Missouri Challenge: Daisy (Finding Home Series #3) Read online




  Missouri Challenge

  Finding Home Series

  "Daisy"

  Verna Clay

  For those faced with overwhelming challenges.

  Missouri Challenge

  Finding Home Series

  "Daisy"

  Copyright © 2013 by Verna Clay

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

  For information contact:

  [email protected]

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  Publisher:

  M.O.I. Publishing

  "Mirrors of Imagination"

  Cover Design:

  Verna Clay

  Pictures:

  CanStockPhoto (Alexis84): Female

  CanStockPhoto (SNR): Cabin

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Table of Contents

  Preface

  Prologue

  PART ONE: THE OLD HOMESTEAD

  Chapter 1: Alcove Spring

  Chapter 2: Daisy

  Chapter 3: Renewed Acquaintance

  Chapter 4: Fixin' What's Broken

  Chapter 5: Meet the Father

  Chapter 6: Unexpected News

  Chapter 7: Plan A

  Chapter 8: Surprise

  Chapter 9: Plan B

  PART TWO: BIG G RANCH

  Chapter 10: Banter

  Chapter 11: Arrival

  Chapter 12: Bungling No More

  Chapter 13: Learning from the Best

  Chapter 14: Helluva Hoedown

  Chapter 15: Overnight

  Chapter 16: Morning Walk

  Chapter 17: Weak Eyes

  Chapter 18: Mexican Territory

  Chapter 19: Brand

  Chapter 20: Tracking Clues

  Chapter 21: Maria

  Chapter 22: Brave Women

  Chapter 23: Return to Sanity

  Chapter 24: Decisions

  Chapter 25: Fatted Calf

  Chapter 26: Trent Confesses

  Chapter 27: Window to the Soul

  Chapter 28: Pins and Pa

  Chapter 29: Encountering the Past

  Chapter 30: Crooked Tie

  Epilogue

  Research Materials for Daisy: Missouri Challenge

  Author's Note

  Abby: Mail Order Bride (Excerpt) Unconventional Series

  Broken Angel (Excerpt) Unconventional Series

  Ryder's Salvation (Excerpt) Unconventional Series

  Novels and Novellas by Verna Clay

  Preface

  Before I started writing this third book in the Finding Home Series, I wasn't sure whether to title it after Missouri or Texas because both states (and two romances) are equally divided in the storyline. I chose the name Missouri Challenge for a couple of reasons: first, it's the state that Tim Wells and Daisy Smithson's adventure begins in, and second…well, I think I'll let the story reveal that.

  Originally, this was meant to be only Daisy and Tim's romance, but in Rescue on the Rio: Lilah, I introduced Trent Garrett, the brother of Rush Garrett, and he became such a tortured hero, I just had to find the perfect woman for him. I had a little help when Pearl, the housekeeper of Big G Ranch, whispered in my ear that the heroine for Trent's story was right in his own back yard, so to speak. And after listening to Arizona Cayson's yearning for Trent, I couldn't agree more.

  But, back to Daisy and Tim, they were both eight years old when they met and became friends. However, the night before Timmy (his childhood name) left for Oregon, Daisy dreamed they would marry one day. After she made the mistake of telling him, he couldn't get away fast enough.

  I suppose another reason for naming this book Missouri Challenge is because it was so challenging to write. Of course, it could just as easily have been titled Texas Challenge.

  Enjoy the Challenge,

  Verna Clay

  Prologue

  May, 1883

  Tim Wells bent to kiss Maddie, his fifteen year old sister goodbye, and then patted the head of his ten year old brother, Beau. Next, he hugged his mother tightly and planted a kiss on her cheek. "Don't cry, Ma."

  "These are tears of happiness, Tim. In my heart, I know this is a journey you must make."

  Tim shook the hand of his stepfather, Cooper Jerome, who pulled him into a tight hug. "We're going to miss you, son."

  Having never been away from his family for more than a week or two, Tim was excited, yet sad, to leave. However, before he settled down and started his own family—something he'd been considering over the past year—he needed to return to Missouri and the home he'd known before his father died.

  The Oregon Trail had brought him to his new home in Oregon City, but the past was calling. He didn't understand the constant tug on his heart, but he knew if he ignored the call, he would always regret it.

  Mounting his horse, he said to no one in particular, "I hope to return before Jake's back from visiting his family in Texas." Jake was Cooper's son from a previous marriage and one of Tim's best friends. His other best friend was Sam Hankerson, a boy he'd befriended while traveling to Oregon in 1866.

  His stepfather nodded and Tim could see that he was struggling against strong emotions as he placed his arm around Tim's mother and pulled her against his side.

  His ma sniffed and swiped her tears. "You be careful, son."

  When his brother and sister also started wiping their eyes, he decided he'd best leave before they were all bawling like babies.

  "I love ya'll. Be back soon." He turned his gelding toward the road and urged him into a trot.

  PART ONE: THE OLD HOMESTEAD

  Chapter 1: Alcove Spring

  After two months of riding the same trail he had traversed seventeen years earlier with his mother and Cooper Jerome, who would later become his beloved step-father, Tim halted Amigo, the horse his parents had given him when he was eighteen and graduated from the small school in Oregon City. His friend, Sam Hankerson, as smart as a whip, had graduated with him at the age of fifteen and gone on to higher education in Portland. Sam had returned three years later to teach school in Oregon City. By the time his friend was twenty, he was married to Polly, a sweet girl who had lost her parents on the Oregon Trail and been taken in by the Prudence Pittance Orphanage. Sam and Polly were expecting their first child and would be parents by the time Tim returned home. That knowledge boggled Tim's mind.

  He resettled his hat against the sun. At one time, he had harbored a secret crush on Polly, but she'd always had eyes for Sam. Since the age of sixteen, there had been a few other girls that caught his attention, but none that made him want to settle down, except maybe Janie Iverson. But that was something he would think about when he returned to Oregon.

  Now, gazing around the trail, it was as if he had traveled backward in time. In this modern era, traveling from the eastern states to Oregon was accomplished by rail, and portions of the original trail had been laid with tracks, but other parts, like here, seemed not to have changed even after all these years.

  He nudged Amigo forward. He was anxious to reach Alcove Spring and see if he could find the names that Cooper had etched into stone amongst the hundreds already there. An hour later he paused beside a wooden sign painted with faded lettering—ALCOVE SPRING—and smiled. He turned Amigo in the direction of the arrow.

  Before he saw the spring, the sound of bubbling water made him feel like a kid again and put a lump in his throat
. His mother often said he was like his father, deeply caring and affected by things that other men never gave a passing thought to. He supposed she was right. All of his life he had been an observer. He loved animals and plants and trees and mountains and the mists during early morning. He had even penned a few poems that he kept hidden.

  He rounded some bushes and came within sight of the spring. Words to one of his poems sprang to mind.

  Days dawn

  Rivers flow

  Time continues evermore

  Life is but a dawning and a flowing

  Awaiting another sojourner when I cease

  Tim smiled at his lapse into sentimentality, but his expression stayed contemplative as he realized the truth of his poem. He watched water cascade off a high ledge into the same basin he remembered from his youth.

  Someday my life will cease. What legacy will I leave or will I even be remembered?

  He dismounted and circled the basin, reading names and dates that went back as far as the 1840s. He scanned the rocks and after a few minutes found the etchings he was looking for. Aloud he read, "Tim Wells, Hallie Wells, Cooper Jerome."

  Closing his eyes, he could still hear his mother's words. "Just think, all these people have paved the Westward Trails for us. And now, we're paving the way for those after us."

  Although Tim felt things deeply, rarely was he moved to tears, but now, remembering that glorious day, he felt close to crying. Walking over to their names, he smoothed his hand across the letters. Afterward, he knelt and splashed his face. The water was just as cold as he remembered.

  Because he wasn't ready to leave, he sat cross-legged at the water's edge and closed his eyes, thinking of his birth father, Thomas Henry Wells. The tears that had not fallen, now did so. He had loved his kind and generous father. When word of his pa's death in a tornado had reached his ma and him, part of Tim had died that day, and for a long time he had blamed God for allowing his father to travel to St. Louis on the same day as a tornado. The trip had been for the purpose of purchasing tickets for the steamer that would take them from St. Louis to Westport Landing a month later.

  Since his father's death, however, Tim had reconciled himself to the fact that perhaps his pa's heroic deed of shielding a little girl from flying debris and saving her life had been for a higher purpose. One life given so another can live.

  Deep in memories, he absorbed the sounds of water, wind, birds, and remembered good times with his father. Finally, he was ready to leave and finish his journey. His next significant stop would be the home he had lived in with his pa—a home with precious memories that called to him year after year. What would he find there?

  Chapter 2: Daisy

  At the back of the house, Daisy Smithson hung the laundry she'd just washed, and swiped sweat from her brow. The day was warm and humid, and she berated herself for not starting her chores earlier. Although she disliked washing clothes, she enjoyed hanging them out. She loved feeling the sun and wind on her face and refused to wear a bonnet while pinning clothes on the line.

  She reached to hang one of June's diapers and smiled. Her mother's petticoats had been perfect for cutting into squares for that purpose. Glancing at the wooden box under the overhang of the cabin with her two month old daughter wrapped and sleeping inside, her smile widened. Never had she imagined the love she would feel for her tiny bundle. Throughout the dark days of her pregnancy and her shunning by society, she had often felt such despair she'd wished her life would end. Of course, she hadn't known then that June would ease the loneliness of her life and give her a reason to live.

  Since the death of her mother three years previous to a stroke, and then her father's death a few months later when his buckboard toppled in the rain and crushed him beneath it, Daisy had not only been left with the running of their small farm, but become the victim of heart wrenching sorrow. As an only child, her father and mother had doted on her with such love she had always felt safe. After their deaths, lonely nights and backbreaking work had taken its toll in physical and mental exhaustion, exacting its greatest damage in emotional upheaval and despair.

  Although the townspeople had helped whenever possible with her harvest that first year, and she'd even shown a profit, they had encouraged her to marry, insisting that a woman alone could not run a farm. Something in Daisy had resisted their advice and when men started calling, wanting to court her, she'd felt repulsed by most of them. The vast majority were widowers seeking a mother for their children; a woman to run their households; and a body to warm their beds. Daisy had shunned all their efforts and been chastised by the same townspeople who had once banded together to help her only a year earlier. Eventually, their assistance with planting and harvesting had ceased and she was left to her own devices. She had even become the topic of a sermon by the pastor. Of course, he had not spoken her name, but everyone knew that the rebellious woman disdaining the kindness offered by eligible men of the community to lift her heavy burden was none other than Daisy Smithson.

  After that humiliation, Daisy had refused to return to church and had become an outcast from "good" society, as one upstanding woman loudly proclaimed inside the general store while it was packed with customers.

  The final undoing of her reputation and severing of contact by that "good" society had been her pregnancy. As an unmarried woman, she was now the pariah of the community.

  Daisy placed a clothespin on the last of her laundry, gazed lovingly at June, and sighed. I can't bring our crop in alone, baby girl. We might have to travel to the next county to hire hands at harvest time. She would have to sell her mother's wedding ring to raise funds to pay for help.

  A noise from the front of the house alerted her to someone's approach and she ran like a gazelle to lift the box with her baby. Entering the cabin through a back door, she hid June under her bed and rushed to retrieve her rifle. She kept it loaded to discourage unwanted visitors.

  Peeking out the curtain of her front window, she watched the approach of a young man on a magnificent steed. Although his face was shadowed and only a smattering of blond hair shown from beneath the wide brim of his hat, something about him seemed familiar. He appeared friendly, but Daisy had no intention of finding out just how friendly. She'd made that mistake once, and although June was the beautiful outcome, she had no inclination to repeat history.

  Chapter 3: Renewed Acquaintance

  Tim paused on the packed-dirt clearing around the cabin. He'd seen the curtain move and waited for someone to step outside. He frowned at the shabbiness and neglect around him. If he remembered correctly, Mr. and Mrs. Smithson had been meticulous in their care of the home they'd purchased from his parents. Perhaps ownership had changed. After all, it had been seventeen years since he'd left the area.

  Even as he glanced around the poorly cared for grounds, nostalgia made him weak. He remembered his father and mother sitting on the porch in the evenings discussing the day's happenings. The old swing on the white oak remained, its wooden seat almost completely decayed. He looked toward the barn and outbuildings where he'd often run errands because of his pa's inability to walk long distances, having suffered infantile paralysis.

  The sound of the front door opening brought him back to the present. A small woman with unruly dark red hair stepped onto the porch. She pointed a shotgun at him.

  "Mister, you can just turn your horse around and get off my property. I don't cotton to strangers. In fact, I flat out don't like them. As you can see, I got nothin' here worth stealing, so it's best if you leave. That way, I don't have to shoot you."

  Tim remembered Daisy's fiery red hair. "Daisy, is that you?"

  The slight lowering of the rifle was the only movement the woman made. She didn't respond, but it was enough for Tim to realize this was, indeed, Daisy.

  He said, "It's me, Tim Wells. You knew me as Timmy. Maybe you don't remember me, but my pa and ma sold your family this farm when we were eight years old."

  Tim watched Daisy's eyes widened, but she didn
't lower the gun any more. Instead, she asked bluntly, "Why are you here?"

  Tim made an expansive motion with his hands and she tightened her grip on the rifle. He frowned. "I guess you could say I'm revisiting my past. My ma made a new life for us in Oregon, but I've always known one day I would return to my beginnings in Missouri, if only to say a final farewell." He smiled. "Would you mind pointing that gun another direction?"

  * * *

  Daisy frowned. Timmy Wells? That was Timmy Wells standing in her yard?

  She lowered the gun a little. "How do I know you're who you say you are? Last time I saw you we were kids on the back of my pa's buckboard."

  The man slowly dismounted and Daisy lifted her gun back up. He noticed and quirked an eyebrow. "Do you remember the dream you told me about?"

  The gun went slack in Daisy's hands. "Well, I guess you must be Timmy because I never told anyone else that dream and I'm figuring it wasn't somethin' an eight year old boy would want to spout out."

  Timmy grinned and made a waving motion around the yard. "Looks like you're having hard times."

  Daisy replied with a hint of humor, "Can't imagine why you'd think that?"

  Timmy returned his gaze to her face and held her eyes with his own. "Are your ma and pa still living?"

  "No. How 'bout your ma?"

  "Yes. She married the man that led us to Oregon and I have a brother, sister, and step-brother."

  Daisy smiled. She said, "I'm happy to hear that." She paused and the smile left her face. "My ma died a few years back and my pa not long after." With her free hand she made a waving motion encompassing the farm. "I do the best I can."