The Innocent Read online




  © 2015 by Ann H. Gabhart

  Published by Revell

  a division of Baker Publishing Group

  P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

  www.revellbooks.com

  Ebook edition created 2015

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

  ISBN 978-1-4412-4609-7

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Scripture used in this book, whether quoted or paraphrased by the characters, is taken from the King James Version of the Bible.

  Page 268—“Come Dance and Sing”—Shaker Hymnal, recorded 1838.

  Page 319—“Kindness and Love”—Shaker Hymnal, recorded at Enfield, Connecticut, 1852.

  Page 350—“God Moves in Mysterious Ways”—words, William Cowper, 1774.

  Published in association with the Books & Such Literary Agency.

  To my family, and especially my son-in-law, Gary, who sparked the idea for this story by saying I should write about a sheriff and a Shaker.

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  28

  29

  30

  31

  32

  33

  34

  35

  36

  37

  38

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Books by Ann Gabhart

  Back Ads

  Back Cover

  1

  SEPTEMBER 15, 1865

  When she saw the two men riding down the lane toward her house, Carlyn Kearney lifted the shotgun down off the long nails that held it over her front door. One of the men was a stranger, but the other one was not. She needed to keep a gun between her and that man. Not that she intended to shoot anybody, but she wasn’t about to let Curt Whitlow know that.

  Beside her, Asher quivered as he watched the door with his gray-specked fur ruffed up on his neck and a low growl in his throat. The dog had barked once to alert her that the men were coming and now was ready for whatever she wanted to happen next. He was an uncommonly intelligent dog and the only reason she hadn’t gone insane after she stopped getting letters from Ambrose two summers ago.

  “Easy.” She spoke softly to the dog, not wanting her voice to carry out to the porch. She gripped the gun tighter when she heard the tread of boots on her steps. The front door was shut. A good thing. The windows were open to the warm September air, but unless the men poked their heads through them they couldn’t see her. Maybe they’d knock and just go away if she stood silent.

  That wasn’t likely to happen. The door wasn’t locked, and Curt Whitlow wouldn’t let a closed door stop him. Not when he considered the house his. He wanted to consider her his, but she’d let him know plenty of times that he’d best reconsider on that score.

  She kept the gun pointed toward the door with hands that trembled. The same tremble ran through the dog standing against her leg. She wanted to think she was like Asher, more ready than afraid, but not much use lying to herself. She could handle Curt with the gun between them, but two men might tip the scales against her even if she was willing to pull the trigger. She wished she’d gotten a better look at the other man before she stepped back from the window to get her gun. The set of his face might help her judge his purpose there with Curt. She pulled in a long breath to steady her hands and her resolve.

  Even though she was prepared for it, the fist banging against the door made her jump. The dog tensed beside her, but didn’t make a sound. It wasn’t like they hadn’t played out this scene time and time again. The only new actor was the stranger.

  “Carlyn, open the door. I know you’re in there.” Curt banged on the door again, shaking it against the facing.

  “Give the woman a chance to come to the door, Whitlow. You’re apt to scare her beating on the door that way.”

  The other man’s voice was calm with a sound of authority. Not what Carlyn expected from someone Curt would bring as reinforcements to put her out of her house. Carlyn shut her eyes a moment. What was it she’d just thought about not lying to herself? It wasn’t her house. Not anymore. She hadn’t been able to pay Curt Whitlow his due on it. He’d let her ride for almost a year because of Ambrose fighting for the Union, but when Ambrose didn’t come home after the war ended, his patience ran out.

  In the spring, he’d hinted she could find other ways to pay him. Through the summer the hints had become more like threats. It didn’t seem to matter to him that he had a Mrs. Whitlow and a houseful of children back in town. He told Carlyn a woman alone had to make her way however she could. He said she could look through the Bible and see that was true. That was when she started keeping the shotgun over the door.

  Now he was answering the man outside. “The Widow Kearney’s not that easy to scare.”

  If only he knew how that word made her shake inside. Widow. It was harder and harder to believe it wasn’t true. She hadn’t heard from Ambrose since Vicksburg in June 1863. Over two years ago. But she had no proof he was dead. The army said missing. Missing wasn’t dead. Ambrose might yet find his way home.

  He could have been wounded or laid low by some sickness. In that last letter in 1863, he mentioned suffering fever chills, but he could even now be well enough to start home. It was a hope as fragile as the spun gossamer of a spider web. She knew that. Even so, she’d made Ambrose a promise till death do them part, and until she was sure death had parted them, she’d keep that promise. No matter how many people called her the Widow Kearney.

  But vows of faithfulness didn’t keep a roof over her head. Whether or not she was ready to admit being a widow, she was losing her home.

  A rap on the door brought her back to the problem at hand. No banging this time. A polite knock.

  “Mrs. Kearney, we want to talk to you. That’s all. Mr. Whitlow has asked me to come see if we can work out the problem of the money you owe on the house.”

  “There’s nothing to work out, Sheriff. She doesn’t have any money and it’s my house. It’s your job to put her out,” Curt said.

  Sheriff. He’d brought the law. And the law was on his side. The man’s voice was steady, calm as ever, when he answered Curt. “We’re not putting anybody out today, Mr. Whitlow. You have to give the woman a chance to find another place.”

  “She’s had chances. Plenty of chances.” Curt’s voice rose, his impatience plain.

  “True or not, I suggest you tamp down your eagerness to bring trouble to a widow woman. We’re not putting her out today.”

  “If she can’t pay, she’s out. That’s the law and you’re bound to uphold the law.”

  �
�I know my job, Mr. Whitlow.” The sheriff didn’t raise his voice, but his words had a cold edge to them.

  “Then do it.” Curt wasn’t backing down. Not this time.

  After a moment of silence, there was another sharp rap on the door. “Open the door, Mrs. Kearney. Please.”

  The fight drained out of her. She couldn’t spit in the face of the law. She lowered the gun until she was holding it in the crook of her arm with the barrel pointing at the floor. Asher looked up at her with an uncertain wag of his tail.

  She clicked her tongue at the dog and pushed a smile across her face. She didn’t want to say the wrong thing and have the sheriff change his mind about setting her out in the road with night coming. At least with his promise, she’d have until morning, maybe longer, to figure out what to do. Or for Ambrose to make a miraculous appearance.

  Miracles happened. The Bible was full of them. People coming back from the dead. That mother’s son sitting up on his funeral pyre. Lazarus walking out of his tomb after four days. But even Lazarus hadn’t been missing from the family circle for two years.

  One day at a time. That had been her mother’s constant refrain when Carlyn’s preacher father went out evangelizing the world and left them to fend for themselves. Each day had worries enough of its own. No need adding on the ones coming on the morrow. Her mother had shown her where it said that in the Bible.

  “He did say please.” Carlyn whispered the words as she touched Asher’s head.

  The sheriff was ready to knock again when she pulled open the door. He lowered his hand and swept his eyes to the gun and back to her face. She was right about him being a stranger. He must be new to town, but that didn’t seem right. The sheriff was elected, and it usually took a well-known person to win the votes. But then she hadn’t been to town for months.

  With no money to buy anything, she’d made do with what she could grow or barter for with the church folks. She did mending and made soap to exchange for salt, sugar, and tea. The church people felt sorry for her, and while she hated being the object of pity, the fact was her situation had declined to pitiful. She knew that. She just didn’t know what to do about it. Her father had taken the rest of her family off to Texas before the start of the war. She had no way of getting there even if she could bear the thought of living under her father’s roof again.

  The stranger at her door was feeling sorry for her too. The pity in his eyes was even worse than that in the church people’s eyes. Poor Carlyn Kearney. Won’t admit she’s a widow. The man, this sheriff, had probably never had anybody pitying him like that. He looked to be a man who took control and made things happen. Not someone buffeted by the winds of misfortune.

  He was even taller than Ambrose and so broad across the shoulders that a lawbreaker would surely think twice before going up against him. Then again, here she was staring straight at him, a gun in her hands. The barrel was pointed at the floor, but that didn’t mean she couldn’t jerk it up if need be.

  “See, I told you she’d have a gun, Sheriff.” Curt looked even shorter and rounder than usual standing back in the man’s shadow. His face was red as he pointed at Carlyn and took a step toward her.

  Asher raised his hackles and growled. Curt stopped in his tracks.

  “Make her call off her dog.” Curt eased back.

  Sometimes Carlyn thought he was more afraid of the dog than her gun, and he was probably right to feel that way. She didn’t say anything, just held her ground the same as Asher. Her growl wasn’t audible, but it was sounding inside her.

  “Ma’am, you need to put down the gun and keep a hold on your dog,” the sheriff said.

  Carlyn found her voice. “The gun’s pointed at the floor and the dog won’t bother anybody who doesn’t bother me.” She flicked her eyes to Curt and back to the sheriff’s face. “Mr. Whitlow knows that.”

  “I’d still feel more comfortable if you’d set the gun down. You wouldn’t want Mr. Whitlow to suffer a heart attack here on your porch.”

  She could have told him that it wouldn’t bother her one whit if Curt Whitlow fell down dead on her porch, but that might not be the best thing to tell a lawman. Might make her suspect if something untoward were to happen to Curt in the days ahead. She looked straight into the man’s dark brown eyes. Without blinking, he met her gaze straight on. After a few seconds, she propped the gun against the door facing.

  “And the dog,” he said.

  She touched Asher’s head and made him sit. With an unhappy whine, he obeyed, but he stayed tense, ready to spring if the occasion called for it.

  “Thank you, ma’am. That makes talking easier.” He took off his felt hat, revealing wavy brown hair in need of scissors. “I’m Sheriff Brodie. Sorry to bother you today, but Mr. Whitlow claims you haven’t paid what you owe on the house here.”

  He glanced around at the peeling paint and sagging porch as if he were assessing the house’s value and finding it wanting. It wasn’t a great house, but it was a house. A person learned to deal with leaky roofs and loose floorboards. Ambrose planned to fix it up when he got home from the war. They’d been so happy when he carried her over the threshold. Neither one of them had any money, so it had seemed a stroke of good fortune when Curt Whitlow offered to let them have the house and make a payment each year till they paid it off.

  She scraped up enough money to pay him more than the old house was worth the first two years, but after Ambrose went missing, his army pay stopped. Now she couldn’t scrape up anything except mud off her shoes. All she had were squatter’s rights and that wouldn’t hold up in front of a judge. Or a sheriff. Out west maybe, but not here where all the land had owners.

  “My husband’s been away fighting for the Union.” Carlyn kept her voice steady, but then wondered if she should break down in tears. That had long ago lost any effect on Curt, but the sheriff might be moved by a woman’s tears. Maybe moved enough to give her more time before he upheld the law and set her out of her house.

  “The war is over, Carlyn.” Curt practically shouted at her. “All the men have come home. Those that could. Ambrose Kearney is never coming home. He’s dead. Can’t you get that through your head? He’s dead!”

  She staggered back under the force of his words, and her eyes filled with tears. Not ones she had to pretend, but the true sorrowful tears that came to her nearly every night. While she couldn’t be sure Ambrose was never coming home, it was true that he hadn’t. His homecoming was way overdue.

  2

  The woman was not at all what Mitchell Brodie had expected. When Curt Whitlow had come in the office and demanded Mitchell make the Widow Kearney vacate his house, he’d ranted on and on about her recalcitrant ways. His complaints had made Mitchell think Carlyn Kearney would be older. Someone perhaps, if not soured on the world, at least hardened by it.

  So the woman who opened the door surprised him. The dark brown curls escaping her tied-back hair made her look even younger than she surely was. Color burned in her cheeks, and with her mouth set in a grim line, she narrowed her eyes and stared out at them without a word. Those stormy blue eyes revealed plenty. Mitchell had learned to gauge the anger or fear of the people he confronted. In his job, if a man wasn’t ready, he could be dead. The sheen of sweat on her brow and the throbbing pulse in her temple belied her calm exterior.

  Plus there was the gun that maybe told more about Whitlow than the woman holding it. He’d obviously been at the wrong end of her gun before and probably for cause. Mitchell didn’t know Whitlow well, but he’d heard the gossip. The man beside him had a wandering eye and the means to make some women look past his unappealing looks and forget his marital status. Not this woman however. Else there’d be no gun and no need for him as sheriff to be standing at her door.

  Carlyn Kearney was sad, scared, and angry all at the same time. He had to insist she put the gun down, but he took no pleasure in seeing her shoulders droop when she complied. She looked defeated. With reason. The law was on Whitlow’s side. As much as Mitche
ll hated that being true, it was. He would have to carry out the distasteful task of putting her out of her home. He fervently hoped she had family to give her a spot under their roof. Her and her dog.

  Mitchell looked down at the dog, its lips snarled back to reveal teeth. Whitlow had told him about her vicious beast. Claimed it was more wolf than dog. Now with the drone of Whitlow’s demanding words playing back through his head, Mitchell almost wished the woman would set her dog on the man. It might be entertaining to watch the dog chase Whitlow out to his horse as he’d probably done on more than one occasion.

  Mitchell was about to suggest Whitlow step off the porch so he could talk to the woman without interference when the man shouted out that the woman’s husband was dead. True or not, Whitlow had no reason to throw the words at her like stones. Stones that found their mark.

  The blood drained from the woman’s face and she staggered back a step. Mitchell was so sure she was going to faint that he risked the dog’s raised hackles and stepped across the threshold. The growl did make him think twice about touching the woman. Instead he grabbed a chair to push under her. She sank into it and dropped her head into her hands.

  The dog’s growls grew fiercer and Mitchell turned, prepared to grab it by the throat if it lunged at him. But the dog was paying him no mind. It was crouched, ready to spring at Whitlow. The woman, lost in her sorrow, didn’t note the danger to her dog as Whitlow fumbled in his coat pocket for the pistol Mitchell guessed was there.

  “Down, boy.” Mitchell put force into his words. As sheriff, a voice of authority often worked with drunks and rabble-rousers, but he was more than a little surprised when it worked with the dog. The animal turned his head toward Mitchell and eased back to a sitting position.

  When Whitlow started through the door into the house, Mitchell stepped between the man and the dog. “No need to pull that gun out of your pocket, Whitlow. Nobody’s going to shoot anybody or anything.”

  “That dog needs shooting.”

  Behind him, the woman gasped. Without turning toward her, Mitchell addressed her worry. “That’s not for you to decide. Now you need to wait out in the yard, sir.” Mitchell used the word “sir” loosely. He had little use for men like Whitlow who thought they could order the world just because they’d managed to accumulate some land or money.