Название: Mail Order Sweetheart
Автор: Christine Johnson
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Исторические любовные романы
isbn: 9781474067935
isbn:
“Shouldn’t you be thinking about your fiancé?”
The blonde sighed. “I can’t think on someone I ain’t met.”
The girl’s atrocious grammar and cheap muslin dress marked her as poor. Fiona had once been exactly the same. Changing her speech took practice, but improving her dress took money. She’d worked long and hard before she could afford her first pretty gown. Until then, a kindhearted singer had given Fiona one of her cast-offs for the stage. Away from the theater, Fiona had hidden in the shadows so no one would connect the poor girl with the singer on the stage.
Fiona stared at the young woman. “Are you saying you’ve never met your fiancé?”
The girl shrugged. “Ain’t been no chance to.”
“None of us has met our beau yet,” the bubbly redhead said, “but we’ll meet them soon. We’re going to Harmony to get married.”
Fiona drew in a deep breath. The similarities to her arrival in Singapore didn’t drift past without notice. “You’re all answering advertisements for a wife?” She hoped they weren’t all going for the same man.
The leader shook her brunette locks. “No, ma’am. We each got a husband waitin’ for us.”
“I see.” But she didn’t. “Then you’ve written to them already.”
Again the leader shook her head. “Mr. Adamson chose us.”
“Chose?”
“Yes, ma’am. He held an interview, and we got picked. Dozens applied.”
The whole process appalled Fiona. “Do you know anything about the man you’re going to marry, Miss...?”
“Clara.” The leader straightened her spine. “Call me Clara.” She then proceeded to introduce the rest.
Fiona forgot their names in an instant except for Dinah, the blonde, who wasn’t yet eighteen years of age.
“We all got a description,” Clara finished up. “My fiancé’s name is Benjamin. He’s twenty-eight and tall with dark hair like mine.”
The other ladies then described their future mates, all of whom were older and whose hair color came remarkably close to their own. When their matching dresses were taken into account, there was something odd about this whole situation.
“What do they do? Their occupation?” she asked.
Clara gave her a blank look. “They’re all farmers, of course. We’re creating a community free of strife and vice.” She reeled that off as if quoting something she’d been told to memorize.
Fiona was appalled. “Surely you had another choice.”
Each girl shook her head.
“Marry a drunken bum,” Clara stated frankly. “We’ve been workin’ in the shirtwaist factory after getting thrown out of the orphanage.”
“Thrown out?” Fiona could hardly believe what she was hearing.
“Because we’re too old,” the redhead, Linore, explained. “That’s why we’re getting married.”
“Next ta Bleek Street, Harmony sounds like paradise.” Dinah sighed. “No drinkin’ or brawlin’.”
That did sound too good to be true.
“Then they are all upright men of God?” Fiona prodded.
“That’s what Mr. Adamson says,” Clara answered.
Each woman nodded in affirmation.
If what Mr. Adamson claimed was indeed the truth, Fiona could understand why these women had agreed to go to this island community. But what if it wasn’t?
“Can you leave if your fiancé doesn’t turn out the way he’s been advertised?” Fiona would definitely have made certain that option was available. She’d held on to it when answering the advertisement that brought her to Singapore. Even now, that possibility remained, though it would get much more difficult once Mary Clare arrived. She had not set aside the fare for two to travel to Chicago.
The women all stared at her as if she were mad.
Clara vocalized their response. “Why would we leave? It’s better than what we got now.”
Fiona recalled the newspaper that had so gripped their attention. “Then why the interest in the advertisement for a wife?”
The women looked at each other and giggled.
This time the one with the chestnut-colored hair answered, her jaw thrust out. “A girl’s gotta dream, don’t she?”
“Well, I can tell you for certain that this advertisement is only a dream. There’s not a man in this town who fits that description.”
Instead of solemnly nodding, like she’d expected, the ladies grew quiet, their eyes wide, and stood as one, smoothing their plain skirts as if they wore silk. A hush came over the room.
A man cleared his throat behind Fiona.
She whirled to see Sawyer standing in the doorway, hat in hand. “Sawyer! Mr. Evans, that is. I’m glad to see you’re well.”
His complexion reddened as if—no, it wasn’t possible—he were blushing. He stepped from foot to foot, clearly uneasy. “I’m fine.”
“So I see.”
The ladies giggled behind her.
Fiona left the room and led Sawyer to the front porch where they might have a bit of privacy. The chill air bit into her, and she hugged her arms close for warmth.
“You had something to tell me?” she prompted.
Sawyer cleared his throat again, though his eyes darted toward the parlor windows. “I just wanted you to know that the VanderLeuvens are back in town and are opening up the hotel. We can begin the concerts again.”
Fiona breathed out. She hadn’t realized how much she would miss the income she’d received from her concerts. Almost three months without pay had stretched her funds very thin. “That’s wonderful. An answer to prayer.”
“You’ve been praying to have a concert?”
“I’ve been praying for an income.”
The color left his face. “An income?”
“I do need to pay for room and board,” she pointed out.
“Of course.” His color returned, this time to a bright red. He avoided looking directly at her.
“All right. What’s wrong? Spit it out.” Fiona СКАЧАТЬ