Rocky Mountain Dreams & Family on the Range by Danica Favorite (list of ebook readers .txt) 📗
- Author: Danica Favorite
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“Are you sure you’re feeling all right?” Gertie knelt beside her and put a hand on her forehead. “You’ve looked awfully pale since you got here.”
“Nothing a night in my own bed won’t cure.” She gave another half smile, then closed her eyes and took a deep breath. She would do this. She would make it through the rest of the day in the mining camp, and everything would be just fine.
Her father joined Gertie in front of Annabelle. “She did faint in the middle of Harrison Avenue yesterday. We all thought it was because her corset was too tight, but perhaps she is coming down with something.”
The concern in her father’s face undid her resolve. She couldn’t let him think that his last remaining child was in danger, too. He’d lost so much, and even though she was trying to be brave for his sake, she couldn’t have him thinking she was ill.
“Truly, I’m fine.” She stood, and at the same time, all the tears she’d been trying to hold back came rushing out. “I just want to go home. I don’t want to be here, where everything reminds me of everything I have lost.”
The only good thing about crying like this was that she couldn’t see anyone’s faces to read their expressions. Especially Joseph’s. Why his was the most important, she didn’t know. But as much as she’d like to save face in front of him, the dam had been breached, and she couldn’t stop any of it.
“I miss Susannah. I miss Peter. I miss Mark and John. I miss Mother. And I’m tired of pretending that it’s fine. It’s not fine.”
Nugget wrapped her arms around Annabelle’s legs. “It’s all right, Miss Annabelle. You can cry just like I did when I was missing my mama. It’s all right to miss your mama.”
The little girl’s kind words sent Annabelle to blubbering like a fool. She had said that very thing to Nugget. It’s all right to miss your mama. But she had no idea just how powerful those words were until someone said them to her.
Gertie stepped forward and wrapped her arms around her. “Oh, dear heart, I should’ve thought about that. Of course a young lady would miss—”
Annabelle tried to shrug off the embrace. “Please, Gertie, I can’t.”
But Gertie only squeezed her tighter, and the tears kept rolling down Annabelle’s cheeks faster and faster.
“You have to face this, my girl. You lost your mother, yes, but you have a lot of people who love you. You don’t have to lose us, too.”
Gertie’s words throbbed in Annabelle’s ears. Was that what she’d done? In shutting herself off from everything, could she have been making it worse?
Annabelle straightened, and moved out of Gertie’s embrace. This time, the older woman let her go. Annabelle turned and looked at her father, who held out a handkerchief.
“Thank you. I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to go on like that.” She blew her nose, an action that would horrify her mother, but she supposed her mother would be horrified by a lot of things she’d said and done lately.
Her father wrapped his arms around her. “No, don’t be sorry for your tears. I suppose I haven’t been very good at helping you grieve.”
He kissed the top of her head, the way he did when she was little, and held her tight. “Your mother would have known how to talk to you, but I... I don’t know what to say. I miss her more than you can imagine.”
Annabelle looked up. Examined the lines in her father’s face, noting for the first time that they’d deepened in recent months.
“You never told me.”
“I was trying to be strong for you.”
His words mirrored her own. Annabelle blinked away the tears. “And I was trying to be strong for you.”
Her father pulled a letter from his pocket, the familiar script staring out at her. Aunt Celeste.
“Your aunt has been begging me to let you visit. The Simms family offered to escort you, but I...”
A long sigh shook his body. “I haven’t been able to let you go. You’re hurting so much, and I can’t let you leave broken.”
“I’m always going to be broken if I’m here.” She looked around, noting that Joseph had taken the little girls closer to the fire, where they played with their dolls, and Joseph amiably chatted with Gertie and Polly.
She wanted to be able to interact with them. To talk like they did in the old days. But those days were gone, and nothing would ever be the same.
“No,” her father said softly. “You’re always going to be broken if you leave without fixing this.”
But he didn’t understand. It wasn’t hers to fix. Annabelle hadn’t broken anything. She was the one who had been broken.
Annabelle pulled out of his embrace and smoothed her skirts. “So what now? You won’t let me leave, and I can’t stay.”
Her father let out the exasperated sigh she’d grown too used to hearing. “Gertie has been asking us to come up for a while now. I’ve been making too many excuses. There are a number of parishioners I need to see and I haven’t been able to spend nearly the time I’d like up here caring for them.”
A familiar tightness closed around Annabelle’s lungs. “Please don’t ask me to—”
“I’m not asking, I’m telling.” Her father stood immovable. “This shouldn’t be a chore. You used to beg to spend more time here. No matter how many days you spent up here, you always wanted more. So for you to be so reluctant to stay up here—”
Her father looked her in the eyes, searching in a way that he hadn’t done before. “Annabelle, if there is some reason, other than you being upset over the loss in our family, then tell me. Otherwise, we’re staying. Long enough for
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