Authors: Ruth Ann Nordin
doubtful, she muttered, “Blowhard,” and headed for the
steps, figuring it best to leave the conversation on that note.
It was just as wel Joel didn’t have a treat in the kitchen.
Now she could tel Sep about the latest developments.
Chapter Nine
Joel couldn’t shake the uneasy feeling in the pit of his
stomach that something bad was about to happen. The
problem was, he didn’t know what it was or when it would
happen. April and Sep were even quieter than usual during
lunch, and he didn’t think they could get any more quiet than
they already were. If it weren’t for Nora, the entire house
would have been stuck in a strained silence.
Since he’d taken care of Sep’s room, he thought he’d
check out April’s room but didn’t dare without her
permission. So after lunch, he waited until she cleaned up
the kitchen before he approached her. “Do you have
anything that needs fixing in your room?”
“No, the wal s and windows are fine,” she replied from
where she sat in the rocker with Nora settled on her lap.
“What about the furniture?”
Blinking, she directed her attention to him. “Furniture?”
“I can fix more than wal s and windows. I figure before I
leave, I’d get you and your brother’s things in good shape.
Then I’l see the deputy about taking care of that brother-in-
law of yours.”
“Oh, I don’t know.”
“Oh, I don’t know.”
“Don’t know what? Whether you got furniture that needs
fixing or about the deputy?”
“The deputy. I don’t suppose this is someone who’d be
wil ing to marry me?”
For some reason, the notion that she’d marry anyone—not
just him—bothered him, but he shoved the concern aside.
What did it matter to him? He wasn’t marrying her anyway.
“The deputy is married to my sister.”
She frowned in disappointment.
Resisting the urge to rol his eyes, he added, “I meant that I
can get you some help.”
“You wil get me some help. That help wil be a husband.”
“So I keep hearing, but up until now, you’ve been pretty
insistent that it’s going to be me.”
“That’s because you’re the only one here.” She looked at
him then, and there was no denying the chal enge in her
eyes. “You’ve made it perfectly clear how you feel about the
arrangement, and I agree with you. It’s not ideal. But when
you’re backed into a corner, you take what you can get. If
you know of another man I can marry, preferably one who is
more agreeable, then I’l be happy to swap you two.”
His jaw dropped. “One who is more agreeable?”
“Yes. One who doesn’t feel the need to make clever little
retorts about how my scheming ways won’t win him over.
Not that I’m trying to win you over, mind you. As far as I’m
concerned, you’re like my brother, except I actual y like
him.”
He stared at her for a long moment, unable to believe she
—someone who needed his help in the worst possible way
—would have the nerve to talk to him like this. Then he
recal ed what he said upstairs when she offered him some
cookies and chuckled in disbelief. “Is this because I
wouldn’t eat cookies earlier today?”
“What? Oh, good heavens, no. It has nothing to do with
cookies. It has to do with the games you’re playing.”
“Games?”
“Yes. Games. You keep saying you want to get out of here,
but when you get the chance, you don’t. Then you spend the
day grumbling about how miserable it is to be here while
you go around the place fixing everything you can find that
needs repairing.”
He crossed his arms and narrowed his eyes at her. “Wel ,
it’s nice to know my hard work has been appreciated
around here.”
“I do appreciate you fixing things. Sep can only do so much.
He’s got his hands ful around here. But I can only take so
much bel yaching from a grown man before I start to wish
Doctor Adams had someone helping him who was a little
more accepting of marriage.”
“Wel , isn’t that a fine how-d’ye-do! I get forced out here with
a kid who keeps pointing a gun in my direction if he so
much as thinks I’m heading out of here. Even now!” Rushing
to the window, he pul ed aside the curtain and saw Sep
pacing up and down the porch with a rifle in his hand. “Even
now, your irrational brother is out there making sure I can’t
leave. I might be older than him, but I can’t outrun a bul et
and I’ve seen him hit a moving target with that coyote
yesterday. I’m not here because I want to be. I’m here
because I have no choice.”
She let out a slight chuckle and shook her head.
“I don’t care what you believe. It’s the truth.” Deciding he’d
had enough of this conversation, he stormed up the stairs,
muttering, “This is the thanks I get for helping people.
Unbelievable.”
No wonder he thought it was smart to avoid marriage
completely during the whole fiasco when his sister Jenny
married the wrong man. Sure, it turned out wel for them in
the end, but what a bunch of grief it caused in the
meantime. The whole family went into an uproar when they
thought their new brother-in-law was a wanted man. Then,
as if Jenny’s fiasco wasn’t bad enough, there was his
brother Tom who ended up with a fril y pink buggy after he
got married to Jessica, and now his life was run by al
things feminine. He had four children, and every last one of
them were girls. What were the chances? And now Tom
talked about his feelings from time to time. Joel shook his
head as he reached the top of the stairs. Why would he
want to end up tearing up because his daughter said she
loved him?
Then there was Sal y, his other sister, who pretty much
schemed and lied to Rick to get him to marry her. Why Rick
didn’t catch onto what she was doing, Joel never
understood. And his brother Dave had to go across state
lines when his wife was abducted. Who needed that
headache? It just seemed to Joel, with the exception of his
brother Richard’s wife, women brought too many problems
or made men weak. That was something he didn’t need.
Nope. He was happy being a bachelor. Life was less
messy that way, and if nothing else, the situation he was
now stuck in proved it. He’d have to be insane to want to
stick around here for the rest of his life.
Satisfied at the reminder of why he decided to avoid
marriage two years ago, he glanced at his surroundings
and tried to decide what he might do to pass the time until
enough snow melted so he could slip on out of this prison.
His gaze went to the third bedroom. No one ever went in it.
It was always locked. He knew that because he checked on
it from time to time, just to see if anyone did anything with it.
And sure enough, they didn’t. What was in there? Grunting,
he shook his head. What did he care? The third bedroom
only meant this family wasn’t right in the head. No one
locked up a room in their house.
He turned to April’s bedroom and figured he might as wel
go in there and see if there was anything he could fix. If he
didn’t, he’d end up resting on the flimsy second bed in
Sep’s room, and if there was one thing he hated, it was
doing nothing. Granted, he pretended to be lazy while he
was growing up, but that was for a good cause. There was
no reason for him to go into farming so why waste time
doing any more chores than he had to? And that was
another excel ent reason why he shouldn’t marry April. This
house was on a farm, and if he married her, he’d be
expected to farm. Grimacing, he pushed that notion far from
his mind and examined her room.
After a casual inspection of the place, he started
hammering in the side of the loose headboard of April’s
bed when April entered the room with a sleepy Nora. “I
don’t need you to do anything in here.”
Biting his tongue, he finished hammering in the last nail. He
glanced at April who set Nora into the crib and bundled her
up with a blanket. Nora let out a soft, contented sigh and
shut her eyes. April smiled at her and gently rubbed her
back before she added more coal to the box stove. He
hated to admit it, but he did enjoy watching women take
care of their children. There was a certain tenderness in
their actions that reminded him of his childhood when his
mother took care of him.
From downstairs, the front door opened and Sep cal ed out
to April. April jerked and turned her startled gaze in Joel’s
direction. Furrowing his eyebrows, Joel strode toward the
door. Something was going on, and by the anxious look on
her face, he gathered it wasn’t something good.
Before he made it to the door, she blocked his exit. “Wait. I
need to tel you something.”
Sep cal ed out, “They’re here, April!”
“Who’s here?” Joel asked her.
“Look, I know this isn’t something you want, but Lou’s a bad
man and I can’t have him coming back here to hurt us.”
“Lou?” Was that the name of the man whose bloody
handprint was on the railing outside? “Is Lou down there?”
“No.”
He made a move to get by her, but she put her hands on his
chest. Surprised, he stopped. She wasn’t strong enough to
detain him, of course, but he hadn’t expected her to touch
him. “Wel , who’s down there?”
“Come on down, Joel,” Tom yel ed. “Rick came al the way
in from the courthouse to oversee this blessed event.”
Glaring at April, Joel pushed her aside and ran down the
stairs where his brother Tom was standing next to their
brother-in-law who held a book with a piece of paper
sticking partly out of it. Sep stood at the closed door with
his rifle in hand, ready to use it if he had to. Tom had an
annoyingly huge smile on his face. Rick, at least, had the
sense to look serious.
“What are you doing?” Joel demanded as he headed for
Tom.
“Making things easier for you,” Tom replied, stil grinning
like a fool. “Why go through the trouble of finding a preacher
when Rick here can perform the ceremony? There’s no
need to thank me.”
“Thank you?” Joel shouted. “You want me to thank you?”
Tom shrugged. “Once is enough.”
“I don’t believe this!” Joel turned to Rick. “My idiot brother I
understand. Ma dropped him on his head when he was
young.”
“Hey!” Tom protested. “That’s not true. I was only one and
lost my balance while climbing out of Ma’s lap. Besides,
she caught me before anything got hurt.”
“Fine. Maybe if you bumped your head, you would’ve gotten
some common sense in there.” Joel poked Tom’s forehead
before he looked at Rick. “You’re here to get me out of this
house, right? I mean, you can see that the foolish kid over
there keeps pointing that gun at me. He’s been shoving that
thing in my face ever since I got here Tuesday morning to
check on Nora.”
With a sympathetic expression on his face, Rick shook his
head. “I’m sorry, Joel. I can’t do it.”
“What? Why?” Joel glanced over his shoulder as April
stepped into the parlor, her face pale while her eyes darted
from one person to another. Eyes wide, he turned back to
Rick and put his hands up in the air. “It’s not what it looks
like. I was upstairs fixing her headboard. She set Nora in
the crib to take a nap. I wasn’t doing anything up there that I
shouldn’t.”
“I believe you, Joel,” Rick said.
Relieved, Joel put his hands back down at his sides.
“Good. Then there isn’t a problem.”
Wincing, Rick shook his head again. “It’s not as simple as
that. This is the Edwards residence.”
“So?”
“So Harvey Edwards kil ed a man right before he got what
was coming to him. There’s suspicion that his brother was
an accomplice to the murder.”
April rushed forward and shoved Joel aside so she could
stand in front of Rick. “I never heard this.”
“There’s nothing we can do to Harvey now that he’s dead.
“There’s nothing we can do to Harvey now that he’s dead.
The man he kil ed was a wealthy merchant. Lou got away,
but Harvey was shot in a saloon not too long after the
murder. The sheriff is on the lookout for Lou, but no one’s
seen him.”
Tom snapped his suspenders and grinned. “I thought I
recognized the name Lou from somewhere. Owen was
talking about him the other day. I just couldn’t remember the
last name or what he’s suspected of doing.”