Home>>read The Unexpected Wife free online

The Unexpected Wife(68)

By:Mary Burton


Tears welled in her husband’s eyes. “They’re fine. You saved them.” He swallowed as if struggling to regain control. “They are outside with Holden now.”

“Holden is here?”

“He came to deliver news of Collier.” His jaw tightened, released. “Holden found his body. Apparently, he’d stopped by the creek to nurse the bullet hole I put in him. He was mauled and killed by a bear.”

She nodded, unable to summon sympathy for the man who’d endangered her boys. She tried to sit up, wincing at the pain that cracked through her skull. “My head.”

Matthias pressed a dampened cloth to her head. “The horse’s hoof clipped your head. You’re lucky to be alive. Another inch and the horse would have crushed your skull.”

She moistened her lips, and then tried again to sit up. Pain shot through her body. “I hurt all over.”

Gently he touched her face with his hands. “Lie down. The last thing you need to be doing is sitting up.”

Her mind felt foggy. “I’ve got a pie in the oven.”

He smiled grimly. “The pie burned. Two days ago.”

“Two days!”

“You’ve been out for two days.”

She noticed then the thick stubble on his face. “But the horses…the stampede.” The details were all so fuzzy. “Did you get the horses back?”

He took her hand in his. “Practical Abby.” He kissed her hand. “No, I didn’t get the horses. I’ve been worried sick about you.”

“But you needed to sell the horses to the railroad. All that money.”

He kissed her forehead gently. “The money doesn’t matter. You do.”

The emotion in his voice tore at her heart.

Tears burned her eyes. “I was being so silly about my birthday. I didn’t mean what I said.”

“I love you,” he said. “I should have said it weeks ago.”

“Matthias.” To see this proud man so upset broke her heart. “You don’t have to say what you don’t mean. I understand you can give only what’s in your heart.”

“I do mean it.” He kissed her gently on the lips.

She closed her eyes, ashamed of her own actions. “I shouldn’t have overreacted.”

“Abby, look at me.”

She opened her eyes. She saw no traces of anger in Matthias’s dark eyes, only pain and sadness.

“Abby, I made you a promise and I broke it.”

“You don’t have to explain. You have worked so hard to make this place a success. And I said horrible things that I really didn’t mean.”

“None of it matters without you,” he said simply. “And I should have told you that.”

“Matthias, please don’t.” She didn’t want pity.

He cupped her face in his hands. “I love you. These last two days and nights, I thought I might lose you.” He swallowed. “It would kill me if I lost you.”

Tears welled in her eyes as she stared up at him. “Oh, Matthias, you will never lose me.”

“I love you, Abby Barrington.”

“And I love you, Matthias.”





Epilogue




May, 1880



Hilda Clements was bone-tired. But it was a good kind of tired.

She had to smile as she eased her backside into the chair by her writing table. The light from her lantern glowed onto a freshly written letter on cream-colored paper, a half-full inkwell and pen.

This year was going to be her store’s most profitable. The railroad was bringing its rail line right past Crickhollow and soon the valley would be growing by leaps and bounds. Matthias and Abby Barrington’s ranch had turned a fine profit last year. Matthias, with Holden’s help, had rounded up his horses and sold them to the railroad. The Barrington horses were considered the best in the territory and he received top dollar for them. Abby’s cooking had also turned their ranch into a prosperous stagecoach stop.

Two months ago they welcomed an addition to their family. Their daughter, Elizabeth, was one of the prettiest little babies she’d ever seen and there was no denying that Matthias, Quinn and Tommy doted on her.

Holden said that Matthias had nearly worried himself sick until the babe had safely arrived, but Abby had sailed through the delivery.

Hilda chuckled. She’d never seen a man more crazy in love with his wife than Matthias Barrington. Her matchmaking had turned out just fine. Fact, she doubted Matthias could have chosen a woman better himself.

Smiling, she dipped the nib of her pen into an inkwell.

Dear Rose—



I received your letter yesterday and enjoyed reading it very much. To answer your questions, I run the stagecoach line in Crickhollow, Montana. I’ve lived here for eight years and my business is thriving. In the last year alone, I’ve added two more coaches and drivers to meet the growing demand. Crickhollow is a fine town, with a hotel, livery and a bustling mercantile. My life lacks only one thing—a wife, who’ll share my life with me.