MILITARY ROMANCE: The War Within Himself (Alpha Bad Boy Marine Army Seal) (Contemporary Military Suspense & Thriller Romance) (181 page)

BOOK: MILITARY ROMANCE: The War Within Himself (Alpha Bad Boy Marine Army Seal) (Contemporary Military Suspense & Thriller Romance)
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Chapter 17

 


Vill du gifta dig med mig
, Elise?” Moya asked, holding her hand as she sat beside him on the bed. Then he repeated the words in English. “
Vill
you marry me? I love you more than life itself, and I
vant
to spend
de
rest of my life
vit
you.”

She smiled. “I know for sure now, Moya. I love you, too.
Ja, jag kommer gifta mig med dig
. I will
absolutely
marry you. I don’t have a single reservation about it.”

“But I can’t use my hand
vell
. I can’t support you right now.”

“Then I’ll support you until you either heal or learn a new trade. You told me that you wanted to be a woodworker. Surely, you wouldn’t need nearly as much strength in your hand for that profession. Why don’t you try it?”

“Before we marry,
dere’s
someting
you should know.”

“About Lars?” Moya nodded, and Elise added, “I already know. He is the one who attacked you. I won’t say anything about it because he released me. As long as he never bothers you again, I will keep silent on the matter. But, I’m warning you, if he tries to hurt you again, I
will
report it to the sheriff and Dr. Frey.”


Tank,
Elise.”

“You’re welcome. As soon as Dr. Frey gives his permission for you to be mobile again, we’ll get married in a small service, right here in this house. We’ll start our life where our love bloomed.”

“But Stina and Karin?” he asked in concern. “
Vat vill
become of
dem
?”

Pouting in the extreme, Elise teased him. “You’ve become a different man since your
accident
, Moya. You’re not nearly as cheerful.”

Apparently, he didn’t understand that she was taunting him, because he answered in a serious tone. “Does
dat bodder
you? If it does, you should know
dat
I can’t help it. The laudanum does funny
tings
to my mind. I sleep a lot, too.”

“You need that sleep to recover. Besides, I was just teasing you. You’ll get back to yourself someday. I have no doubt. Now, as to Stina and Karin, they can find their own man. The one lying in my bed is taken.”

THE END

Stina and the Decision

 

 

A Mail Order Bride Western

Book 3

(Can be read as a standalone book)

 

 

 

 

 

 

By: D.D. Boone

 

Stina and the Decision

Prologue

“I know what you did, Lars,” Stina Bengtson told Lars Olson. “I heard Elise and Moya talking about it.”

“You know nothing,” he replied.

“I’m sorry if you don’t believe me, but if they ever decide to tell Sheriff Douglas, I can testify at trial.”

“Your English,” he said, “is awfully good when you want to bribe somebody.”

Stina smiled. She was proud of the fact that she knew a great deal of English. Swedish was her native language, but Elise Anderson Sten had taught her well in Bishop Hill. Granted, she still had an accent, but she pronounced most of the words properly. That didn’t concern her conversation with Lars, though, and he was just stalling.

“It’s not a bribe,” Stina said. “It’s blackmail. And I’m not doing either. I’m just warning you about what I know.”

“You would choose their side of the story over mine.”

“I don’t know your side, and it doesn’t matter. I only need to know what I heard.”

Lars stalked out of the washhouse he’d helped other men in the town build for Stina so she wouldn’t have to go from one house to another for her job. The blond for whom she’d left Bishop Hill, Illinois, was furious with her, but she didn’t care. He would eventually come to realize that she’d only told him for his protection.

When Elise had received the letter from Lars to come to Forestville, Stina had basically invited herself to join Elise on the trip. She’d been interested in Lars for months before he left, but he’d been courting Elise. Maybe, she’d thought, Elise would find a different man, and she could have Lars. Then again, maybe she could find a better man of her own than the one who had been courting her in Bishop Hill.

That man, whose name she refused to even think, had ruined her faith in all men, except Lars. Lars had always treated Elise with respect, and Stina had loved watching them court.

With a sigh, Stina took some hot water from the stove and poured it into the washtub. She needed to get back to work. Actually, she didn’t mind the work nearly as much as she’d thought she would. If she was having a bad day or was angry about something, she could scrub the heck out of the denim material the men wore for work, and it was almost always men who used her services.

She’d met many nice men in town, but none of them came up to her expectations—only Lars. But then again, she’d wanted to be with him for a long time, she could be a biased because she had loved Lars from afar for so long.

Then a new man came to town.

Chapter 1

 

Exhaustion overwhelmed Stina as she opened the door to the home she shared with her sister Karin and Elise Johnson. Elise was getting married soon, though, and then it would be just the sisters.

She opened the door and strode into the house. Across the room, a redheaded woman glanced at Elise.

“Hi, Stina,” Elise said. “How was work today?”

“Tiring,” Stina replied, her gaze going from the flame-haired woman to the red-haired man. “I guess you’re Bridget, but I’m afraid I don’t know your name.”

Rising, he took three long steps to stand before her. “Michael O’Riley. And you are?”

“Stina Bengtson,” she replied with a shy smile.

“I’m please to meet you, Miss Bengtson.” He took her hand, bent over as he lifted it, and pressed his lips against her dry, cracked hand.

His soft lips against her rough skin caused her to wonder how he could possibly want to do that. All the lye in the soaps she used had taken its toll on her skin to the point that even
she
didn’t like to touch it. Thankfully, his gentle kiss lasted only a moment before he released her and stood erect.

“Yes, it’s nice to meet you,” Bridget said. “You live here with Elise, right?”


Ja
,” Stina replied, ready to get away from everybody, “and I should go clean up and change for dinner. I saw Karin headed this way with Jared and Emily, Elise. They should be here soon.”

And Stina escaped into her room. She was so embarrassed by her appearance she could scarcely bear being in everybody’s company. Coming home from work with Moya there was bad enough, but in front of company, she felt as though she was a street urchin breaking into the house.

Staring into the mirror, she shook her head. Her light blonde hair was coming from her chignon; her dress, although damp on the skirt, was covered with dirt from the men’s work clothes. She was more embarrassed than she’d ever been.

As she took off her dress to change her clothes, she thought about how nice Michael O’Riley seemed. He was quite attractive with that red wavy hair and those bright green eyes. In fact, she’d never seen such green eyes. And Michael was tall, shorter than Moya but taller than Lars.

Pulling the pins from her hair, she released her chignon and let her nearly waist-length hair cascade down her back. After putting on a clean dress, she picked up her brush and ran it through her hair until all of the snarls were out of it.

She washed her face off with the warm water Elise put in her room every night just before she got home. Had she ever told Elise how much she appreciated that? If not, she should.

After drying her face on the nearby towel, she studied herself in her mirror. At least, she looked presentable now. Turning to leave the room, she hesitated.

Michael O’Riley seemed like a very nice man, and he actually appeared to be a bit interested in her. If she could get him to court her, maybe Lars would want her, just like he had wanted Elise more once Moya had started courting her.

With a thought, she returned to her mirror and took her rouge from the dresser beneath it. She applied just a little bit of color to her cheeks and lips. Then her gaze fell on a larger jar on the dresser. Picking it up, she opened it. She hadn’t used this mixture for several weeks, but it might be time to begin using the concoction again. Glad that she still had a little left, she dipped her fingers in to the lotion and worked it into her hands. They started to feel better already.

Finally, she put the lid back on the jar and left the room. By now everyone had assembled in the sitting area. Almost the moment she joined them, Mike scrambled to his feet. Elise announced that they were just waiting for the biscuits to be done and dinner would be ready. Then Elise and Karin went to set the long table they had borrowed from Jared’s house.

“Here, Miss Benson,” Mike said extending his arm toward the Victorian chair he’d abandoned, “you take my chair.”

“Thank you,” she replied, sitting down before he sat on the arm of the chair, “but my last name is Bengtson.”

“I’m sorry. So is your real name Christina?”

“No, it’s Stina. I didn’t want to change it when I came here from Sweden. Why don’t you just call me that?”

“Thank you, I will. But now you must call me Mike.”

“I’ll be happy to, Mike. What brought you to Forestville?”

Mike explained that he wanted to open a newspaper office, that for many years it had been his dream to be a journalist, even though he had been a banker in New York. So he had decided to take the opportunity to join his sister Bridget on the journey to keep her safe and keep her company during the long trip.

“What brought you into the house looking like something the cat dragged in?” Mike asked cheerfully at the end of his explanation.

“I own and operate the washhouse,” she replied.

“I must say, you turned from a street urchin into a lovely, young lady in only a few minutes,” Mike praised.

“Dinner’s ready,” Elise called to everyone. “Come and get it.”

At the table, Mike held Stina’s chair and pushed it under her as she sat down. She was a bit embarrassed by his manners, especially considering the other men didn’t do the same. Bridget and Jared conversed quietly across the table from her, and Karin, who sat between Jared and Emily, watched with a loving smile as Emily chatted in Swedish with Moya at the end of the table. Elise sat at the opposite end of the table, and Mike sat down next to Stina.

Stina ate in silence until Karin, who still used some Swedish pronunciation, began a conversation with her. “Tell me, Stina. I heard you correct Mike on how to say your last name.
Vy
don’t you
yust
change to Benson like I did?”

“Because,” Stina said, struggling to control her irritation so Mike didn’t see it, “my name isn’t even Bengtson. It’s Klausdotter. I never wanted to change it. Papa made me.”

“It wasn’t Papa, Stina, and you know it. The immigration people said we had to do it.”

“Papa
let
them, Karin.”

“It doesn’t sound like you wanted to move to America,” Mike observed. “You must have loved it in Sweden.”

“I had very good friends there,” Stina replied. “I never wanted to leave, but our parents made us.”

“I was thrilled to come to America. I was sure my life would change for the better.”

“Did it?”

“It absolutely did,” Mike said. “I’ve earned enough money to do what I love, and I’m on my way to making it happen. Why don’t you tell me what you like about Sweden?”

By the time Mike left that night, Stina knew without a doubt that he was interested in her. They had chatted for two hours after dinner was done—until Stina insisted that she had to get some sleep so she would be able to work in the morning. Only then did Mike lightly kiss the back of her hand and say good night.

Chapter 2

 

The next morning, Stina recalled the previous evening. Mike had been the perfect gentleman, holding her chair, opening the door when they decided to talk on the porch, linking her arm in his as they took a walk for a while. He even left as soon as she said that it was probably time for her to go to bed.

Would she see him that day? She hoped so, but she couldn’t be sure. He knew where she worked, but he didn’t know where the washhouse was. Of course, he could easily find it, considering almost every man in town had his laundry done there.

She found herself hoping that he would seek her out and take her mind off her work for a while that day. He could talk to her while she hung up the laundry, or maybe he would offer to take some of the drudgery off her hands and scrub some of the filthy dungarees on the washboard. That would be one of the nicest things he could do for her.

“What are you thinking about this morning?” a man asked from nearby.

Stina looked over at the blond man falling into step beside her. “Good morning, Lars. How are you today?”

“I’m fine,” Lars replied, “but you seem like you’re in another city. Do you have something important on your mind?”

“Not really. I was just thinking about dinner last night. Elise’s friends got here from New York City, and we had them over so Jared and Bridget could get to know each other in a casual setting. Elise didn’t want them just thrown together in marriage. She wanted them to be comfortable.”

“Is that the bride she wrote to for Jared?”


Ja
. Elise’s plan seemed to work, too. They didn’t have any trouble talking together.”


You
didn’t seem to have any trouble talking last night, either,” he said accusingly.

Stina shot her startled glance to his face. His blue eyes were narrowed in irritation—or anger. She wasn’t sure which it was. The expression on his face was one she’d never seen before, and she wasn’t sure she wanted to see it again.

Finally, she managed to force out a response. “I’m not sure I know what you’re talking about.”

“I’m talking about the redhead you were walking with last night. I saw you two chatting away, looking at each other like you were star-crossed lovers.”

“Don’t be silly, Lars,” Stina replied. “That’s Bridget’s brother. I was just keeping him company while Bridget and Jared were getting to know each other.”

Stina had no idea why she’d told Lars that. She knew it was a lie, but she didn’t want him to know that she found Mike quite so charming. On second thought, maybe she did know why. If Lars thought that another man was pursuing her, maybe he would do the same, and she could win him over. If he thought he had competition, he might just ask to be her suitor, which is what she’d wanted ever since Elise had introduced her to him.

“You’d better be careful around him,” Lars warned. “I saw the look in his eyes. I think he wants to bed you. In fact, there’s not a doubt in my mind. If you gave him just a little bit of encouragement, he would do it.”

Stina sighed and shook her head. “You’re being ridiculous, Lars. Mike was a complete gentleman. In fact, I don’t believe I’ve ever met a man who has manners like his.”

“Well, you need to stay away from him.”

Unable to resist, she laughed. “Lars, you’re just jealous. Mike is nothing more than a new friend, and I have no intention of staying away from him if we happen to run into each other and want to chat.”

“You’d better,” he warned ominously as he strode away from her.

Was that a threat?
Stina thought with an involuntary shiver. Or was it just a jealous man expressing that she was his? Either way, she didn’t like the tone in his voice, and she liked the look in his eyes even less.

Both concerned her, given what he had done to Moya. Would Lars hurt her? Surely not. Although, there was that time when she saw him come out of a dark alley after she got finished with her late one night. The next morning a prostitute had been found beaten into unconsciousness in that same alley. Had Lars done that? Would he really hurt a woman?

No, she couldn’t believe he would do such a thing. He’d never even indicated in Bishop Hill that he would. That had to have been a coincidence.

Taking the key to the washhouse from her pocket, Stina opened the door. She was mad that Lars had told her what she should do, and she would take her anger out on the dungarees she needed to wash that day.

***

Nearly two weeks passed before Stina saw Mike again, this time at the weddings of Elise to Moya and Bridget to Jared. They stood side by side, watching the ceremony in silence. On the other side of Stina, Karin struggled to keep Emily, who was thrilled to have a new mommy, under control. The child was so excited that she wanted to be right in the middle of everything.

Stina smiled at Emily. The dark-haired imp, as she was being then, had never had a mother. In fact, according to Karin, who worked for Jared, poor Emily’s mother had never even held her.

If she ever had children, Stina thought as the two couples exchanged their vows, she would dote on them. If she discovered she was dying during childbirth, she would demand to have the baby placed on her chest so she could feel it.

Shaking the notion from her head, she tried to focus on the ceremony. She shouldn’t be thinking about that, anyway. She wasn’t married, or even pregnant, thank goodness, after her time with Nels Osterberg in Bishop Hill.

What would Lars think if he knew that she’d been with Nels? Would he still be jealous of Mike? On second thought, Mike was such a gentleman that he would probably not want anything more to do with her. Of course, he had already backed away from her after that one evening. He’d probably already decided that she was too young for him. She absently wondered how old he was.

“By the power of God, I now pronounce you husbands and wives. You may kiss your brides.”

Suddenly back to reality, Stina watched as Moya swept Elise into his arms and gave her a passionate kiss. Jared, however, kissed Bridget on the lips quickly, without embracing her.

Stina thought that was odd, but she reasoned, it was an arranged marriage. Jared was probably reluctant to hug Bridget in public.

An arm draped around her shoulder, and Stina looked over to the hand handing over her left shoulder. She turned her gaze to Mike’s smiling face.

“I love a good wedding,” he said. “What about you?”

“I’m afraid my mind was wandering,” she admitted.

“I told Bridget that, after the ceremony, I would take them over to the newspaper office, which is in the process of being built. Would you like to join us?”

Stina couldn’t believe she was saying this, because she truly wanted to join them. “I’m afraid I can’t. I didn’t get my work done yesterday, and I have some clothes to finish ironing.”

“I understand,” he replied, removing his arm. “When will you be done? I could come by and walk you over to the office to show it to you later.”

“I would like that,” she said, “but I’m not sure when I’ll get done. Besides, you don’t even know where the washhouse is.”

“Of course, I do. I’ve watched you working several times, but you always seem so involved in what you’re doing that I haven’t wanted to bother you.”

Stunned, Stina stared up at him. He had been there? He had watched her? She’d had no idea because she always got deep into her thoughts while she worked.

“And if you’re interested,” Mike said, interrupting her thoughts, “we could have dinner at the hotel restaurant afterward.”

She gave him a quick smile then said, “You saw what I look like when I’m done working. I would be a mess to eat at a restaurant.”

“Ah, but I listened to you. You’re just ironing. You should look just fine.”

An elbow in her ribs caused Stina to turn toward her sister. Karin urged her on. “Go with him.”

“See?” Mike said, drawing Stina’s attention back to him. “Even Karin thinks you should agree.”

“All right,” Stina finally agreed. “I suppose it will take me about three hours to finish my work.”

“Very good. I’ll come to the washhouse in about three hours to get you.” Mike turned away from her and toward his sister. “Are you ready, Bridget Coleman?”

Stina watched without a word as Mike, Bridget and Jared left the church. As badly as Stina wanted to go with them, she did have work to finish from the previous week; she hadn’t just used it as an excuse. She hugged Elise and wished her and Moya the best in Swedish then headed over to the washhouse.

BOOK: MILITARY ROMANCE: The War Within Himself (Alpha Bad Boy Marine Army Seal) (Contemporary Military Suspense & Thriller Romance)
4.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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