Man In the Woods: A Pair of Historical Romances
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High Society Twin Sisters & The Two Cowboy Brothers In Colorado - Two upper class twin sisters, used to high society life in North Carolina, take a chance for love and an adventure and travel to Colorado, with one already the fiancé of one brother, leaving a spare sister and brother to make do as best they can.
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Man In the Woods - Doreen Milstead
Man In the Woods: A Pair of Historical Romances
By
Doreen Milstead
Copyright 2016 Susan Hart
Walking To the Six Gun Samurai
Synopsis: Walking To the Six Gun Samurai - A cowboy with a ranch in Arizona sends for a mail order bride who arrives early and not realizing that his ranch is many miles away from the railway station, she sets out walking, and halfway there meets a stranger on horseback who is dressed in an unfamiliar style and carries guns and two swords in his belt. It’s here that her life takes on many challenges and adventures and a journey into love.
Ellen Parker was walking down the dusty road.
The road was supposed to lead to Morse Watkin’s ranch. As far as she could tell, the road led to more dust. It was a hot August day in the Idaho Territory and the mountains loomed in the background. Ellen was carrying a small traveling case and an umbrella in case it decided to rain. She didn’t think it would rain in this weather, but you could never tell in Idaho. She had been told by people before leaving New York that the weather out west tended toward the hot side, but it could be unpredictable.
Yes, there were plenty of deserts, but those deserts could get cold. And when they got cold they got deadly. The last thing you wanted to do was to be trapped out on the range in a windstorm when the temperature dropped. There were tales of people being found frozen in death years after it had happened. At least the War Between the States had been over for five years.
She didn’t think much would happen today. There was a better chance of dying from thirst. She had filled her canteen at the train station, but didn’t know how much longer she could last as the water had ran out an hour ago. Ellen put her bag and umbrella down and looked around. Somewhere there was a river in these parts, or so she had been told on the train up to the northern part of the territory.
Somewhere there was the border with Canada, but she didn’t think it was very close either. She couldn’t hear on sounds of running water, just the rustling of tumbleweeds as they rolled across the trail next to her. Wasn’t this place supposed to have those rocks which moved on their own, or was she thinking of some other location?
In this heat, you could start to imagine all sorts of things.
Ellen continued walking because she knew that there had to be something around here where a person could get a drink. There had to be a well or something resembling one in this place. How could a traveler make this distance across the hills without at least a creek to stop and relieve themselves?
She continued walking; hoping there would be a house, or something resembling one, upcoming.
No such luck.
She looked over the hill in front of her and saw a lone figure walking up the trail. Ellen said a prayer of thanks and began moving in the figure’s direction. Finally, someone who could help her. She hadn’t seen another human being since leaving the train station in Redknife, five miles back.
In addition, her feet were killing her.
The figure grew in size as she approached it. In the distance she could see the hills, a stark contrast to the path she was upon. Idaho Territory was full of contrasts and beauty. How she had ended up in this place was a story in itself, which she might tell her children someday, providing she had some again. Ellen tried to suppress the memory of her former family from her mind, but it was difficult.
She had lived outside Boston with her husband. They were a humble but loving family. She was just twenty-two when they married three years earlier and her husband had been a physician in a town outside Boston treating the old and infirm when an epidemic struck. It had taken him and their daughter from her in less than two weeks. She found herself reduced to poverty as Ellen had depended on her husband for money. She managed to learn to cook and clean from a neighbor, but it wasn’t the sort of living someone could depend upon if they wanted to survive.
A chance glance at a local paper had shown it to have a listing for matrimonial advertisements. There were plenty of farmers and ranchers in the western states who needed a woman to take care of them. She began a correspondence with Morse Watkin, a rancher in the Idaho Territory and soon she had accepted his offer of marriage.
Morse was a man who had traveled all over the world and this intrigued her. She was fascinated by his tales of sailing to the empire of Japan and the shores of China. He told her that he’d learned much from the Japanese people and it helped him in his daily life. She couldn’t understand what he meant by this, but decided she would find out soon enough.
It took her weeks of traveling through the United States. Ellen traveled by carriage, rail and boat to reach the little town of Sagebrush Creek. It didn’t even have a train station; she was forced to depart at the station in Redknife. She had neglected to tell her future husband just where she was going to meet him, unsure of the exact time of arrival. Ellen had brought along enough money for the trip, but decided she would let him know after she had arrived where she was staying.
To her Bostonian mind, no civilized place could survive without a decent inn or hotel. However she had seen many uncivilized places on her journey across the country and understood what she took for granted on the East Coast of the US was a luxury in many places.
So, when she left the train at Redknife, the first thing Ellen did was to walk up to the stationmaster’s booth and ask him for the direction to Sagebrush Creek. He pointed down the road next to the station and told her twelve miles.
Twelve miles,
Ellen said to him. But that will take me all day to walk.
Yep,
said the stationmaster and went back to smoking his corncob pipe. And you better get started now if you want to make it by dusk.
Can’t I hire a driver,
she asked him.
You could,
he told her, if we had one around. Honey, this town doesn’t get enough traffic to support a saloon. I don’t know why they even put a stop here.
She walked out of the station and looked around. There was a road leading into the distance, two shacks and an empty store. This was the only station close to Sagebrush Creek, she imagined. Ellen wanted to put down her traveling case and cry. She had a map with her and consulted it.
Indeed, the settlement she was supposed to meet her husband at was over ten miles away and there was nothing between it