A New Life...In a New World
Traveling to Canadaâs Northwest Territories is a thrilling opportunity for Linette Edwardsâand her chance to escape a dreaded marriage in England. Sheâs more than eager to accept Eddie Gardinerâs written invitation. How could she know that Eddie thinks heâs marrying not Linette, but her friend, Margaret?
Eddie planned for a well-bred bride whoâd help prove his worth to his father. Instead heâs saddled with a ragamuffin stranger and the little boy in her care. Heâll shelter them until springtime and no longer. But before the snow clears, his heart is thawing tooâ¦and hoping this makeshift family can find a permanent home together.
âWhile you are here, I expect you to conduct yourself wisely and in a ladylike fashion,â Eddie said.
Linetteâs nostrils flared. âYou mean play the lady of the manor.â
He had his doubts as to whether she even knew how a lady conducted herself. Like his father said, the Edwards family didnât fit in. Softly he asked, âHow do you see your role here?â
She ducked her head so he was unable to see her expression. âI suppose I thought you meant to marry me.â She lifted her head and faced him with her eyes flashing courage and challenge. âI will make a good pioneer wife.â
âI never got your letter, or I could have warned you Iâm not desperate for a wife. Besides, you canât simply substitute one woman for another as if they are nothing more than horses.â
âWhy not? Are you madly in love with Margaret?â
Love? There was no such thing as love in an arrangement like theirs. âWe suited each other.â
âShe doesnât seem to share your view of suitability.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.
I have set before thee an open door,
and no man can shut it.
âRevelation 3:8
Without cowboys our part of the world would be a much different place. This story is dedicated to the cowboys of the West and those who love them.
To both past and present cowboys and to those who entertain at the greatest outdoor show in the world: the Calgary Stampede, which celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2012. Thank you.
Chapter One
Northwest Territories, Canada
October 1881
For the first time she was about to meet Eddie Gardiner. The man she intended to marry. The answer to her prayers.
Linette Edwards parted the curtains on the stagecoachâmeant to keep out the dust and cold. The first few days of their trip, dust had filtered through them, and now cold with the bite of a wild beast filled every inch of the tiny coach. Four adults and a child huddled against the elements.
âYouâre letting in the cold,â her traveling companion complained.
âI fear we are in for an early snowstorm,â one of the male passengers said.
Linette murmured an apology but she managed to see the rolling hills and the majestic mountains before she dropped the curtain back in place. Since theyâd left Fort Benton, headed for the ranch lands of the Northwest Territories of Canada, sheâd peered out as much as she could. The mountains, jagged and bold, grew larger and larger. A song filled her heart and soul each time she saw them. This was a new country. She could start over. Be a different person than sheâd been forced to be in England. Here she would be allowed to prove she had value as a person. She ignored the ache at how her parents viewed herâas a commodity to be traded for business favors.
She shifted her thoughts to the letter of invitation hidden safely in the cavernous pocket of the coat sheâd acquired in Fort Benton. She longed to pull it out and read it again though she had memorized every word. Come before winter.
âI expect more than a shack,â her friend Margaret had fumed when sheâd read an earlier letter from the same writer. âAfter all, he comes from a very respectable family.â With bitterness edging each word, Margaret read the letters describing the cabin Eddie assured her was only temporary quarters. âTemporary? Iâm sure he doesnât know the meaning of the word. A year and a half heâs been there and he still lives in this hovel.â