Montana Cowboy Family. Linda Ford
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Название: Montana Cowboy Family

Автор: Linda Ford

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Вестерны

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isbn: 9781474065191

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СКАЧАТЬ and then a shuffle of feet, and the door opened enough to allow Sammy to peek through. “Teacher? Mr. Marshall? What’re you doing here?”

      Sadie squatted down to eye level with the boy. “I was worried about you and came to make sure you are okay.”

      Logan leaned closer to peer through the narrow opening of the door. The interior showed little sign of life—a bare table and an equally bare cupboard. He’d never seen a kitchen with nothing to indicate food preparation. “Can we come in?” he asked when it became apparent Sammy didn’t mean to extend an invitation.

      Sammy glanced behind him, then shook his head. “I don’t think so.”

      Sadie straightened and turned to Logan. “This isn’t right,” she whispered.

      He nodded.

      “I’m okay,” Sammy said. “You don’t need to worry none about me.”

      “But, Sammy, we are worried.” He knew he spoke for both of them. As he studied the boy, a pair of small feet entered his field of vision. “You have a little brother or sister? And a sick mother?”

      Sadie gave him a look full of appeal, seeking his help, perhaps even his opinion. He tried not to let the notion make him feel that she might see him as a man worthy of her respect. Which, he thought with a degree of irony, he was. What he meant was he no longer cared if a woman thought so.

      Nevertheless, he listened to her silent call for help and shouldered the door open, the squawk of its rusted hinges rending the silence.

      Sammy stepped back. An older girl pulled him close while, in her other arm, she held a smaller girl. The older girl wore shoes with the toes cut out to accommodate her feet. Her dress had a tear in the skirt and was almost colorless from frequent washings. The little one was barefoot and her faded pink dress was equally worn, yet they were both surprisingly clean.

      In a glance Logan took in the room—a bed with no mattress and only a scattering of blankets. A narrow wooden table sagged to one side, and nearby was a single chair with rungs missing in the back. Again he was struck by how empty the place was of belongings. Or any sign of domesticity. Not a curtain. Not a dish. Nothing.

      “Where’s your mother? Your father?” Sadie’s words were surprisingly gentle considering the state of the place and the children.

      Logan remained at her side, stifling an urge to put an arm about her shoulders and protect her from the glaring truth. “You kids are alone, aren’t you?”

      Sadie pressed a hand to her throat. “Alone? Is that possible?” She studied the silent trio. “I think you better explain what is going on.”

      Sammy looked up at his older sibling, a slender girl with hair lighter than Sammy’s and the same dark eyes. She shook her head in answer to Sammy’s unasked question.

      “We got nothing to say,” Sammy said.

      Logan pulled forward the only chair, two rungs missing in its back, and indicated Sadie should sit. Her glance at Logan informed him that the misery of the children’s situation brought her pain. Sadie placed a package on the table and unwrapped a cake. Three pairs of eyes lingered on it, then eased away. It didn’t take more than a glance around the place to know they were likely hungry.

      He wished he could erase the pain for Sadie and the children. But things like this couldn’t be undone...only resolved, and he prayed for wisdom. Lord, help us unravel this mystery.

      Slowly, softly, Sadie began to speak. “Sammy, are these your sisters?”

      Sammy nodded.

      The older girl tightened her arm about Sammy’s shoulders. If Sadie noticed the warning gesture, she ignored it. “What are their names?”

      “She’s Beth.” Sammy indicated the older girl. “And this here is baby Jeannie.”

      Jeannie, the blondest of the three, with the same dark eyes, wasn’t a baby anymore, but Logan understood that the youngest child often got called the baby for a long time.

      “How old are your sisters?” Sadie continued in her gentle voice.

      “I’m thirteen,” Beth said. “And Jeannie is three. Why?”

      Sadie managed a slight smile as she met Beth’s eyes. “It’s just something teachers ask children. Let me introduce ourselves. I’m Sammy’s teacher, Miss Young, and this is Logan Marshall.”

      Beth nodded. “I know who you are. But why are you here? I—Sammy took a note asking you not to visit.”

      Logan noted the hesitation, as if Beth had been about to say she had sent the note. He glanced at Sadie, saw by the flash in her eyes that she had heard the same thing.

      Her gaze returned to the older girl. “Yes, he did. But I couldn’t help but be worried. Especially when I saw that his back hurt him.”

      Both Sammy and Beth adopted impassive expressions.

      “Sammy, who has been hurting you?”

      “Not Beth.”

      “I wasn’t accusing Beth.” She looked to Logan, seeking his opinion.

      He gave her a slight nod to indicate she should continue questioning the children.

      “Where’s your mama?” she asked them.

      “Mama?” Little Jeannie spoke for the first time.

      “Hush, baby.” Beth jostled the child.

      “I want Mama.” Jeannie looked ready to cry.

      “Hush, hush. Remember what I told you.”

      Jeannie nodded. “Mama not coming back.”

      So Logan’s uncle had been right.

      “I’m sorry,” Sadie said. “You must all be very sad.”

      Nothing but more unblinking stares from Sammy and Beth.

      “Where is your father?” Logan asked. Though his deeper, more demanding voice jolted the pair, they quickly recovered and pressed their lips together.

      “Where’s your papa?” he asked again, softer this time.

      Little Jeannie, her eyes full of fear, whimpered and clung to Beth. Beth’s jaw muscles twitched as she clenched her teeth. Her eyes narrowed and she wrapped her arms about Jeannie in such a protective gesture that a shiver climbed Logan’s spine.

      Logan crossed the floor to the cupboards and threw open the only remaining door. Empty. He touched the stove. Cold. He confronted the children. Sadie was right, both in thinking things weren’t as they should be and coming here to check on them.

      He stilled his raging heart. “There is nothing in the house to eat.”

      No response from any of them.

      He circled the room, hating every inch of it as a place for children СКАЧАТЬ