Train Station Bride - 1887 Julia Crawford, Boston debutante, corresponds
with an aging shopkeeper and travels to South Dakota to marry him, hoping to escape
the ridicule she endures as the plump, silly daughter of one of Boston’s
premiere families. What happens when the train station groom is not who Julia
bargained for? Will her secrets keep her from love and acceptance? Or will Julia’s
love be strong enough to conquer her past and give her the future she’s always
dreamed of?
Boston 1887
“Really, Julia, do hurry,”
Jane Crawford said to her daughter still seated at the ivory lace-covered
vanity. “The guests are arriving, and you should be there to greet them.”
Julia
Crawford smiled up at her mother with resignation. This was a battle she did
not need to win. She would make no argument.
“I’ll be down shortly, Mother. Jolene and
Jennifer are there. Our guests are here to see them, not me. Has Jillian gone
down?”
“She is standing with your father at the door,”
her mother replied.
“I’ll
be down in a moment, then. Do go down to the guests. You know how father fusses
when you leave him alone,” Julia said as she spun a blonde curl around her
finger.
Her
mother glided to the door and closed it softly. Julia cocked her ear, waiting
for the soft patter of her mother’s slippers on the steps. Only then did she
pull the gold chain from her neck and insert the key that hung from it in a
gilded jewel box. With a final glance at
her bedroom door, Julia pulled a white envelope from the case and unfolded the
letter it held.
Dear
Miss Crawford,
I will be at the train
station to meet you on the appointed day. My mother and I look forward to your
arrival. I will stay above my shop until the day of our marriage. My mother has
graciously allowed you to stay with her during that time. She is pleased to
know you do needlepoint. Her arthritic hands no longer allow her to sew, and
she is most anxious to have another woman about. I am anxious as well . . .
Julia read to the last line
even though she could have recited the letter as if it were the Lord’s Prayer. Very
truly, Mr. Jacob Snelling. The day
would arrive for her to depart sooner than she both hoped and dreaded. Mr.
Snelling was a successful shop owner, near fifty years old, with an aging
mother in a small South Dakota town. He had never married. His mother had begun
to complain of a lack of company, and he admitted he was lonely. Those two
forces had led him to place an ad for a wife in the Boston Globe nearly a year
ago. And to Julia’s shock she had answered it. Their correspondence had been
proper, more formal than she had expected from a merchant in the Midwest.
That formality had been a
great comfort to her. It was what she was accustomed to. And he sounded like a
truly nice man. He had great regard for his mother, of that Julia was certain. His
letters were filled with news of the aging Portentia Snelling and that always
brought comfort to Julia when she was most terrified of what she was embarking
on. A man so devoted to his own mother would certainly be kind to her. Julia
rose from the vanity seat with a smile on her face. One more formal evening
with her family could not deter her now.
Julia was not sure of the
sentiment only a few minutes later. She greeted a few guests and found an
unoccupied chair in the corner of the library. She had spent much of the day
arranging the fresh flowers that now filled the room. It had kept her mind and
hands occupied while her sisters fussed over their wardrobe and their mother
had scolded the servants over some small matter. Without distractions, the day
would have dragged on, and she would have dwelled on a decision her mind had
yet to grasp. Julia gazed absently about the room.
Her older sister, Jolene,
married now ten years with a beautiful, fair child, sashayed about on the arm
of her husband, Turner Crenshaw. Julia’s younger sister, Jennifer, nearly
twenty-one, sat amidst a bevy of Boston’s first sons, laughing sweetly and
tilting her head just so. It was most certainly the sin of envy that would lead
her straight to Hades in the afterlife.
Julia felt no jealousy,
though, as her eyes found Jillian. The baby of the family. Jillian would spend
the first hour of the party with the adults and then be whisked away to her
rooms. Only ten-years-old and already beautiful enough to turn male heads.
Dressed in navy velvet with a cream-colored lace collar to match her hair,
Julia was certain Jillian was the fairest of the Crawford family. Even at her
young age she was a model of deportment and graciousness with a gay laugh and
shining blonde hair. Julia would miss her most of all.
The Crawford women were all
tall and slender except Julia. She was no higher than her father’s tiepin at
fourteen and still exactly the same height at twenty-seven. Julia snatched
three shrimp from the young serving girl’s tray as she passed and laid them
beside four chocolate bon-bons in the napkin on her lap. Julia preferred to
refer to herself as pleasingly plump, or on the days before her monthly courses,
as a fat, frothy, ugly spinster with perfectly beautiful siblings and parents.
Julia
was licking chocolate from her fingers when she saw her mother staring. Jane
Crawford excused herself from her guests gracefully, as she did everything in
life, Julia had long ago decided. Gracefully floating, serene and above the
clutter and clamor of normal living. She had attempted to instill that elegance
to each of her children. Julia was certain her mother considered her second
daughter her greatest failure.
“Julia,
use a napkin,” Jane chided and turned her head to view the crowd in their
formal sitting room. “Alred McClintok
has been hoping to speak to you all evening. Why don’t you quit hiding in this
corner and go talk to him?”
Julia
dabbed chocolate from the corner of her mouth and looked at the man her mother
was referring to. Did everyone assume that plump women were only attracted to
fat men? One of the reasons Julia continued writing Mr. Snelling was because of
his description of himself early on in their writing. I am of medium height
and very thin. Dear Mama worries I am ill, but Dr. Hammish assures me . . .
Alred McClintok was busy stuffing canapés in his mouth, leaving a trail of
grease around his fleshy red lips. He reminded Julia of a large black ball
propped on two very stubby sticks.
“I’m
perfectly happy here, Mother. Your party seems a rousing success,” Julia said.
Changing subjects had been a tact Julia had used successfully when conversation
turned her direction, especially with her father and Jennifer. Her mother and
Jolene, however, rarely allowed such a diversion unless it was to their
advantage.
Julia
knew she had failed when her mother gave her a glare she was long accustomed
to. The icy blue of her mother’s eyes and the pinched shell of her mouth
screamed spinster, on the shelf, and a long list of other shortcomings without
saying a word.
“Mr.
McClintok is an associate of your father’s, dear. We must always endeavor to
make your father’s business prosperous. Household expenses only seem to rise,
rather than fall,” her mother said.
The
veiled reference to Julia’s dependence on her parent’s home did not escape her.
She also knew her family’s business was very successful. Feeding and clothing
her would never send them to the poor house. Julia glanced at the shrimp still
lying in the napkin on her lap. Maybe she’d best go speak to the man. Nothing
would come of a quick introduction and might keep her from expanding her
waistline yet another inch. If he spit lamb on her gown, she could go to her
rooms to change and not emerge until morning. Or she would slip to her room via
the servant’s staircase in the kitchen and check her bags already packed and
stacked in the dressing room of her bedroom. On the morrow there would be only
three days until she departed.
Julia
had hoarded every bit of silver she could for her trip. The letter to her
family was written, as well as a separate one for Jillian. Their maid, Eustace,
would give them out when she didn’t arrive home from a weeklong visit with Aunt
Mildred. By that time she would be married, and there would be nothing her
family could do.
Jolene
would roll her eyes. Jennifer would be sad. Not for long, though. Her father
would rant and rave. Her mother’s fury would be hidden behind a glassy stare.
Though, all in all, Julia was sure they would be glad she was gone. They would
never voice the sentiment, for certain. Would be gauche to admit this final lapse
in judgment would, thankfully, be the last, in their company at the least. They
would tell friends Julia was on an extended holiday at Aunt Mildred’s. Just as
they had done before. Soon no one would inquire as to when she would be coming
home. Her family least of all.
The
only person other than their housekeeper, Eustace, who would miss her would be
Jillian. No more long walks in the park. No more reading together by
candlelight with the rest of the household long abed. No more brushing the
girls’ silken hair till the child’s eyes drooped. Jane Crawford supposed
Jillian preferred Julia’s company because Julia often acted with the sense of a
ten-year-old rather than a woman. Julia would insist that Jillian loved the
freedom to just be herself in Julia’s company. For whichever reason, they would
miss each other desperately.
But
it was long past time that Julia did something for herself. Make something of
herself. Even if it was to only be a wife to a thin, balding Midwesterner and a
companion for his mother. She could have lived indefinitely with Aunt Mildred.
Her aunt had written her as much. Julia loved the woman and her aunt adored
her, but Mildred at seventy-two had an active life with other widowers in the
seaside town she lived in. And a beau in his eighty-fourth year. As Mrs. Jacob
Snelling, she was someone of her own making. Someone’s wife. Something no one
could take away from her.
Awakened
from her daydreaming, Julia realized her mother had drifted on. She let out a
sigh of relief and rose from her chair, having made her obligatory appearance
and feeling quite content to reread Mr. Snellings’s letter until she fell
asleep. Her escape to the kitchens was thwarted by Jolene.
“Julia,
come here,” her elder sister said hurriedly. When Julia was within arms reach,
Jolene pulled her close. “I do believe Mr. McClintok would love to talk to you.
Stay right here with Turner, and I’ll fetch him.”
Before
Julia could form a reply, Jolene was off in a whirl of pale blue silk. Julia
looked at her brother-in-law from the corner of her eye. “Hello, Turner.”
“Ah,
how are you, Julia?” Turner asked.
Turner
Crenshaw was strikingly handsome. And rich. He and Jolene made a very
attractive couple, much in demand at social functions. Jolene’s throaty laugh
and elegance combined with Turner’s good looks and business success made them the
couple to emulate. Turner was always comfortable and in command, other than
when he was forced to converse with his wife’s rather eccentric and spinster
sister.
“I’m fine, Turner. Thank you for asking. How
is William?” Julia asked.
“Quite
the little man, already,” Turner replied with a smile.
The
ensuing silence stretched on. As usual they had little to say to one another. Julia
never pictured Turner as the brother she never had. Exactly the opposite, in
fact. There was nothing sisterly about how her heart raced when Turner’s face
broke into a beautiful smile. This was
the most compelling reason to board that westbound train. She wasn’t eccentric.
She was pitiful. Pining after her sister’s husband, year after year.
“William
is so handsome already. He’ll break hearts all over Boston, I fear,” she said.
Turner
agreed with a nod and gazed over the crowd, stopping as his wife leaned her
head back to laugh. “With a mother as lovely as Jolene, I had little fear our
children would not be beautiful.” Turner tilted his head and stared at his wife
with passion and reverence. “She is the perfect mother, the perfect hostess. I
am indeed a lucky man.”
Julia
swallowed and turned to him with a shaky smile. “My sister is accomplished. The
essence of all my mother’s work. But Jolene is lucky as well.”
Turner’s
face reddened slowly from his neck to his ears. “Julia, I did not mean to go on
so about her.”
Jolene
arrived with her prize in tow. “Julia, darling. Have you been introduced to Mr.
McClintok?” Jolene said as she clutched Julia’s arm. “I know you would just
love to meet him.”
Jolene
loved everything. Her new hat. Her
son. Crisp stationary. Hard working servants. Her husband. Julia didn’t understood
how Jolene bandied about a word such as love without an ounce of insight to its
meaning.
“A
pleasure, Mr. McClintok,” Julia said.
Alred
McClintok shifted his plate overflowing with teacakes to the hand already
holding a crystal champagne glass. “Miss Crawford,” he said with a meaty smile.
“Alred
here is making quite a name for himself at Federal Bank. Up and coming, you
know,” Turner said and winked at Julia. “I hear his home on Monfort Street has
fourteen bedrooms.”
Julia
smiled wanly as the rotund man rubbed his tongue over his gums. Turner and
Jolene’s measure of success was money and what it bought. They always
introduced people with a clear indication of their status in the financial
world. As if she cared one fig that the piggish man had seven hundred bedrooms.
She would never be in any of them.
“I
hear your stables are extraordinary,” Jolene added for good measure.
The
fat man’s head bobbed. “Yes, yes. I’ve managed to assemble some of the
handsomest and most valuable stock in Boston.”
The
three of them turned to Julia expectantly. As if she should respond, ‘Yes, I’ll
marry you. You have nice horses, and I’m twenty seven, unmarried and a hair
over weight.’ Julia watched her sister’s mouth turn from a beautiful smile to a
grim expectant line. She had to say something. Hopefully something as witty and
charming as Jolene or Jennifer would.
“You
don’t say,” Julia replied.
Jolene’s
shoulders dropped, their alabaster skin sinking further into white lace. Turner
glanced absently around the room. He had done his duty, Julia supposed. She
tried to suppress the embarrassment she felt when Turner was witness to one of
these humiliating scenes. Her head snapped up when Alred McClintok belched. He
smiled at her and drank the rest of his champagne. Julia’s mouth tightened, and
she supposed those up-and-coming souls with Turner and Jolene Crenshaw at their
sides had no need of good manners.
“A ‘pardon me’ would do just fine,” Julia
said.
Alred
McClintok sputtered and hurried away as Turner reached for his wife’s arm.
Jolene faced her sister. “Really, Julia. Is it necessary to be rude?”
“Rude?”
Julia asked. “He belched in my face without so much as an ‘excuse me’.”
Turner
took hold of Jolene’s elbow as if to guide her away. Jolene glared at her
husband. “I believe Father needs you, Turner.” Jolene dropped her head for a
moment and looked up to present her husband a charming smile. “You do know how
he loves to show you off.”
Julia
watched Turner clip off a nod to his wife. The two sisters stood in silence.
Jolene used the same tactics their mother did. Stony, unrelenting silence until
the suspected party blubbered out all of their transgressions.
“Say
your peace, Jolene,” Julia finally said when the quiet was eventually
overwhelming.
Jolene
nodded to a passing guest and turned a cold face her sister’s way. “Is it
absolutely necessary for you to chase off every possible suitor? Is it your
grand design to be an . . . .an . . .”
“An
embarrassment? Jolene, I have humiliated this family in more grandiose ways
than the simple observance of an appalling lack of manners,” Julia said.
“Have
you no pride left, Julia? Do you wish to live in your parents’ home until your
doderage? Don’t you want a home of your own? A husband?”
Tears
clung stubbornly to Julia’s lashes. She whispered for fear of screaming her
reply. “Yes, no and yes. I had dreams too, Jolene. Dreams of a handsome man and
a home of my own. My dreams died with one glance at my older, thin, tall,
beautiful sister. And because I have pride left, I have no intention of
marrying the only man left in Boston who would take to bride a short, fat
spinster with well-heeled relatives.”
“You are attractive in your own way, Julia.
You are not thin, granted, but certainly not the fat round spinster you make
yourself out to be. And the only reason Mother and I keep introducing you to
eligible men is because we want you to be happy. Have a home and children of
your own.”
“I
have a home, Jolene.” The subject of children was more than Julia could
possible speak about without tears and hysterias. “I have given up everything
for the good of this family. I will not sacrifice my self-respect.”
Jolene’s
cheeks tightened. She stretched her arm out to a guest and glided along with a
smile to greet them.
* * *
The
stars shown brightly as Julia lay in her bed and stared out the window. The
last guests had finally left, and Julia could hear tidbits of conversation from
the foyer. Jolene, Jennifer and her mother were reviewing the evening.
Delicious food. The right people. Jennifer’s way with the bachelors. Turner and
Jolene’s invitation to the governor’s mansion. A smashing success. Then a
prolonged silence. “Rude to Mr. McClintok?” “Oh dear.” “What’s to be done?” Heavy, thoughtful sighs
followed.
As
if she was nine-years-old again and spilled a glass of milk on her mother’s
Belgian lace tablecloth while the mayor and his wife dined with them. Or when she tore the hem of her Christmas
dress just as the family alighted from the carriage in front of the church
steps and all of Boston’s good society. Or when at fourteen she slapped the son
of her father’s business partner for kissing her. He told everyone she had been
trying to kiss him, and the mark on his face was left when he tried to avoid
her lips and bumped into the doorjamb. The shattering of a priceless vase had
been her fault as well.
Julia
pulled the coverlet over herself and rolled onto her side. Soon the plague of
the Crawford family would be one thousand miles away. And maybe, just maybe,
Julia thought, she would find a peaceful, useful existence away from censure
and judgment, without constant reminders of her failures. South Dakota could not have seemed more like
the promised land to Julia than heaven itself.
South
Dakota 1887
Jake
Shelling stood in the doorway of his home and breathed a sigh of relief and
happiness as his youngest sister rolled away in the wagon. Gloria was twenty,
married a year and expecting her first child in the fall. Her happiness had
been the last remaining item on his mental list, finally clearing a path for
his own plans since his sisters’ upbringing had fallen to him when their
parents had both died of influenza. Jake could still picture himself at the
ripe old age of sixteen holding his sisters’ hands as men lowered their mother
and father’s caskets into the bleak South Dakota prairie.
Flossie
was nine the day they had died and Gloria a mere three-years-old. The first
five years from that day had been the hardest he would have sworn at the time.
A barely cleared farm, a half-built house and no relatives nearby to help.
Years later he would have said the worst time was when Flossie went to her
first dance and Gloria’s husband Will had begun hanging around.
Jake
had made it through his sister’s suitors, blizzards and a rocky start to where
he found himself now. Thirty-three years old and just beginning to think about
what he wanted to do for himself. The land had fulfilled a dream just as his
father had promised and had provided money in the bank, as well as dowries for
his sisters.
Jake
turned down the hallway of his two-story farmhouse and headed for the kitchen.
No rug padded his feet, and no pictures or heirlooms hung on the walls. The
sitting room he passed held two horsehair chairs in front of an unlit
fireplace. Doo-dads weren’t necessary; he told Flossie when she scolded him
about the state of their parent’s home. His sister was always trying to
brighten things up with curtains and pictures, but Jake wanted none of it. His
now deadly quiet house was where he slept and ate. He didn’t need throw pillows
to accomplish that.
But
he had decided what it did need. A woman. He supposed he would let her fuss a
bit if she had to, buying fabric and gewgaws. But they weren’t going to get in
the way of his plan. A woman to cook and mend and a son to pass his years of
sacrifice and work on to. His sisters’ husbands had farms of their own, and
when Jake let himself wallow, he imagined his own burial with his nieces and
nephews standing at the graveside wondering what to do with the barren house
and farm of their uncle’s other than to sell it to a stranger.
Jake
Shelling had no intention of letting his parent’s graves and legacy fall into
the hands of a buyer that was not of his parent’s stock. He would have a son,
regular meals, sex without buying it and someone to work the farm towards a
common goal. Yep, marriage was going to suit him just fine, Jake thought as he
poured himself a cup of lukewarm coffee. This time.
Shortly
after Gloria’s wedding last spring he had arranged to marry a woman, a cousin
of his closest neighbor. Valerie Morton had been reported to be an attractive,
hard-working woman ready to tie the knot. He had let himself hope to find some
of the happiness his sisters had with their husbands. Not love necessarily but
comfort and companionship. It was not meant to be. Valerie Morton had married
the owner of the Brass Jug Saloon on her trip to be Jake’s bride.
So
much for the exchanged letters and promises. He’d been embarrassed to realize
he’d never given a thought to the possibility that his intended would not hold
true to her word. The day he received her letter saying she would marry him,
he’d considered her part of his family. Valerie Morton didn’t honor commitments
the same way he and his sisters always had. He had misplaced his trust and been
sorely disappointed.
But
this time, he had planned better. Jake ordered a bride from Sweden of all
places he thought to himself and chuckled. A young widow with no children,
wanting to make America her home. He supposed he could live with not being able
to understand what his wife was saying as long as she was as strong and
reliable as the agency in New York reported. So he had sent three hundred
dollars four months ago and his bride, all six foot of her, was to arrive
tomorrow. A tall woman wouldn’t bother him, he imagined. She wouldn’t be taller
than him after all.
Flossie
and Gloria had scolded him something awful, and his brothers-in-law, Will and
Harry, had laughed till they cried when Jake told them of his plans. He told
Pastor Phillips to meet him at the station at three o’clock on Friday. He was going to marry Inga
Crawper at the railway platform before the B & O chugged away. And he was hoping and praying Miss Crawper’s
eight brothers were proof of a good chance of having sons. He didn’t want
daughters, that he knew for certain. Jake didn’t think he would live through
someone courting his child. It had been hard enough with Gloria and Flossie.
Yep, things were going to work out just fine.
3 comments:
I have always wondered how it would be to be a mail order bride. You have to be pretty brave to do that.
debby236 at gmail dot com
Isn't that the truth, Debby! Can you imagine traveling somewhere and marrying a stranger and going to bed with him? Someone you'd just met? And I'm sure the grooms weren't all as handsome as the ones in books like Jake. AHHHHHH!
Holly - You know I loved Train Station Bride, as well as all of your books. I recommend it every chance I get. Looking forward to your next novel. :-)
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