Dalton Brothers #2
April 9, 2019
Indie Published
Available in: e-Book

Country Blessings

Ten years after Rachel Charbonneau left the South Dakota farm where she grew up to pursue her dreams of an acting career, she has come back for her mother’s funeral. Rachel plans to sell the farm and return to California. Despite her bad feelings about the place, the good things, including Matt Dalton, call her to reconsider. Matt, an injured war hero, wishes he could change her mind, but he doesn’t know how a scarred soldier can win the heart of a famous actress. Can he arm himself with enough patience, faith, and love to be her hometown hero?

Chapter One

 

Nothing much had changed in ten years on the farm where Rachel Charbonneau had grown up. The faded red barn sat against a backdrop of fields newly planted with grain and alfalfa. A gentle breeze rustled shiny green leaves in the cottonwoods lining the creek. The peaceful picture didn’t tell the whole story. Despite its appeal, she hated this place.

Gripping her daughter’s hand, Rachel squinted against the warm May sun in the cloudless sky over the South Dakota prairie. A silver pickup, coming down the lane, bumped across the ground and kicked up a cloud of dust as it came to a stop near the barn. When the driver emerged, she recognized him, even at a distance.

Tightness settled around her heart. She swallowed a lump in her throat as she brushed dust from her black silk dress. She wasn’t sure what she would say to Matt Dalton. Time had made them strangers.

With a very obvious limp, Matt trudged toward the barn. His faded jeans and blue chambray shirt with the sleeves rolled up accentuated his tall, muscular build. He’d been at her mother’s funeral this morning, among a sea of people who had come to pay their last respects to Lynn Charbonneau, but Rachel barely remembered talking with him. Her mind had been consumed with grief ever since she’d learned her mother had died suddenly in a car accident.

As Matt disappeared into the barn, Becky tugged on Rachel’s arm. “Mom, who’s that?”

“Someone I used to know.” Gazing at her daughter, Rachel wanted to gather Becky close but resisted the protective gesture that had become second nature in the past few weeks. A flush rose in the child’s smooth, olive complexion. The breeze ruffled her brown hair lying in natural curls around her shoulders. Rachel brushed the wayward strands from Becky’s cheek and wished she could as easily spare her daughter the heartaches of life.

“What’s he doing in the barn?” Becky asked.

“I’m not sure.”

“Can we go see?”

“No, we aren’t dressed for that. We’ll check out the barn another time.” Rachel figured talking to Matt would come soon enough.

“But I want to go now.”

“We’ll be here a few days. You can wait.” Rachel glanced toward the barn again just as Matt reappeared and retrieved a large sack from his pickup.

Becky pointed across the yard. “Look. Here he comes.”

“I see.” Rachel summoned a welcoming smile as he drew closer. “Hello, Matt.”

“Hi, Rachel, I’m real sorry about your mom. I didn’t get a chance to say more than a few words to you this morning. Had to get back to the fields, so we didn’t get to stay for lunch.” The comforting sound of his deep voice made the years fall away like rich soil beneath the blade of a plow.

“Thanks.” Rachel nodded. “There were so many people. It all seems like a blur.”

“I’m sure it does.” He stepped forward and held out the sack he carried. “Sarah sent this over for your evening meal.”

Was Sarah his wife? Had Matt been with his family this morning? Rachel just couldn’t remember. His going off to war and subsequent return as an injured soldier were the only news her mother had ever shared. When Rachel left town, he was engaged but not to someone named Sarah. Rachel had never dared to ask about Matt’s marriage, and she couldn’t bring herself to ask now.

When she took the sack, their fingers brushed. The sudden contact made her pulse quicken. She shook away the unwanted feelings and vowed not to let memories ruin this reunion. Besides, she shouldn’t have such feelings for a married man. “You want to come up to the house for a few minutes while I put this in the kitchen? My grandparents would love to talk to you.”

Looking back at the barn, Matt hesitated. “Feeding the horses didn’t take that long. I can probably spare a few minutes.”

“Still teaching school and helping out at the farm in the summer?” Rachel asked, wishing she could ask about his injuries but feeling it was the wrong time for such a discussion.

“Yeah, it’s what I love.”

Rachel looked at her little girl. Becky was Rachel’s love. Nothing was more important in her life, especially now. “This is my daughter. Becky, say hello to Mr. Dalton.”

Matt extended his hand to her as she looked up at him. “I’m glad to meet you, Becky. You don’t have to call me Mr. Dalton. You can call me Matt. How old are you?”

Smiling shyly, Becky shook his hand. “Almost six.”

“Your mom was the same age when I first met her. She used to pal around with me and my cousins when I visited their farm every summer.” Matt hunkered down to Becky’s eye level. “You look just like your mom when she was a girl.”

“No, I don’t,” Becky said. “She doesn’t have blue eyes like me. Hers are brown.”

“You’re right. Where’d you get those pretty blue eyes?”

“From my dad, but he died before I was born.”

“I’m so sorry about that. Where’d your mom get her eyes?”

“From my great, great, great, great grandma. She was a beautiful Sioux Indian princess.”

“But not as beautiful as you and your mom.” Matt patted Becky on the head as he stood.

Becky shrugged and sidled up to Rachel. “I guess.”

Watching Matt charm her daughter just the way he’d charmed her years ago, Rachel tried to read his tanned features shaded by a ball cap. “I always thought you considered me more of a pest than a pal.”

“Well, maybe, but we guys didn’t mind having you tag along as much as we let on. Hero worship is good for the ego. And now I can say Rachel Carr, glamorous TV star, spent her summers following me around.” Matt winked.

“You exaggerate.” Leading the way across the farmyard toward the house, Rachel absorbed the strange sound of her professional name on the lips of a friend. Nothing had prepared her for dealing with the way people from her past thought of her now. Did they think success had gone to her head? Would they treat her differently? She hoped not.

He gave her a lopsided grin and, despite his limp, matched her step as they traversed the uneven ground. “No exaggeration. Your smiling face greets me from the magazine rack of every grocery checkout lane.”

“What are the tabloids saying these days?” She pretended not to know. The stories they printed were laughable, sometimes irritating, and mostly untrue. They often took half-truths and turned them into stories. Now, her mother’s death added to her trouble. Would the heartaches never end?

When they reached the patio at the back of the house, Matt stopped next to a wrought iron umbrella table. His golden eyes twinkled with amusement. “You’re involved with three handsome actors, feuding with your agent, and leaving your TV show because you’ve been diagnosed with some debilitating malady.” The twinkle left his eyes. “You aren’t actually sick, are you?”

“I don’t have any debilitating diseases, but…”

“But what?”

The concern in his voice touched her heart. “I’m not doing the TV show next year because I need a rest. Besides, I’m being considered for the lead role in a feature film—something I’ve always wanted. I don’t want anything to keep me from getting that part.”

“You’ll get it. You’ve gotten everything else you’ve wanted in your career.”

Rachel could only nod as a bitter lump rose in her throat. His statement reminded her that, despite a successful career, her personal life was full of tragedy. Fame and money could never replace the people she’d lost. “I’m glad you have so much confidence in me. It’s too bad you’re not making the final decision.”

“Mom.” Becky gazed up at her. “Can I change my clothes?”

“Sure, tell Grandma and Grandpa we have company.” Rachel thought of her mother’s parents and their grief over their daughter’s death—the grief they all shared.

Lagging behind Becky as she sprinted to the house, Rachel glanced over her shoulder at Matt. He smiled, and her heart skipped just the way it had so many years ago when he smiled at her. As they reached the back door, he quickly stepped in front of her and opened it. The courteous gesture reminded her that things were kinder and gentler in the country compared to the big city.

The smell of morning coffee still lingered in the kitchen. The old oak table and chairs were the only familiar things in the room. Blue and white checked curtains, decorating the window over the kitchen sink, matched the chair pads. Gleaming white granite counters and light oak cabinets had replaced the butcher-block counters and dark pine cabinets she’d known as a child. The changes reminded her that she’d been gone a long time.

“Does this stuff need to go in the refrigerator?”

“Yeah.” He let the screen door slap shut behind him as he removed his cap and finger combed his thick wheat-straw-colored hair. “I see you passed on the family history to your daughter.”

Nodding, Rachel removed a blue casserole dish from the sack. “It all started over the question of eye color. She wanted to know why her eyes are blue and mine aren’t.”

“A legitimate question.”

Rachel put the dish in the refrigerator, then turned to face Matt. “She asks lots of questions these days. And I don’t always have the answers.”

Matt chuckled. “Not the birds and bees already.”

“No. Life and death,” Rachel said, unable to miss the scars on the right side of his face, more visible now that he had removed his baseball cap.

“Tough subjects. I’ve always found trust in God provides a lot of answers and comfort, too.”

Rachel looked at the floor. She didn’t want Matt to see the doubt in her eyes. Is that the way he still felt after all he’d been through? Matt had faced death as a soldier and survived. She wondered how he’d managed to keep his faith when her faith in God had died ten years ago along with her father.

Scared and alone in a hospital emergency room, she’d prayed that God would spare her father’s life, but the heart attack had killed him. God hadn’t helped then. He wasn’t helping now. Nothing could dull the pain of her mother’s death.

“I suppose you could say that,” she mumbled, blinking away her tears.

“Are you all right?” Matt stepped closer and put his arm around her shoulders.

“I’m coping, but I can’t always keep the tears from coming.” The warmth of his touch made her want to slip into his embrace and shut out the anguish of losing her mother. She had treasured their friendship that had begun when he visited his uncle’s farm one summer. He’d been twelve, and she’d been just a six-year-old kid with a ponytail and skinned knees.

After his first visit, he came every summer to help on the Dalton farm. The summer after his high school graduation, he came and stayed, going to college at South Dakota State in the fall. He worked on the Dalton farm during the summers until he finished college. Her junior year, he started teaching biology at the local high school.

He patted her shoulder. “I wish I could make it all better.”

“Like when I was a teenager.” She nodded, remembering how Matt had been there to console her when she’d lost the 4-H competition at the state fair, made her laugh when she didn’t get the lead in the school play, and had run interference when she’d driven her mother’s car into a ditch.

But she had to keep in mind that he wasn’t single anymore. A friend was all he’d ever be. Her thoughts came to an abrupt halt when Becky reappeared, wearing jeans and a T-shirt.

“Mom, Grandma and Grandpa are resting.”

“Then we won’t disturb them.”

“How long do you plan to stay?” Matt asked.

Rachel shrugged. “I’m not sure.”

“It would be great to have you around for a while.”

“I don’t have definite plans right now. I have some big decisions to make.”

“Yes, you do.” He stepped toward the door. “I’d better get going. Say hi to your grandparents. I’ll see you at church tomorrow.”

“I suppose.” Rachel didn’t want to tell him she didn’t plan to be there.

He pushed open the screen door and stopped. “I’ll be praying for you and those decisions you have to make, too.”

Stepping outside with Matt, Rachel forced a smile. Could he ever understand she didn’t share his faith or reliance on prayer anymore? “Tell your wife thanks for the food.”

Matt chuckled as surprise showed on his face. “Sarah’s not my wife. She’s married to John.”

Rachel’s heart skipped a beat. “Your cousin?”

“Yeah, I’m just the single delivery man.” Matt grinned. “John would be pretty upset if he thought I was trying to run off with his wife.”

“Sorry. I should know better than to jump to conclusions. That’s what the tabloid press does all the time.”

“No problem.” Matt grinned again. “I’ll introduce you to Sarah tomorrow. You’ll like her. And they have a little girl the same age as Becky.”

“Great.” Rachel manufactured a smile again. Another reason for her to attend church. The expectations continued to mount.

As Matt drove toward the blacktop road, Rachel stood with Becky at the edge of the patio and waved. A gamut of emotions washed over her. What was there about him that made her remember her painful teenage crush like it was yesterday? Maybe it was the newness of seeing him after all these years, maybe finding out he wasn’t married. Or were her emotions all tied up in the death of her mother and the shock of seeing Matt’s injuries?

He still had that easy charm, but he carried the physical scars of the combat he’d seen. And his eyes, surrounded by deepened lines, held a look that told her he’d endured too many horrors. She wondered what changes he saw in her. The unexpected feelings she still had for him made her wary. They were part of the past and connected to this farm, something she wanted out of her life. And he had a faith in God, something she couldn’t share.

As Rachel turned toward the house, Becky pulled her to a stop. “Why does Matt walk funny and have scars on his face?”

Rachel stared at her daughter. Thankfully, she hadn’t asked the question in front of Matt. “He was a soldier and was injured when he fought in the war.”

“Does it hurt?”

Reading Becky’s look of concern, Rachel wondered how she should answer that question. What kind of pain had he known? Emotional pain often lingered longer than the physical. She could testify to that. “I don’t know whether it hurts anymore, honey. But he’s a very brave man.”

“And he’s nice.”

Rachel was glad her child could see beyond his physical appearance to the real man beneath the scars. But was he the same as the young man she’d had a crush on as a girl?

Shaking away her troubled thoughts, Rachel walked toward the redbrick ranch house that had been her childhood home. She drank in the familiar sight of her favorite childhood haunt—the tree fort sitting on the large limbs of the cottonwood tree closest to the house. The oak and maple trees surrounding the house had flourished in the last ten years. Planting those trees with her father had been one of the last happy memories she had of him before the worry and care of keeping the farm afloat had taken their toll. Now her mother was gone, too. She pressed her lips together to keep from crying.

As Rachel and Becky crossed the patio, a voice sounded from inside the house. “Did I hear a car?”

Rachel glanced toward the back door. Her grandmother Kate stood on the threshold. “Yes, Grandma. You just missed Matt Dalton. He brought something for our supper.”

“Sorry I missed him. You should’ve gotten us,” Kate said.

“I didn’t want to disturb you.”

“I know, but I’d like to have spoken with Matt. He was such a help to your mother. Whenever she needed something, he was here to lend a hand.” Kate stepped back into the kitchen as her husband joined her. “It’s a shame what that boy’s been through.”

Rachel nodded. “I didn’t realize the extent of his injuries.”

“You aren’t even seeing the half of it,” her grandmother said. “He almost died.”

“I was surprised to learn he’d come back here after he recovered,” Rachel said.

“He did spend the summer after his rehab with his folks in Georgia, but he came back as soon as school started. He considers this his home.” George Hofer peered at Rachel through his wire-rimmed glasses. “Matt’s a fine person. You’d do well to marry someone like him and give that daughter of yours a good father.”

Watching Becky skip across the patio, Rachel made no reply. Would she be getting a lecture at every turn on how she should find a father for Becky? After her bad choices when it came to men, Rachel didn’t want to think about tying herself to another one, even for Becky.

 

***

 

The aroma of frying bacon filled the air as Rachel approached the kitchen the following morning. Sunday had always meant church when she was growing up. But she hadn’t attended church in years, and she wondered how she could avoid going today. “Good morning, Grandma. Grandpa.”

Her grandmother glanced up from the stove. “You sound chipper.”

“I do feel better.”

“Well, the world always looks a little better after a night’s rest,” Grandpa said. “You still haven’t indicated what you plan to do with the farm.”

“Sell it.” Sighing deeply, Rachel looked away. While she waited for her grandfather’s reply, the clock in the nearby den chimed as if to signal the protest she expected to hear.

Leaning forward, he set his coffee cup on the table. “I think it’s sad you have to part with this place. There are lots of good memories here.”

The idea of strangers living in this house and caring for the garden was not a pleasant one, but Rachel steeled herself against sentimental feelings. The farm had to go. There was no other way. “I never liked farming. It’s a hard way of life. It takes a special kind of person to endure it.”

“Farmers love the land and thrive on seeing their crops come in or their livestock taken to market.”

“To me, they’re gluttons for punishment who watch months of work destroyed by a hailstorm, tornado, or drought.” She closed her eyes and pinched the bridge of her nose. “I don’t know how they do it or why, especially when they don’t survive.”

“Are you talking about your father?” Her grandfather stood and put an arm around her shoulders.

“This farm killed him.”

“Is that why you’re so determined to sell it?”

“No, I’m selling it because I have no use for a farm. You’re not going to talk me out of it. I have a life in California. Not here.”

Grandpa patted her shoulder. “You have to do what’s best for you, but give yourself time to think things over before you make any major decisions.”

Smiling wryly, Rachel shook her finger at him. “Grandpa, you’re playing games with me. You’re telling me what I do is my business, but underneath this agreeable attitude you’re trying to undermine my decision.” She watched while he opened his mouth in protest. “Don’t try to weasel out of it.”

“How dare you doubt my intentions!” He chuckled. “Humor an old man and give staying here some thought. It would be a good place to take the time off you’ve been talking about. I know when Grandma and I go back home, it would be a load off our minds if we knew someone was here to look after the place.”

“I’m not deciding anything today.”

“That’s reasonable, but you’d better get ready for church because we’re invited to the Daltons for Sunday dinner.” Grandma wiped her hands on her apron. “We’ll be going right after church.”

Rachel’s stomach knotted at the thought of going back to the church she’d attended as a child. “I wasn’t planning to go. I wanted to start going through Mom’s things.”

Grandma stopped turning the bacon and studied her. The snap and pop of the hot grease filled the silence. “You ought to go this morning. A lot of people are expecting you.”

“I don’t want to be a hypocrite. Church just isn’t for me anymore.” Rachel crossed her arms at her waist. “Grandma, when good people like my parents die in the prime of their lives, doesn’t it shake your faith in God? How can you trust in a God who would allow this to happen?”

“I know how your father’s death affected you, and I’m sure your husband’s and now your mother’s deaths have done nothing to change your attitude about God. But your grandfather’s and my faith isn’t shaken by the death of a loved one, even though we don’t always understand why it happened. I trust God to know what’s best, and that, in His wisdom, all things will work out for those who believe in Him.”

Tears welled in Rachel’s eyes as she gazed out the kitchen window. She blinked and tried to gain control of her emotions. “I sometimes envy your faith, but I can’t believe anymore. The world seems to go on without any sign of a superior being in control.”

“I’m not trying to convince you to believe. I know your mother tried to restore your faith, but she realized you would have to make that decision on your own. About the only thing we can do is what your mother always did. Pray.”

Rachel kept her eyes focused on the view out the kitchen window and slowly shook her head. “I don’t think your prayers will do much good.”

Her grandmother put her hand on Rachel’s shoulder. “The Bible says, ‘the fervent prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.’ We plan to continue praying for you every day.”

“I know I can’t stop you. And I suppose you’re right. I should go this morning to honor my mother.” Rachel’s stomach lurched. A command performance for all of the relatives and friends—one of the reasons she’d never wanted to come back.

back to Top

Other Books in Dalton Brothers Series