had become second nature to take off when things got a little dicey. Maria Hernandez had taught her that.

“So we know who I am. Who are you?” She managed to not shake as she asked the question, meeting his somewhat intimidating gaze.

“Jake Martin.”

“Of Martin's Crossing.” The town in the middle of nowhere that she'd driven through to get here.

“Yes, Martin's Crossing.”

“The girls?” She glanced back over her shoulder and saw that he was moving toward her.

“They're safe.” He stepped close, smelling of the outdoors, fresh country air and soap. “I got a call from Brock, the attorney in Austin. He said he told you to come here and talk to me.”

“Yes, he told me about Lawton and asked me to find you.” She shook her head. “I missed the funeral, I'm sorry.”

She didn't give him explanations.

She guessed the Goliath standing in front of her wouldn't want to hear explanations. He wouldn't want to know how much it hurt to know that all these years she'd had another brother. And now he was gone.

“Right.” He looked away, but not before she saw the sorrow flash across his face, settling in his eyes. She started to reach out but knew she shouldn't. Her hand remained at her side.

Maybe they were feeling the same sense of loss but he didn't seem to be a man who wanted comfort from a stranger. From her.

“So, you came for your inheritance?” He dropped the words, sharp and insulting.

“Is that why you think I'm here?”

“It would make sense.”

She shook her head. “No, it doesn't. It's insulting.”

He shrugged one powerful shoulder. “Your brother was my best friend. His daughters are my nieces. I have every right to keep them safe.”

“I'm not here for any reason other than to see them.” She turned and walked back to the kitchen.

“Running?” He followed her, light on his feet for a man so large.

“Not at all. I need a minute to cool off so I don't hit you with something.”

At that, the smooth planes of his face shifted and he smiled. She was slammed with a myriad of other emotions that seemed more dangerous than her rage. At the sink she filled a glass with water and took a sip. He scooted a chair out from the island in the middle of the big room and bent his large form to fit the seat. She ignored the lethal way he sat, like a wild cat about to attack. She ignored that he had beautiful features, strong but beautiful. She could draw him, or chisel his likeness in stone.

Or grab a chunk of granite and...

His eyebrows lifted, as if he guessed where her thoughts had gone.

“I'm not here to take what I can and leave.” She remained standing on the opposite side of the island, not wanting to be anywhere near him. She needed that force of wood and stone between them.

“Really.” His voice was smooth but deep, and full of skepticism.

“Yes, really. I had a father and a brother that I never got to meet. I wanted to come here because this is where Lawton lived. I thought I might somehow...” She shook her head. “Never mind. He's gone. I want to meet his daughters. Please, just let me meet them.”

* * *

Jake stood, rethinking what he'd come to tell her. Rethinking her. She stood on the other side of the counter, as if the granite could protect her. As he eased out of the chair, she moved a little to the right, her back against the counter. Brown eyes the unfortunate color of caramel watched him.

Unfortunate because her eyes were strangely compelling. And more, there were emotions that flickered in their depths—sadness, anger, loss. He hadn't expected to feel anything for her other than distrust.

“I'm going to get a glass of water, nothing else,” he said.

He opened the cabinet and found a glass, filling it with cold water from the fridge. He took a drink and studied the sister of his best friend, looking for similarities. She had long straight dark blond hair that framed a face that he'd call beautiful but strong. She was tall and slim but not thin. The peasant skirt and blouse gave her a bohemian look. She would stand out in Martin's Crossing. If she stayed. He doubted she would. She had city written all over her.

Yes, she looked enough like Lawton for him to believe she was his sister. Lawton had obviously believed it. Even before the DNA test.

“Well?” she asked.

“You remind me of your brother.”

“I hope that's a compliment.”

“It's an observation.” He watched her, still unsure. He'd been unsure from the beginning when Lawton first told him about her. “I need to head back to my place. You can meet me over there.”

Jake poured out the remaining water and put the glass in the dishwasher. She had moved away from him again. He didn't comment, just walked past her and headed for the front door, grabbing his hat off the hook on his way out. She followed.

He had more on his mind than a sister who suddenly showed up when it looked as if the gravy train might have derailed in her front yard. Back at his place he had a mare about to foal. He'd lost a good cow that morning and now had a calf to tend to. He had fifty head of cattle heading to the sale tomorrow and a brother who couldn't get his act together.

They both stopped on the porch. The temperature, typical of late November, had dropped fifteen degrees while they'd been inside. Clouds were rolling, gray and full of rain.

“How far?” She looked past him to the open land and seemed unsure. Then she focused her attention on the horse he'd tied to the post.

“Not far.” He untied his horse, tightening the girth strap and watching her over the top of the saddle. “Since I'm riding, you'll need to go back down the drive, turn left and in a mile take a left at the entrance to the Circle M.”

“How long before you get there?”

“It'll take me a little longer but I'm cutting through the field, so not much.” They stood there staring at each other and he noticed the softness in her brown eyes. The last thing he wanted was to give in to the softness. Lawton had immediately trusted her. That wasn't Jake's way. He had to be the one to draw lines and make sure no one got hurt. But he wasn't an ogre. “I'm sorry.”

She gave a quick nod her eyes registering surprise. “Thank you.”

“He was a good man.” More words of kindness. His brother Duke would have been proud. He'd told Jake to be nice to their new sister. He'd almost laughed at that. She was
not
their new sister.

Jake didn't need one more person to watch out for. His plate was full of siblings that couldn't seem to stay out of trouble.

With a goodbye nod, he put a foot in the stirrup and swung himself into the saddle. She shot him a wary look and headed for her car.

He watched her go, holding the gray gelding steady as the horse tossed his head, eager to be on his way. The car was down the drive when he turned the horse and headed for home. The rain had blown over but the air was damp and cool. It felt good, to let Bud loose. The horse was itching to run. So was Jake. But he knew he couldn't outrun the problem that was driving to his place in a compact car with Oklahoma tags.

Fifteen minutes later, with his horse unsaddled and back in the pasture, he headed for the house. Breezy was standing on the front porch of the stone-and-log home he'd been living in alone for more years than he cared to count. He'd be thirty-four soon. He guessed that made him a crusty bachelor.

“Pretty place,” Breezy said when he reached the front porch of the house.

“Thank you.”

He nodded toward the door. Time to get it over with. He figured she'd be here another ten minutes, and then she'd be gone and he wouldn't have to worry about her. He'd hand her a check and they'd go their separate ways.

Today he'd said a few prayers on the matter and maybe it was wrong, but he'd prayed she'd take the out. Of course he knew God didn't exactly answer prayers based on Jake Martin's wants. But he'd sure be grateful if the good Lord made this easy on him.

“Let's go inside.” He led her across the porch with the bentwood furniture. Ceiling fans hung from the porch ceiling and in the summer they made evenings almost bearable. Not that he spent a lot of time sitting out there.

“Do you live here alone?” she asked, turning a bright shade of pink. “I mean, do you have family here? In Martin's Crossing?”

“This is my home and I do have family in Martin's Crossing.” He didn't plan on giving her the family history.

What would he tell her? That he and his twin sister had helped raise their younger siblings after their mom had left town, left their dad and them? This ranch had been in their family for over one hundred years and keeping it going had put his dad in an early grave. Now he'd lost his sister, and he was determined to find a way to keep the family together, keep them strong, without her.

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