Read Courting Trouble Online

Authors: Deeanne Gist

Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #Historical, #General, #Religious, #ebook

Courting Trouble

Courting Trouble

Books by Deeanne Gist

A Bride Most Begrudging
The Measure of a Lady
Courting Trouble
Deep in the Heart of Trouble
A Bride in the Bargain
Beguiled
*
Maid to Match

*
with J. Mark Bertrand

Courting
Trouble

DEEANNE

GIST

Courting Trouble
Copyright © 2007
Deeanne Gist

Cover illustration by Bill Graf
Cover design by Jennifer Parker

Unless otherwise identified, Scripture quotations are from the New King James Version of the Bible. Copyright © 1979, 1980, 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Printed in the United States of America

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Gist, Deeanne.

Courting trouble / Deeanne Gist.

     p. cm.

ISBN-13: 978-0-7642-0394-7 (hardcover : alk. paper)
ISBN-10: 0-7642-0394-0 (hardcover : alk. paper)
ISBN-13: 978-0-7642-0225-4 (pbk.)

ISBN-10: 0-7642-0225-1 (pbk.)

1. Single women—Fiction. 2. Corsicana (Tex.)—History—19th century—Fiction.

I. Title.

PS3607.I55C68      2007

813'.6—dc22                                                          2007007115

To my Groom,
whom I love with all my heart,
all my soul, all my mind,
mind all my strength.

DEEANNE GIST has a background in education and journalism. Her credits include
People, Parents, Parenting, Family Fun,
and the
Houston Chronicle
. She has a line of parenting products called I Did It! Productions and a degree from Texas A&M. She and her husband have four children—two in college, two in high school. They live in Houston, Texas, and Deeanne loves to hear from her readers at her website,
www.deeannegist.com
.

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

PROLOGUE

chapter ONE

chapter TWO

chapter THREE

chapter FOUR

chapter FIVE

chapter SIX

chapter SEVEN

chapter EIGHT

chapter NINE

chapter TEN

chapter ELEVEN

chapter TWELVE

chapter THIRTEEN

chapter FOURTEEN

chapter FIFTEEN

chapter SIXTEEN

chapter SEVENTEEN

chapter EIGHTEEN

chapter NINETEEN

chapter TWENTY

chapter TWENTY-ONE

chapter TWENTY-TWO

chapter TWENTY-THREE

chapter TWENTY-FOUR

chapter TWENTY-FIVE

chapter TWENTY-SIX

chapter TWENTY-SEVEN

chapter TWENTY-EIGHT

chapter TWENTY-NINE

chapter THIRTY

chapter THIRTY-ONE

AUTHOR’S NOTE

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The citizens of Corsicana, Texas, opened their arms to me and did all they could to assist me with my research. Many thanks to Bobbie Young, the precious gal who runs the Corsicana Historical Society. She gave up much of her time to me, answered my many, many questions and hooked me up with folks in the know—including Mayor Buster Brown. The Haynie brothers walked me up to Hickey Hill so I could see the oldest operating rig in the world—and one that was in use during the first oil boom in Texas.

Carmack Watkins was a particularly delightful old-timer who regaled me with stories and drove me out to the old brick yard where he had stored some ‘‘gumbo busters’’—oil rigs from the early 1900s that could bust through Corsicana’s black clay. He also had one of the original bois d’arc blocks that had once paved Corsicana’s streets. He told me that when it rained, the blocks would stain your heels yellow, so Corsicanans became known as ‘‘yellow heels.’’

And a very special thanks to Clay Jackson, who dropped everything to meet me after hours and patiently answered so many of my questions about the early oil industry in Corsicana and Navarro County. When I asked him what oil smelled like, he looked kind of surprised, then shrugged. ‘‘I don’t know that I could describe it, but once you smell it, you never forget it.’’

The next morning, he swung by my hotel with a jelly jar full of oil that he had tapped from one of his rigs—so I could smell it for myself. Can you imagine? Just walked out back and drew me up a sample. What a sweetheart!

Back in Houston, my dear sisters in Christ, Beth and Sabrina, hooked me up with three precious, godly women. Amy, Lisa and Angel: Thank you so very, very much. It is my fervent prayer that the Lord bless you abundantly.

My critique group for this book included two new members. A talented and insightful poet, Allison Smythe, and a highbrow intellectual with a fabulous sense of humor, J. Mark Bertrand. I have grown incredibly fond of both of them along with my returning critique partner, Meg Moseley. Y’all’s fingerprints are all over this work. Thank you so much for sharing your expertise and time and talents with me.

Last, but certainly not least, I would like to thank Steve Oates and his sales and marketing team at Bethany House. They come out with both guns smoking and never look back. I am truly blessed to have such an awesome force behind me. I adore you all and so appreciate everything you do for me. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

PROLOGUE

CORSICANA, TEXAS
JULY 1874

THE COWBOY, GOLDEN-SKINNED, blond and blue-eyed, plunked down a wad of bills on the auctioneer’s table. ‘‘I believe I’ll take that lunch basket.’’ He turned and picked Esther Spreckelmeyer out of the crowd with his intense gaze. ‘‘That is, if it’s okay with Miss—’’

‘‘Es-sie!’’ her mother called.

The ten-year-old girl glanced at her bedroom door, then back at her ‘‘cowboy.’’

‘‘I’d love to share my basket with you, sir,’’ she whispered, ‘‘but if you would excuse me for just one minute? I’ll be right back. Promise.’’

Flinging open the door, Essie left behind her make-believe Fourth of July celebration populated with figurines, baby dolls, and imaginary friends. ‘‘Coming, Mother!’’

She vaulted onto the banister, slid all the way down, flew off the end and executed a perfect landing—feet together, back arched, hands in the air. Just the way those pretty ladies in the circus had landed when they jumped off the trapeze.

‘‘
Essie
. How many times have I told you not to slide down the railing?’’

She whirled around. ‘‘Papa! I didn’t know you were home.’’

‘‘Obviously.’’ Her father shook his head. ‘‘When you are finished with your mother, you are to write a one-hundred-word essay on the reasons females should not slide down banisters. It is to be on my desk before supper.’’

‘‘Yes, Papa.’’

He tugged on her braid. ‘‘Go on now, squirt. I’ll see you at dinner.’’

She flung herself into his arms. ‘‘I’ll try to do better, I will. It’s just so much fun. And I’m very good at it. I never fall off anymore. And if I’m going to be in the circus when I grow up, then I must practice.’’

He patted her on the back. ‘‘I thought you wanted to be a wife and mother when you grow up.’’

She offered her father a huge smile. ‘‘Oh, I do, Papa. I do. Didn’t I tell you? I am going to marry either a cowboy or the ringmaster of a circus. But whoever he is, he’s going to buy my box supper at the Fourth of July picnic.’’

Sullivan Spreckelmeyer blinked in confusion, but Essie had no time to explain. Mother didn’t like it when she tarried.

chapter ONE

T
WENTY
Y
EARS
L
ATER

ESTHER SPRECKELMEYER HATED the Fourth of July. This day above all others reminded her that everyone in the world went two by two. Everyone but her. She would have stayed home if she could have gotten away with it, but her father, the judge for the 35th Judicial District, expected his family to attend all social events.

Standing in the quiet of her family’s kitchen, she determined that this year was going to be different. She had turned thirty last week and she needed a husband. Now.

She straightened the red-and-white gingham bow wrapped around her basket handle, then checked the contents one more time. Fried chicken, sweet potatoes, hominy, dill carrots, black-eyed pea wheels, deviled eggs, cow tongue, and blackberry tarts.

Cooking was of utmost importance to a man in search of a wife. Whoever bought her box supper today at the auction would need to know that with Essie, he’d be well taken care of.

Her father entered the kitchen, pulling on his light summer jacket. ‘‘What do you have in your basket this year, dear?’’

She took a deep breath. ‘‘I don’t want you bidding on it, Papa. Nor the sheriff, either.’’

Papa came up short. ‘‘Why not? What’s wrong with your father or uncle winning it?’’

‘‘If the two of you bid, no one else will even try.’’

His gray eyebrows furrowed. ‘‘But no one has tried for years, other than that youngster, Ewing.’’

Essie cringed. Ewing Wortham was seven years her junior and used to dog her every step. At the ripe old age of ten, he offered two measly pennies for her basket. No one, evidently, had the heart to bid against him, and every year after he proudly bid his two cents. She could have cheerfully strangled him.

She’d received her height early and her curves late. Between that, her penchant for the outdoors, and her propensity for attracting the admiration of incorrigible little boys, her basket had been passed over more times than naught. Especially since Ewing had gone away to school.

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