Sweet Forever (7 page)

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Authors: Ramona K. Cecil

Tags: #Romance, #Christian, #Fiction

BOOK: Sweet Forever
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“Oh, thank you, Jacob.” Sophie bounced like a giddy child. She glanced across the room where her aunt and uncle stood conversing with another couple. “Now, while Uncle Roscoe’s attention is diverted, I must catch up with Edith and her brother, Edwin.” Sophie murmured a quick good-bye, and with a rustling of her taffeta skirts, went to join a young lady with strawberry blond curls, standing beside a tall young man of the same coloring.

“She’s a very sweet girl.” Rosaleen meant every word as she followed Jacob’s gaze across the room.

“Yes. Yes, she is.” His soft voice held a thoughtful tone. As he turned his full attention to Rosaleen, his tone and countenance brightened. “I want to commend you on the wonderful job you did today. I’m sure my heart was not the only one touched by your playing.” His mouth quirked in a mischievous grin. “Sophie was right. It is a ministry, you know.”

Rosaleen stiffened. “I play the piano, that’s all.” Suggesting that someone God refused to recognize could perform any kind of ministry seemed beyond absurd. She wouldn’t be forced to be something she wasn’t—not ever again.

“Rosaleen”—her heart pranced when he gazed into her eyes and took her hands in his—“I know this was not the first sermon you’ve heard me preach. For the last couple of weeks, I’ve noticed you in the hallway outside the parlor door during worship services. You’re searching for something, and you don’t know what it is. But I do.”

Reveling in the touch of his hands on hers, Rosaleen made no comment, unable to speak over the knot in her throat. She wished he’d never let go.

When his fingers slipped away, she felt bereft. She watched him walk to the mahogany desk near the parlor window and retrieve a small brown paper package.

“Please take this. It is in appreciation of your agreeing to play for services.” He pressed the package into her hands, and his gaze melted into hers. “Please promise me you’ll read it. If you have any questions, any at all, please ask me and I’ll endeavor to help answer them.”

Rosaleen managed a smile and a nod.

That night she sat cross-legged on her straw mattress, the Bible Jacob had given her in her lap. In the flickering light of the lantern hanging from the wall sconce, she read the words of Jesus. Her eyes misted as she read from Matthew 11:28–29: “Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.”

Could Jesus give her peace? Could he accept a soul that had been a mistake?

All afternoon her heart had warred. Jacob had spent the day at the Stinnetts’, visiting Sophie. Rosaleen knew she should be happy for him if he were to renew his relationship with the sweet Sophie. He deserved a pure, unblemished wife.

Tears seeped through her lashes as she shut her eyes tight against the awful scenes flashing behind them: Bill McGurty’s whiskey-laced breath hot on her face. Her useless struggles. Then there were the others—those Bill had sent to her in order to curry their favor. And those times he had forced her to steal what he hadn’t taken from them at the gambling table.

Shame that no amount of tears could extinguish burned her face and twisted through her like a hot poker. Her heart crumbled beneath the weight of the disgusting memories, and she gave way to sobs.

Why had she ever allowed the thought to flit across her mind that Jacob Hale might ever care for her? She felt like a dirty rag beside Sophie Schuler’s spotless purity.

Collapsing to the straw mattress, she pressed the Bible against her broken heart.

Oh Jesus, help me.

Nine

The surprising aroma of baking bread met Rosaleen as she descended the stairs. Her curiosity growing, she glanced at the transom window above the front door. The first faint rays of dawn stained the glass pink. This was Tuesday. They always baked on Wednesday, but even then, they never began this early.

Since her arrival at the boardinghouse, one of Rosaleen’s jobs had been to start the cookstove each morning. Confused, she quickened her steps, worried that Mrs. Buchanan might consider her negligent in her duties.

Just outside the kitchen door, she stopped short, her bewilderment compounding when she saw Patsey Chapman, who never came before seven in the morning.

“Patsey, what are you doing here so early?” Rosaleen snatched her apron off the peg behind the door, deciding Opal must have forgotten to mention to her they’d be baking early this morning.

At Rosaleen’s exclamation, Patsey turned from the open oven door and pressed her finger to her lips. “Shh. Don’t want to wake up the whole house yet.”

Rosaleen lowered her voice to just above a whisper. “Why are we making bread on Tuesday, and so early? Opal never said anything to me about it.”

Hampered by her expanded middle, Patsey groaned as she bent over and pulled another loaf of freshly baked bread from the oven. “Gonna have more mouths to feed in a day or two—lots more.”

Still confused, Rosaleen shook her head. “Mrs. Buchanan never mentioned anything about more boarders.”

Patsey lowered her voice, her bright eyes darting about as if concerned that someone else might be listening. “Not for here. For Georgetown.” She shoved another loaf of bread dough into the oven. “Andrew jis got word yesterday. There’s a train a-comin’.”

“Runaways?” Rosaleen blurted, forgetting to whisper.

“Shh!” Patsey’s brow furrowed, and she shot a nervous glance through the kitchen window into the half-lit, dewy garden. Even the mention of the word aloud infused her face with fear. She supplied further information in a quick, staccato whisper. “Andrew got word. Don’t know when. Jis got to be ready.”

“Good morning, Patsey. Rosaleen.” Smiling, Opal walked into the kitchen tying on her apron. Her demeanor gave no indication that she found anything at all odd about baking bread at the crack of dawn on a Tuesday. She dipped water from the bucket by the door into the teakettle and set it on top of the stove.

“Patsey, you know that big ham hanging near the door of the smokehouse?” At Patsey’s nod, Opal continued in a conversational tone. “Well, I’m afraid it might go bad in this heat, so if you know people who could use it, have Andrew take it to your place this evening, would you?”

“Yes’m.”

Rosaleen listened to Patsey’s muted reply and scooped flour into a large crockery bowl from a muslin sack. Suddenly, she realized Opal, too, knew about the expected arrival of the runaways. Feeling a kinship with those running from oppression, Rosaleen turned to Mrs. Buchanan. “Is there anything I can do to help, Opal?”

Opal pinned her with a knowing stare, but her tone remained light and unconcerned. “Why, of course, Rosaleen. This is a boardinghouse,” she said with a little chuckle. “There’s always something to do.”

Nodding, Rosaleen understood. She must make no mention of the Underground Railroad.

Opal turned her attention to cutting thick slices of bacon that she then laid in the sizzling-hot cast-iron frying pan. “Reverend Hale left before dawn to work on that church building again. That man’s gonna keel over if he keeps workin’ hours on end without eatin’. Rosaleen, I’d like for you to take him this bacon with some of Patsey’s good bread and a little jug of milk.”

Rosaleen jerked her head up from the bread dough she’d begun kneading at the kitchen table. Her mind raced with her heart. Feeling sure he’d renewed his relationship with Sophie Schuler, Rosaleen had vowed to spend as little time in Jacob’s presence as possible. “But shouldn’t I help Patsey—”

“Patsey has things well in hand, and any assistance she might need, I can give her.” Opal packed the bacon, bread, and jug of milk into a linen-lined basket.

A few minutes later, Rosaleen headed out the back door toward Main-Cross Street. She slowed her steps when she reached Broadway. The morning sun shining through the trees dappled the street with gold. Its warmth on her shoulders did nothing to brighten her heart. Perhaps she could simply hand him the basket and leave.

I’ll tell him I have work to do at the boardinghouse, I’ll say

Her musings broke off as she neared the building site. The mule team hitched to a wagon of lumber stood tied and unattended, but she heard no ringing of a hammer or
whoosh
of a saw. Fear grabbed at her heart. Had he been hurt? Was he lying somewhere injured or. . . “Jacob! Jacob, where are you?”

“Rosaleen?”

A relieved sigh puffed from Rosaleen’s lips when Jacob’s blond head popped up from the far side of the building.

“Mmm, breakfast.” Smiling, he hurried to her side and took the basket from her hand. He lifted the cloth, releasing the delicious smells of fresh-baked bread and fried bacon. Rosaleen’s heart bucked when he set the basket on the ground and took her hand in his.

“I was hoping you’d come this morning.” He gave her a mischievous grin. “I can always depend on Mrs. Buchanan’s insistence that I eat breakfast.”

Happiness bubbled up inside Rosaleen at knowing he’d expected her, had been waiting for her.

“Come, I want to show you something.”

They rounded the church, now framed by skeletal walls of vertical two-by-fours. “There will be stone steps later,” he said, helping her up the makeshift wooden steps into what would be the sanctuary.

She grasped his hand and her heart ached at his nearness.
If only—if only. . .

Never in her life had she wanted to feel a man’s arms around her more than at this moment.

“Here.” Oblivious to her thoughts, he towed her to a sunny spot near the front of the church. Stepping behind her, he gently grasped her shoulders and turned her toward an opening in the wall at the east side of the sanctuary. “This is the spot where we’ll put the piano—here by the window, where the morning sun will shine through.”

The angle presented a nearly uncluttered view of the Ohio River, shimmering in the morning sunlight.

“This is what I want you to see each Sunday morning.” His soft breath caressed her face as he bent his head over her shoulder.

Though she found the scene beautiful, it was the nearness of his face that took her breath away.

How easy it would be to lean my head against his neck, to turn my face ever so slightly. . . No! I mustn’t do this, I mustn’t!

Pulling away from his grasp, she turned and stepped backward. When her left foot found only air, she gasped, her right foot teetering on the edge of the floor.

Fear constricted her chest when she glanced down at a pile of bricks below. Suddenly, she felt Jacob’s arms around her, pulling her back into the building and hard against him.

Wrapped in his strong arms, she surrendered to temptation, pressing her head against his chest. Her heart hammering, she clung to him. This was what she’d wanted. The moment she’d dreamed of for so long—to melt in the embrace of her angel’s arms.

“Rosaleen,” he murmured, sounding as breathless as she felt. The stubble of his unshaven chin prickled against her cheek as he nudged her face back. For a moment, their gaze held. Then, as his eyes closed and his face lowered, their lips met.

Feeling as limp as a rag doll, Rosaleen luxuriated in the kiss, glad that Jacob’s strong arms supported her, holding her tight.

The sudden realization of what was happening jolted her from the beautiful trance. She pushed away from him, tears of regret stinging her eyes.

Rosaleen felt wretched. How could she do this to Sophie? Sweet, naive little Sophie. Jacob deserved better. He deserved someone like Sophie. “We—we mustn’t.” Filled with panic and disgust, she stumbled away from him toward the front steps.

“Rosaleen, I—I never meant. . .”

Disregarding the look of bewildered pain in his blue eyes, Rosaleen fled down the steps and ran sobbing across town until she reached the boardinghouse.

Trembling at the backyard pump, she washed the tears from her face. How could she have allowed such a thing to happen? Her heart sank at the awful truth.

Reverend Maguire was right. I am evil.

Her resolve stiffened. She must leave Madison as soon as possible.

Glad to find Opal and Patsey gone from the kitchen, Rosaleen headed for the stairs. Still shaking, she sought the solitude of her little attic room.

Just as her foot touched the first step, she heard a sharp rap at the front door. With a sigh, she trudged across the front hallway in no mood to greet new boarders with a cheerful smile.

She swung the door open and stood, stunned.

Ten

“Alistair?” The name burst from Rosaleen’s lips as she stood staring wide-eyed at Alistair “The Earl” Ralston.

She’d known the accomplished young thimblerigger and three-card-monte sharp most of her life. Continually moving from one riverboat to another, she and her father had crossed paths with Alistair many times.

The puzzled look on the man’s face changed to joyful surprise as recognition flickered in his eyes. “Rosaleen? Rosaleen Maguire, is it really you?”

Rosaleen managed to nod.

He grinned, showing off his gold front tooth. “Well, as I live and breathe! If it ain’t our own little Rosaleen, all growed up. Ain’t ya gonna invite me in? That is, if you have a room to rent.”

“Yes—yes, we do.” Still reeling from the surprise, Rosaleen stepped aside to allow Alistair into the front hallway.

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