Read Gillian: Bride of Maine (American Mail-Order Bride 23) Online
Authors: Kirsten Lynn
Tags: #Military, #Historical, #Romance, #Fiction, #Forever Love, #Victorian Era, #Western, #Fifth In Series, #Saga, #Fifty-Books, #Forty-Five Authors, #Newspaper Ad, #Short Story, #American Mail-Order Bride, #Bachelor, #Single Woman, #Marriage Of Convenience, #Christian, #Religious, #Faith, #Inspirational, #Factory Burned, #Pioneer, #Maine, #Father, #Evil Plans, #Lighthouse Keeper, #No Letters, #No Ad, #Misunderstanding, #Bass Harbor Head, #Helpmate, #Christmas, #Holiday, #Christmas Time, #Winter, #Weather, #Festive Season, #Mistletoe
“My goodness child, you are frozen solid. Why didn’t that silly man have you belowdecks? Rhys is usually better about things like this.”
“He tried,” Gillian defended. “But I’m afraid I suffered a bit of malaise and was forced to the main deck.”
Ida patted Gillian’s hand. “Oh, poor lamb. What a big day this has been for you. Well, let Ida get you set to rights, and then we can get on with the festivities.”
Gillian could only nod as the whirlwind known as Ida gathered a dress and underthings from armoires and bureaus, and shoved them in her arms. “There you go. They’re my daughter’s, but with the baby on the way, she can’t wear ’em. They should fit, and they’re warm. Would you like a hot bath before you dress?”
Gillian self-consciously slipped the wool cap from her head. “Oh, no, thank you. You’re very kind, but I think we should be getting on with…things.”
“Yes, indeed! Get dressed by the fire, dearie; no one will bother you here. I can’t tell you how excited we all are. The whole town has been abuzz since the first letter.”
The older woman pressed her lips tight together as though she’d said something she shouldn’t. Gillian thought maybe Ida wasn’t sure how she would feel about Rhys sharing her letters with his friends. She wasn’t sure how she felt about that, either.
“Thank you, missus…” Gillian realized she didn’t know the woman’s surname.
“Mrs. Seiders, but please call me Ida; everyone does, even when my Henry was alive. I was never Mrs. Seiders. Always just Ida.”
Ida was still carrying on a conversation with herself as she left Gillian by the fire to change her clothes. In town less than ten minutes and it seemed she’d found one friend.
Gillian stripped from the dress she’d purchased specifically for her day and almost cried. What a waste of funds for a bit a frippery that hadn’t proved practical in the least. She made short work of removing her cold, wet undergarments and getting into those Ida supplied, then stepped into the plain, red wool dress.
She turned and caught her reflection in a full-length looking glass. She’d wanted to look pretty for her new husband; instead, she looked as she did every day when she and the other women went to the factory. The face in the mirror frowned back at her, and she shook her head, chastising herself for being vain and ungrateful. She was warm, and the clothes offered were clean and well-kempt. The red wool dress was actually becoming. Gillian preferred the straight sleeves to the big puffs at the shoulder. It tapered at the waist before flowing in an A-line to the tops of her boots. It fit her much better than the lacy, frilly mess that lay on the floor. She would not become her father who thought silks and fine cloth made you a better person even when your soul was dark and your heart had been blackened with greed and lust.
The vision of her father’s face contorted with anger and shock that she would disobey him swam before her eyes. He’d found a pretty, young bride, and neither wanted Gillian’s interference in their lives. Drawing on the strength she’d admired in her mother, Gillian refused to marry her father’s friend, a man older than he was, and walked away from that life, leaving everything including her father’s name. She’d taken her mother’s maiden name and made a new life in Massachusetts, until another greedy, selfish man decided his needs were greater than others.
Smoothing the front of the simple dress, Gillian smiled. It was perfect for a Christmas wedding. Her smile grew when she remembered Rhys would be sporting red as well, only it would be in his beard.
She gave a self-deprecating laugh at the sight of her hair going in every direction. She wouldn’t indulge in vanity about the dress she wore, but she most definitely would straighten the rat’s nest the wool cap had made of her chignon. A ginger-haired lighthouse keeper would be the next man in her life. May he prove to be always as generous and good-hearted as he’d been this night. If so, there was nothing he could ask of her that would be too much.
‡
R
hys couldn’t put
his finger on what he wasn’t being told, but he was being kept in the dark about something for sure. Everyone was as friendly and jovial as they usually were at Ida’s Christmas Eve dinners, but no one quite met his gaze, and there was a bit of shifting from one foot to the other. Father McDonald kept glancing his way as if he wanted to speak, but couldn’t work up the lung power to get the words out. Even young Charlie, who was never at a loss for words and had been full of questions the last two months, seemed to shovel in a bite of something every time Rhys came near. Rhys rested one elbow on top of the mantle and sipped the hot cider. He scanned the room from the table covered in treats to the portion of the wood floor left open for dancing. Something didn’t smell right, and the balsam pine wasn’t covering the scent of deception.
“There she is.” Father McDonald opened his arms once again to Gillian. Rhys pushed the drink of hot cider past the lump in his throat at the sight of her. The wool dress was nothing special, but on her, it might as well have been silks from Paris. With her dramatic coloring, the red set off her almost-black eyes, and her cheeks now glowed a soft pink as her color returned.
She smiled at the priest but lifted her gaze to meet Rhys’, and her smile grew until, like a sailor to a mermaid’s song, he was drawn to her side. “I see Ida managed to get you warm.”
“Yes, thank you. I’m ready now, if you are.”
Rhys lifted an eyebrow in question. “Ready for what?”
Her eyebrow mirrored his. “Why, to get married.”
Rhys laughed. Nothing was funny about her words, but the thought of him ever marrying again was so ludicrous, laughter was the only response that made sense. That was until he saw those dark eyes fill with unshed tears, which then escaped and cascaded down her cheeks.
“I’m so sorry I’m not what you wanted.”
She turned to flee, but Rhys caught her arm and brought her back into his space. “Any man would want you, Gillian, who had a mind to marry. I don’t have a mind to visit the altar.”
She jerked her arm away. “Then why did you place an advertisement for a wife? Why did you write me such beautiful letters? Was I a joke? Something to amuse you?”
He swore a blistering oath. “Letters? An advertisement?”
“Children, follow me.” Father McDonald walked past them, and they fell into step as though they’d been caught doing something they shouldn’t. Rhys didn’t miss the guilty looks on the faces of the villagers they passed, and his heart sank with each step.
Once they entered a back room used for food preparation, the priest let his gaze rest on Gillian and then on Rhys as if giving each a silent blessing. “I’m afraid we did something out of love for you, Rhys, but let it simmer too long without your knowledge. And Gillian, you dear, were brought here by the village, not Rhys, though we hope you’ll be his wife this night.”
“What the—”
Father McDonald raised a hand to cut off Rhys before he could curse. “You’ve been lonely for years now, Rhys, and afraid to open your heart again. We all love you and only wanted to see you happy as you were before. So I took an advertisement out in the
Grooms’ Gazette
in your name. I provided the highest of recommendations to meet the paper’s, and the matchmaker, Miss Miller’s, high standards.” The priest nodded to Gillian. “Miss Darrow answered, and through her letters, she entered our hearts, as well. When I asked you to retrieve a young woman I thought of as family, it wasn’t a lie. At least not a complete lie.”
Rhys noticed the priest mumbled the last line and crossed himself. He ground his teeth and held back the line of profanity burning his tongue.
“So
you
wrote to me?” Gillian swayed, and Rhys rested a hand on her back to keep her steady.
The priest nodded. “Yes. Young Charlie would pepper Rhys with questions after we received your letters. Then we would meet in the church and compose a letter in reply we hoped was truthful as possible using his answers.”
“So that’s why Charlie was suddenly so interested in everything I was doing and my feelings on marriage.”
“I’m afraid so, Rhys.”
Father McDonald reached into his jacket and pulled out a bundle of letters. “These are Gillian’s letters to you. I hope you’ll read them, son.”
Rhys took the bundle and gave a sharp nod. He wanted to rail against the priest and people of the Bass Harbor, but he couldn’t. His gaze fell to Gillian, her face upturned to meet his in an honest and open fashion.
“So, we won’t be married tonight?”
Rhys’ fisted his hand and let it drop from her back. “No. I’m sorry, Gillian, but I have no intention of marrying again.” It felt strange using her given name, but it also felt very comfortable and right.
Her shoulders dropped in defeat as hope died in her dark gaze. “I understand. This is the chance I took.” She rested her palm on his cheek. “I am sorry though. You seem like a good man. I so wanted a good man.”
With that, she turned and walked from the room. Rhys turned his ire on Father McDonald. “How could you do that to her? She’s a fine lady; anyone can see it, and you’ve all lied to her and brought her here under false pretenses.”
“They weren’t false, Rhys. Moreover, I think your heart is already telling you that truth. I still believe you should marry her and marry her this night.”
“How can you ask that of me when you know everything about Miriam? You helped secure the annulment by the Church, for Pete’s sake.” How the priest could dismiss those dark months of petitioning the church for an annulment on the grounds of adultery, Rhys couldn’t fathom. It hadn’t taken long for Rhys to realize Miriam wasn’t cut out to be his wife, and his infatuation with her died before the end of their first year, but her betrayal cut him to the core. “Do you think I’ll take another woman to the seclusion of the lighthouse, so she can grow to hate me and then leave me for a rich man? No, Father, the shame of one divorce is enough to last me my whole life.”
A strong hand landed on Rhys’ shoulder and squeezed. “When I received Gillian’s first letter, I read in her words the longing for peace and, yes, even seclusion. I also recognized a loving and faithful heart. Do you think we chose the first woman who wrote? We prayed and dissected every word for anything that might lead us to believe she would deceive you. I found nothing. Would you leave her single, penniless, and alone here in Bass Harbor, or send her back to an unknown, and I’m sure, equally harsh fate in Massachusetts? Or would you send her away to find another young man who might be cruel to her and shatter the soft heart we’ve both seen?”
“You’re blackmailing me, priest, turning this on me. You’re the one who brought her here; you can care for her.”
Father McDonald’s eyes gleamed as his head bobbed in a slow nod. “True. We might be able to find her another husband among the young men here.”
Rhys felt the heat of jealousy and rage pump enough blood into his brain that he thought his head might explode. “I don’t know if I can ever forgive you for this, priest. Bring her to the church, and let’s see it done. Blast you for this, Father, and blast you and the village. I’m sure Gillian will be cursing you all as well after days with me.”
He stomped out the door without a backward glance. The church stood lit and he let loose a booming curse at their plans as he almost yanked the door off its hinges. He stood at the altar not glancing at the crucifix or anything that might cool his temper. He couldn’t say why the threat of Gillian finding another man here was his breaking point, but the thought of coming to the village and watching her with a husband, or worse, her belly round with another man’s child, made him see red.
As though conjured by his thoughts, Gillian stepped through the doors and made her way to him. No one followed her inside. She tilted her head to one side, and her mouth curved in a smile. “You don’t have to do this, Rhys. Whatever Father McDonald said, I don’t want you to marry me out of an obligation that was never yours.”
Before he could think his actions through, Rhys, pulled her to him and captured her mouth with his. He coaxed her lips apart and deepened the kiss, keeping her anchored to him with one arm around her waist. She moaned as he taught her how to kiss him back. When she pressed closer, Rhys broke the kiss but kept her secured to him.
“Will you marry me, Gillian Darrow? Will you stay true until death parts us?”
Her eyes were wide and bright, and her face red from where his beard marked her. It was the most foolish thing he’d ever done, but he couldn’t have kept the words in if he’d tried.
“Yes.”
On her acceptance, the villagers, who he now realized had witnessed it all, came inside and took their seats. They must have followed Gillian to the church, because no one had been brave enough to trail him. Each sparkle in their eyes and the attempts to hide their smiles set his jaw. He wondered if he’d have a tooth left at the end of the evening. Rhys separated from Gillian, but took her hand in his as Father McDonald took his place before them. They knelt as one. Her hand turned cold at one point during the ceremony, and Rhys gave it a squeeze. She squeezed his hand back and her mouth turned up in a small smile.