A Woman on a Mission
The wagon train ride from Missouri to Kansas territory is rife with perils. But there are bigger obstacles for Dr. Victoria Fenway than cholera or creek floods. Years ago, she and wagon-train captain Joseph Rickard were deeply in love. Now, Victoria is tracking the man who killed her late husband, and she is determined to continue his work rescuing slaves. She canât allow herself to fall for Joseph againânot when he abandoned her once before.
Joseph told Victoria heâd love her forever, and heâs been as good as his word. Misunderstanding led to her marrying another man. But with dangerous slavers on their trail, heâll do anything to keep her safe until they reach a new homeâand a second chance.
âThings donât always turn out the way we want them to, do they?â Victoria asked softly.
Something in Josephâs gaze caught and held Victoria breathless. She looked away quickly, but for an instant ten years vanished and they were back on the deck of the riverboat on the Mississippi River, with the water splashing against the shore while she memorized every inch of his face.
âThis isnât the end,â heâd whispered. âIt canât be. Iâll never stop loving you.â
Then the whistle blew and the deck beneath them moved, and the years stacked atop each other once more. She blinked and shook the memory away, but not before she relived the heartbreak of loss. Not again. Never again. She couldnât bear to feel that kind of pain for a second time.
HANNAH ALEXANDER
is the pseudonym of husband-and-wife writing team Cheryl and Mel Hodde (pronounced âHoddeeâ). When they first met, Mel had just begun his new job as an E.R. doctor in Cherylâs hometown, and Cheryl was working on a novel. Cherylâs matchmaking pastor set them up on an unexpected blind date at a local restaurant. Surprised by the sneak attack, Cheryl blurted the first thing that occurred to her, âYouâre a doctor? Could you help me paralyze someone?â Mel was shocked. âOnly temporarily, of course,â she explained when she saw his expression. âAnd only fictitiously. Iâm writing a novel.â
They began brainstorming immediately. Eighteen months later they were married, and the novels they set in fictitious Ozark towns began to sell. The first novel in the Hideaway series won the prestigious Christy award for Best Romance in 2004.
Trust in the Lord forever, for the Lord,
the Lord himself, is the Rock eternal.
âIsaiah 26:4
This story is written in loving memory of Lorene B. Cook, Sept. 13, 1925, to Feb. 25, 2012, whose inner strength will live on in my characters as long as the stories exist.
Chapter One
Dr. Victoria Fenway sat beside her young assistant in the opening of her hostâs covered wagon, grinding herbs with mortar and pestle as she studied the tree-shrouded wilderness for a shadow, a shape or movement that might tell her their camp was being watched by a monster.
Broderick Thames, her husbandâs murderer, was indeed a monster, and he was here in the south of Missouri. She had no doubt of that. For the past few days, after discovering the first unique track of the killerâs fire-red horse, sheâd lived on the razor edge of fear. Heâd come this way for a reason, but why?
A screech of youthful male terror reached her from a distance. She jerked, startled, spilling powdered chamomile everywhere.
Her fourteen-year-old helper, Heidi Ladue, dropped her empty teabags and caught Victoria by the arm. âDr. Fenway, that sounds like Claude. Did you hear a splash?â
Victoria turned and tried to peer through the trees toward the roar of the flooded creek that had halted their journey today. âIn that torrent? How could anyone hear a single splash?â
Another cry reached them from the direction of the creek. âThe rope,â came a familiar voice. âHelp me, please! Get the rope.â
Heidi scrambled from her perch on the wagonâs edge, long strands of her flax-pale hair dangling over her shoulders and the calico ruffles of her sleeves. âThat is Claude. Heâs in trouble!â
Victoria shoved her work aside and leaped from beneath the canvas of the Ladue wagon. âWe donât have the ropes. Your mother tied the horses with them.â Theyâd been unable to form a corral with the wagons on this narrow strip of land between cliffs and overflowing creek.
She ran toward the trees in an effort to catch sight of Claude but all she could see was muddy, churning water between giant trunks of oak and broadleaf evergreens. Heidiâs younger brother was not a clumsy boy. Could Thames be nearby? Could that wicked man have pushed him?
Heidi clutched Victoriaâs arm and tugged. âHe was with the Johnston boys earlier. Please come, Dr. Fenway. They had a rope. They were trying to make a pulley out of it to get the wagon across the water.â