Her dreamâon her terms
With her own business, Cassie Godfrey is finally self-sufficient. But her plans are interrupted by four young orphansâand one persistent cowboy. If sheâll care for the children until their uncle claims them, Roper Jones will build Cassieâs house. To her business mind, the proposal makes sense. To her independent spirit, itâs a reminder of the commitments sheâs promised to avoid.
Roper canât help admiring Cassieâs pluck, even if heâs exasperated by her stubbornness. All he can offer Cassie is the love and acceptance she claims not to need. But dreams, like hearts, can change and grow...especially in a land made for brave new beginnings.
âCassie, if you need me you have only to holler,â Roper said.
âI wonât be hollering.â
âI expect not. But I feel better knowing anyone could and Iâll hear them.â
He meant the kids could call for him. âWhy would they need you when Iâll be right there in the same tent or whatever you want to call it?â
âNo reason. Just as thereâs no reason to get all prickly about it.â
âPrickly?â She swallowed hard. âIf I am itâs because you make me sound like I canât manage on my own.â
He held up his hands in a sign of protest. âIt never crossed my mind.â
âWell, then. So long as we understand each other.â She headed back to her site.
He chuckled softly and followed her. âOh, I get it.â
She ignored the note of triumph in his voice. How could he possibly comprehend? He had no idea of the events that had shaped her life and made her want nothing half as much as she wanted to be independent. Self-sufficient.âI donât need anyone,â she muttered.
âSounds mighty lonely to me.â
LINDA FORD
lives on a ranch in Alberta, Canada. Growing up on the prairie and learning to notice the small details it hides gave her an appreciation for watching God at work in His creation. Her upbringing also included being taught to trust God in everything and through everythingâa theme that resonates in her stories. Threads of another part of her life are found in her storiesâher concern for children and their future. She and her husband raised fourteen childrenâfour homemade, ten adopted. She currently shares her home and life with her husband, a grown son, a live-in paraplegic client and a continual (and welcome) stream of kids, kids-in-law, grandkids and assorted friends and relatives.
Owe no man anything, but to love one another.
âRomans 13:8
To families. To my children and their children.
May you build sweet memories, establish worthwhile traditions and grow in love and care for each other. I wish this for all families.
Chapter One
Eden Valley, Alberta
Summer 1882
Cassie Godfreyâs dream was about to come true. She could see it there before her eyes. She could smell it, and practically taste it. Twenty-five years old and she was finally about to become self-sufficient.
âIâm not sure this is a good idea.â The cowboy sitting next to her sounded worried but she dismissed his concern. Sheâd heard all the arguments she cared to hear.
âIâll be fine.â She jumped from the wagon seat and headed to the back where her things waited to be moved to her new home. Only one small problem remained. Or perhaps it was a large problem.
She had no house.
Roper Jones climbed down slowly, reluctantly. âWhere you planning to sleep?â
âEddie lent me a tent.â Sheâd spent the winter at Eden Valley Ranch where Eddie Gardiner was boss and had recently married Linette. When Linette had discovered Cassie living in the Montreal train station after the death of her husband, she had gathered Cassie under her wing and taken her to Eden Valley Ranch with her. After Linette and Eddie married, theyâd insisted Cassie was more than welcome to remain and share their big house but it was time for Cassie to move on. For months, ever since sheâd reached the Eden Valley Ranch, her dream had been growing. There was a time she thought a secure future meant depending on a man, but sheâd grown to see she didnât need a man to take care of her. She could take care of herself. It had become her dream and that dream was about to be realized.
âYouâre mighty determined.â Roperâs chuckle sounded a tiny bit regretful. He hoisted the tent and a couple of bags from the wagon and headed for the little patch of land Cassie had persuaded Mr. Macpherson to sell her. Heâd been reluctant about selling to a woman but she pointed out she was the head of her householdâalthough she refrained from mentioning it was a household of oneâand a widow, which entitled her to file on a homestead.
âGuess if the government would allow me to own one hundred and sixty acres for a homestead, I can buy a small lot.â Her words had persuaded him, and no one else had raised an objection.