Pieces of Dreams

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Authors: Jennifer Blake

Tags: #Romance

BOOK: Pieces of Dreams
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This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

First edition published by Berkley Publishing Group

“The Quilting Circle” Anthology

1996

Second edition published by Berkley Publishing Group

“With Love” Anthology

2002

Third edition by Steel Magnolia Press

2012

Copyright © 1996 by Patricia Maxwell

 

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LFD Designs For Authors

 

 

 

Praise for the Author

 

“Jennifer Blake…a master story teller.”

~Long and Short of It Reviews

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“Jennifer Blake is a veteran of the romance novel industry, and it shows. She definitely knows how to write a…romance!”

~Reader to Reader.com

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 “Blake’s writing style remains the standard in historic romance; lyrical, effortless and a delight to readers who savor the subtlety of prose.”

~Amazon.com

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 “…a master writer.”

~Harriet Klausner

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 “Ms. Blake’s storytelling brush paints a picture for the mind’s eye that is both strikingly clear and true to life…truly a Master of her craft.”

~A Romance Review

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 “I look forward, as always, to further creations by this wonderful author.”

~Genre Go Round Reviews

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 “She builds a strong background, creates three-dimensional characters and weaves sexual tension into a lively love story.”

~RT Book Reviews Magazine, 4.5 Stars Review

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 “The prose is like butter, and it is very hard to stop reading! I loved the descriptions and the skill Blake has to bring her reader into this medieval world.”

~Heather Hiestand

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 “Each of her carefully researched novels evokes a long-ago time so beautifully that you are swept up into every detail of her memorable story.

~RT Book Reviews

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 “Blake…has rightly earned the admiration and respect of her readers. They know there is a world of enjoyment waiting within the pages of her books.”

~A Romance Review

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 “Jennifer Blake is a beloved writer of romance—the pride and care she takes in her creations shines through.”

~Romance Reviews Today

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 “…another satisfying read by the Incomparable, Jennifer Blake”

~A Romance Review

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Chapter One

 

 

Amelia Bennington glanced up from her stitching as the steam whistle of the
J. B. Cates
blasted one last time from the landing at the end of Main Street. The steamboat was leaving, finished with the stop for Good Hope on its regular run from New Orleans to St. Louis and beyond. It had made a fairly long halt this evening. There must have been a team of Missouri mules to be loaded or maybe a passenger to be put off.

None of the other young women sitting around the quilting frame suspended from the ceiling by grass ropes was paying the least attention to the boat. As Melly looked around at her friends in the glow of the lamplight and listened to their low, laughing voices she felt the sudden rise of emotion. They were all so dear. She wanted to remember this evening for the rest of her life, every last detail: the steamboat's musical warning, the bumbling of moths and gnats about the hot lamp globes, the smell of the fresh-made lemonade served by Aunt Dora to ward off the late August heat, the scents of thyme and basil and roses wafting from the front garden through the open windows.

Soon it would all change. She would become Caleb's wife, and nothing would ever be the same again.

The waves of her thick, dark hair caught the lamplight as she allowed her gaze to rest one by one on the four friends who had been such a large part of her life—the four who would be her bridesmaids. Green-eyed Esther Montgomery with her strong face softened by incredibly long lashes and her forthright, common sense views on everything from female suffrage to the best way to make wax posies. Lydia McDougall, tall, auburn-haired, with her tendency toward the dramatic, her warm temper, and her warmer heart. Barbara Zane of the doll-like, china-blue eyes and ash brown curls, known to all as Biddy because she was as petite and aggressive as a bantam chick. And Sarah Franks, Melly's second cousin, serene and statuesque as some ancient Greek earth goddess, with silvery-blonde hair and Mediterranean-blue eyes, always doing for others, especially her father and three brothers. Of all the friends Melly had known from childhood, these four were truly special.

It had been a blessing to be near them as she was growing up, Melly thought, sharing their problems and heartaches as they had shared hers. Three near-spinsters and a widow—the fact they were all over twenty and without husbands had made them unusually close.

It was the natural order of things that they would marry, change, and grow apart; Melly knew that. She was anxious to be wed, to go with Caleb to the farm he was building for the two of them outside town; of course she was. But at the same time, she could not help feeling a little blue, and even a tiny bit fearful.

Leaving her needle standing upright in the thickness made of two layers of cloth on either side of fluffy cotton batting, she smoothed slender fingers over the silken surface of the quilt top on which they were all working. There was so much love, so many hopes and dreams sewn into it.

The center square was in a starburst design that she herself had pieced over the winter and spring just past. Put together with the scraps left after making her wedding gown of pearl-colored oriental silk, it also incorporated pieces of silk and satin in various shades of blue remaining from the dresses made for her bridesmaids. In the center of the starburst was a Greek cross with four equal arms. Across the center Melly had used gold thread and looping Spenserian script to embroider her wedding date:
September 10, 1843
. She’d inscribed her initials in the arm above it, with Caleb's in the one below. The squares set around this focal point, in a star design with a diagonal cross, had been pieced from the silk and satin dress scraps by Melly's Aunt Dora, the woman who had raised her after the steamboat accident that killed her parents. Then each of the four corner squares had been done by a bridesmaid, and featured diagonal bars embroidered with their names and a small sentiment or token of remembrance.

Though they all called it a Friendship Quilt among themselves, it was far more to Melly. Wedding present, house-warming gift, treasured keepsake, it was a shimmering work of art and a lovely reminder of her friends and everything they had meant to each other. More than that, it was a symbol of everything that she would soon become.

Two weeks from this very night, she would walk down the aisle of the church in her gown of rich, flowing silk. Afterward, she would drive away with Caleb. In the house he was building for her with sweat and the toil of loving hands, the two of them would truly become man and wife.

How strange to think that it would be upon her in just a matter of days. The waiting of their three-year engagement had been so long that it had sometimes seemed it would never end.

“Melly's daydreaming again, girls.” Esther Montgomery, seated at the lower right corner of the frame, made the accusation with a quick glance from her soft green eyes. “Just look at her blush. Two guesses what's on her mind.”

“Nothing of the kind!” Melly said in laughing indignation, though she could not help the darker flush whose heat rose to her face.

What would it be like, really, to be a wife? What would she and Caleb say to each other, what would they do, once they were alone together? How would they find their way past the embarrassment of undressing and getting into bed?

Yes, and what, precisely, would happen then?

Melly thought she had a glimmering from the few comments she had overheard between Aunt Dora and her bosom cronies. It seemed all too likely that this physical union would be awkward. Yet from it would come the mingling of their two souls, hers and Caleb's, as well as the birth of their children. Caleb was a good man, level-headed, kind, gentle; she would have to trust that his love and her own common sense would see her through the ordeal.

“And why shouldn't she be thinking about it?” Sarah Franks asked with her usual protective instinct. “Caleb Wells is handsome enough to make anybody's heart beat faster.”

“As if she would dwell on such a thing!” Biddy, used to making herself heard above the hubbub of a one-room school in her job as a teacher, had no trouble speaking over the other girl's voice. “Melly's more likely contemplating how to decorate her new parlor.”

Esther made a disparaging noise, but Melly seized on the suggestion. “That's exactly what I was doing, thinking how nice it would be to display our quilt for visitors to see. I could fold it over a bench—or maybe hang it like a tapestry if I can persuade Caleb to make some kind of support for it.”

“If?” Sarah said with lifted brows. “You know Caleb would cut off his arm and hand it to you if he thought you wanted it.”

“Oh, Sarah, don't be disgusting,” Biddy said.

“Well, he would!”

“Sarah's right.” Lydia McDougall joined in with a nod that made her auburn curls dance. “Do you recall the time Caleb took off his coat and laid it across a puddle so Melly wouldn't get her new shoes muddy? That was years ago, when she was hardly more than twelve or thirteen.”

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