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Mail Order Bride: Ramona (Orphan Brides Go West Book 2) Page 5


  Michael grinned shyly and reached for her bags. Picking them up he made his way over to an open wagon that was sitting behind a beautiful old chestnut mare.

  “Then, maybe tomorrow you could show me around Austin? I’m keen to see all the sights.” Ramona glanced up and down the street before following Michael to the wagon. “I’m in quite a hurry to see all the sights, actually.”

  Chapter Seven

  Michael

  Michael kept sneaking sidelong glances at the woman sitting next to him in the wagon. He still couldn’t believe she was here. To Michael, Ramona—with her exotic mountain of curls and huge brown eyes— looked just like the glamorous women he’d seen on stage at the Austin Theater. He’d been to see a show with Tony and one of his many beaus the previous year. Ramona looked like she should be on stage, not marrying someone like him. She was sitting so close to him in the wagon Michael was becoming even more nervous with each passing moment. He pondered over what he could say to her to break the awkward silence that had descended between them, but even when he finally thought of something his throat seemed to constrict and he couldn’t speak.

  Luckily for him, Ramona was both talkative, and seemingly oblivious to how nervous he was. She broke the silence between them happily, and filled the night air with her silken voice. Her chatter helped him to relax a little as he guided the horse and wagon around town and home to his newly built, little, house. In the weeks since he had first decided to find a bride, Michael had purchased a new home, built by one of Tony’s cousins. It was small but quaint and in a good neighborhood that was filling up with similar newly built houses. Ramona nattered happily about her trip to Austin, and then moved on, telling Michael all about her dreams of singing and dancing on Broadway.

  “I’ve been dancing since I was four years old,” she said, craning her neck to take in her surroundings in the dark city. “It’s always been my dream to sing and dance on stage.”

  She sounds a little sad.

  Michael slapped Sadie with the reins, and she jumped forward into a quick trot.

  “Austin is quite a modern town, really,” Michael said quietly. “There are a lot of artistic types here. I think you’ll fit in just fine,” he said.

  Ramona paused for a second before she nodded her head quickly and smiled brightly. “Perhaps.”

  They navigated their way through the construction site of the capital building where Michael worked. He pointed out the area where he was currently working, and told her a little about his job. He told her about the foreman, and about Tony.

  “Tony’s always been there for me, since I don’t have any family in these parts. He’s Italian too, you know? Like you.”

  “Oh?” she said. “I look forward to meeting him. You’ll have to introduce us soon,” Ramona said.

  Then, furrowing her brow a little she added. “Michael, you don’t know anyone who works at the University of Texas, do you?”

  Michael shook his head as the wagon left the construction site and headed toward the neighborhood where Michael’s small house sat perched on a crest. “No, sorry,” he said. “I don’t know anyone in those circles.”

  “Oh,” Ramona said, leaning back against the seat. Michael heard the disappointment in her voice.

  “Why do you ask?”

  “No reason,” Ramona said quickly. “I was just curious, that’s all. Never mind.”

  “I can take you up there if you like,” Michael said, keen to see her smile again. “We can go look at the university together. I’ve never been, really, but I know there’s nice parks on the grounds, with fountains and places to sit. We could sit, have a little picnic.”

  Ramona nodded her head. “That sounds nice,” she said, leaning her head back against the leather seat. “Right now, all I know is that I’m awful tired after my trip. Let’s do it soon though.”

  “You got it.”

  “Michael, where are we going?”

  “Uh. Oh, sorry. I should have told you. Back to my house.”

  “Oh!”

  “I mean, not just us – Fred and Mary will be there too. They’re friends of mine. They’ve agreed to stay with us until the wedding.”

  Ramona shifted in her seat, and coughed loudly, covering her mouth with her gloved hand.

  Michael frowned. “I thought about putting you up at a hotel, but then decided you might be more comfortable at the house. ‘Course if you’d rather…”

  “No, no. That sounds fine. Really, please don’t trouble yourself. I’m sure it will be wonderful.”

  They rode the rest of the way in silence, Michael was too nervous to broach the topic of the wedding again. When he’d mentioned it, she had jumped in place, as though a bolt of lightning had gone straight through her. There’s something on her mind. And I don’t know what it is. Maybe she is just tired after all, like she said. Michael gripped the reigns tightly as he steered the wagon home.

  Now that she’s seen Austin, and seen me, it’s likely she won’t want to go through with it anyway. I wonder what a girl like Ramona is doing travelling across the country on her own to marry a stranger. A woman like her, so beautiful and glamorous. She likely took one good look at me and realized she’d made a huge mistake.

  He turned to observe the girl curled up on the wagon seat beside him, her large brown eyes already drooping closed, her head lolling to one side.

  I saw the disappointment on her face when I told her I don’t know any university types. A girl like her, she must be used to spending time with intellectuals and performers. I’ll likely never be enough for her.

  When they arrived at the house, Ramona shook the sleepiness from her limbs, and clambered out of the wagon on Michael’s arm. The cottage was very cozy looking, and a soft light drifted from the front windows and across the newly graveled garden path that led to a sturdy front door. Michael grabbed Ramona’s luggage and helped her inside. A man and a woman seated before a roaring fire jumped to their feet and hurried over to meet them.

  “Ramona, this here is Mary, and her husband Fred.”

  “How do you do?” Ramona greeted them with a curtsey, and the two women shook hands.

  “They’re goin’ to be stayin’ here with us, ‘til the wedding.”

  “Oh, of course. How lovely, it will be so much fun – all bunking together.” Ramona smiled warmly at the couple, who beamed back at her.

  “We’re so pleased to meet you, Ramona. You just make yourself at home here, we’ll stay out of your way. This is your home now, and you’re mighty welcome in it,” said Mary, grasping Ramona’s hand once more, her bright eyes twinkling.

  “Thank you Mary.”

  “Come now, I’ll show you to your room,” said Michael, leading the way.

  As he showed her to the spare bedroom, Michael made a vow to himself not to give up on her too quickly. Perhaps I can prove that I am good enough to be her husband, he thought, showing Ramona to her bedroom as he placed her satin bag down at the base of the four poster bed.

  “She’s all set then?” Mary appeared behind Michael and followed him out of Ramona’s room and down the hall.

  “Yes. And I really want to thank you and Fred for staying here with us.”

  “You’re very welcome.”

  “Nothin’ to it Mike, we’re delighted to do it.” Fred was seated in the living room back in front of the fire reading a book.

  “The house is lovely, by the way,” said Mary, sitting down beside Fred on a wooden chair that Michael had whittled from a leftover piece of oak.

  “Thank you kindly. I’m very happy with it. I just hope Ramona will be content here, too.”

  “Of course she will be. What more could any woman want?” Mary smiled warmly at him, and picked up a half-finished shawl she was knitting.

  Michael snuck down the hallway five minutes later to say goodnight to Ramona and to see if she needed anything else, but Ramona had already fallen to sleep. The rhythmic sound of her breathing drifted out to him through the open door, and he pull
ed it closed behind him with a smile. As he strode toward his own bedroom, he couldn’t help wondering what the future might be like, and hoped that his days of loneliness were finally over.

  ***

  The next morning, Michael was summoned to the front door by a loud knocking. Then Tony’s voice bellowed loudly through the house. “Michael! Come on. We’re going to be late for work.”

  Michael hurried to the door, pulling on his boots as he went.

  “Shhh,” he said. “Ramona’s sleeping. She’s exhausted. I’m running late ‘cause I was creeping around, trying to be real quiet so as not to wake her.”

  Tony shook his head and tutted.

  Walking to the construction site, Tony had plenty to say. “She’s already got you under her spell. I hope you ain’t gonna make a habit of being late. I see she’s the sort of princess type that likes to lay around all day long. I won’t say I told you so, but.”

  “Go easy Tony. It’s only her first morning after a long trip.”

  “So, she’s not a princess then?”

  Michael paused before he spoke.

  “She wears her hair in this real modern style,” Michael commented. “People around here might think it’s too modern.” In fact he was worried they would think Ramona was too modern, all round.

  “I told you so,” Tony said pointedly. “Those New York women, they ain’t got no place around here.” He lowered his voice. “And she’s foreign on top of all that, ain’t she?”

  “Italian parents,” Michael rolled his eyes. “Like you, Tony. She was born and raised in New York. But none of that matters a jot to me anyhow.”

  “I’ll say it again. You should wait for a good old-fashioned pioneering woman. Someone used to the frontier life. That’s what I’m fixin’ to do. It won’t be long before this town is crawling with women. And a handsome man like yourself ain’t gonna have any trouble finding a sweet, practical woman to marry. You don’t need a fancy New York type. She’ll be of no earthly use at all. Mark my words.”

  Michael didn’t want to admit it, but he was starting to think that Tony had a valid point. He wasn’t sure Ramona would ever really fit here. He couldn’t imagine her raising babies, washing laundry, baking and doing all the things that a pioneer woman had to do just to get by each day. It was a grueling life, and Ramona didn’t look as though she knew much about hard work. Michael had never met a woman like her before. Not in Texas, anyway. Maybe that’s how they all are in New York City, but around here she is going to stand out like a sore thumb.

  Not that Michael hadn’t already noticed the way that the other men in town stopped and stared when Ramona passed by. As they rode home in the wagon the previous evening, men had paused in the street, taken their hats off and stared.

  He pondered the situation all day long while they worked in the heat of the Texas sun. Walking home that evening, he wondered whether he should just ask her outright what she planned on doing.

  I’ll talk to her tonight. I need to find out why Ramona came to Texas, and if she still intends to become my wife. I need to find out if she really means to marry me.

  Chapter Eight

  Ramona

  When Ramona awoke the next morning, it took her a moment to remember where she was. Looking around the room, it all came rushing back to her. She was at Michael’s house, in Austin, Texas. The morning light poured through the window, already bringing with it the promise of a warm winter’s day. The bed she lay in looked as though it had been hewn by hand from a thick log, wooden nails held each piece in place. The straw tick rustled beneath her, and she could smell the freshly dried grasses through the linens. A hand-whittled rocker sat beside the bed, with an extra crocheted blanket spread over one arm. A rustic vase, made of clay and filled with fresh flowers, sat gaily on a small table against the wall. Ramona sighed with pleasure. The room really was very homely. She tried to remember what the rest of the house had looked like, but it had been so late when she’d arrived the previous night and she’d been so exhausted, she couldn’t recall much about it.

  Ramona crept down the stairs. The house was very quiet. She noticed that the rest of Michael’s home matched her room nicely. Hand hewn and whittled furniture decorated each room. The living room held a roaring fire in a large fireplace on one wall, and the open area led into a snug kitchen and pantry. From there, Ramona could see a door that appeared to open out into a back yard. There were a few things that a woman’s touch could add to the home, such as window dressings and rugs, but overall the house felt inviting and comfortable. She saw Mary, sitting by the fire, darning a pair of pants.

  “Good morning.”

  “Good morning,” replied Mary, standing to her feet and making her way into the kitchen.

  “I’m so sorry, my dear, we would have waited for you to eat breakfast, but we weren’t sure when you might want to get up. You had a long journey to recover from. The men have already eaten and gone to work, so we have the house to ourselves,” said Mary, hurrying to get Ramona a plate.

  “Of course, I wouldn’t expect you to wait. I can’t believe how late I slept. I was so tired, and that bedroom is really very comfortable.”

  “Michael made all the furniture himself. He’s got quite the knack for it,” said Mary, handing Ramona a plate piled high with eggs, and a slice of bread covered with butter and jam.

  “Wow, he has a talent, that’s for sure.” Ramona walked to the table and sat down to eat. Mary sat across from her, the knitting still in her hands.

  “Thank you. This is delicious,” Ramona bit hungrily into the bread. She was famished after so many days of travelling.

  “You’re most welcome. I’ll show you around today, and when Michael and Fred come home from working on the new State Capitol tonight, maybe we can have dinner waiting for them. What do you say?”

  “That sounds great,” said Ramona, wondering how she was going to find her mother if she was going to be stuck in the house all day, every day, while Michael was at work.

  I’ll just have to find a way. Perhaps I can borrow the wagon. I’ll have to earn his trust, so that he lets me take it out on my own. But how I wish I could just go to her now. Still, it is very cozy here, and they have all been so very welcoming. It won’t be the worst thing to stay here a bit until I can get my bearings and figure out where Mother is.

  ***

  When Michael and Fred came home from work that evening, he seemed to be in a pensive mood. Ramona watched him closely; he was even quieter than he had been the previous evening. Mary and Ramona bustled about the small kitchen, cooking fried bacon, cornbread and buttermilk for supper. Mary showed Ramona where everything was located while they worked, and the two of them chatted happily together.

  Michael and Fred sat together by the fire, stoking it occasionally while Fred puffed on a pipe.

  “How’s the building coming along?” Mary called to them both, from the kitchen.

  “Fine. It’ll be another couple of years, they tell us,” said Michael.

  “Phew! That structure’s going to be something, isn’t it?”

  “Sure is.”

  Ramona listened intently to the exchange, hoping to get some further insight into what Michael was like. The moment he’d walked in the door after work she had felt her pulse quicken. There was something about him that made her nervous, and she couldn’t shake the feeling of wanting to be nearer to him. He had such a gentleness about him, and seemed to consider her feelings in everything he said and did. She could already see the warmth in his eyes when he looked at her.

  Forget about Michael. I’m here to fetch Mother. I have to focus on finding out when he can take me to the University. After Mother and I return to New York I won’t ever see him again, so there’s no use in thinking about him. I need to just get him out of my head.

  “Come and get it!” called Mary, breaking through Ramona’s reverie. Ramona removed her apron and wiped her hands clean before carrying plates to the table.

  The men made their way
to the kitchen, Fred cleaning his pipe out first. As Michael took his seat, his arm brushed against Ramona’s, sending a wave of tingles through her body. She started and looked up at him in surprise, wondering whether he had felt it too. His green eyes were staring at her quizzically, as though he were trying to read her thoughts.

  “Excuse me, ma’am,” he said politely as he removed his hat and sat down.

  “Did you have a nice day?” asked Ramona. Her voice was uncharacteristically low.

  “Thank you, I did. And you?”

  The way he watched her made her squirm with pleasure. He seemed genuinely interested in what she had to say. Ramona nodded.

  “Yes, thank you.”

  They barely spoke for the rest of the evening. Fred and Mary exchanged concerned glances. Fred shook his head at Mary, and she smiled pityingly at the two of them.

  “There’s chemistry there no doubt,” she whispered to Fred, “but they’re each too afraid to speak to the other. I guess that will change with time.”

  “It’d better,” remarked Fred.

  Chapter Nine

  Michael

  Michael had every intention of bringing up the topic of the wedding the following day. He’d lost his nerve the previous evening when his arm had brushed against Ramona’s sending a jolt through his body. He’d felt as though his throat would close up entirely, but he was determined to find out where Ramona stood on the subject before work. When morning came and Ramona bounced down the stairs, looking glamorous and cosmopolitan, he lost his nerve once more and instead busied himself buttering a piece of bread.

  This afternoon. After work. I’ll speak with her then. It would be too hurried a conversation to have it now. No - afternoon is a much better time to talk.

  When Michael got home from work that afternoon, Ramona wasn’t there. Mary told him she’d taken a walk.

  “By herself?” asked Michael.

  “She insisted.”

  “But she doesn’t know her way around.”

  Mary simply shook her head.

  It wasn’t long before Ramona returned, slipping off her hat and smoothing back her hair as she greeted him at the door. Once she had cleaned up and settled herself in the sitting room, Michael attempted to engage Ramona in conversation. But try as he might, she was constantly distracted, looking out the front window to the busy street beyond. It was as though she were searching for something, but for the life of him, Michael couldn’t figure out what it could be.