Hannah Alexander - Hideaway Home

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Indulge your fantasies of delicious Regency Rakes, fierce Viking warriors and rugged Highlanders. Be swept away into a world of intense passion, lavish settings and romance that burns brightly through the centuriesSoldier Red Meyers had looked forward to the day he could return to Hideaway, Missouri, to his sweetheart, Bertie Moennig. But his dreams were shattered when he was wounded in the last stages of World War II in Europe.Bertie was beautiful inside out–she deserved a whole man. Red was determined to keep his distance. But a tragedy on the home front brought the couple face-to-face for the first time in years, now a dangerous mystery threatened both their lives. As they fought for survival in their tiny Ozark town, Red had to summon the faith courage to protect the woman he'd never stopped loving.

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Franklin’s broad face didn’t have the usual scowl she’d come to know and dislike. When she met his eyes, he looked away. Then she realized he’d called her by her real name instead of hillbilly.

“You want something?” she asked.

“Your injury doing okay?” he asked, his voice still gruff, but sounding almost sincere.

“I’m fine.”

She started to return to her work, but then he spoke again. “You need to report to the front office. Talk to Charlotte.”

She stared at him as a chill traveled across her shoulders and down her arms. “What’s she want to see me for?”

He avoided her look. “You’ve…got a call.”

“What kind of a call?” Had he actually followed through with this morning’s threat to dismiss her?

It couldn’t be. Franklin enjoyed firing people, didn’t he? Right now, he didn’t look as if he was enjoying himself too much.

“Just get to the office,” he muttered, turning away.

She nodded and left her worktable. She refused to beg. If she got fired, she’d find another job easily enough. Hughes Aircraft wasn’t the only place in town that could use a trained machinist.

Still, she wished she’d watched her mouth a little closer with Franklin this morning. Sass and vinegar weren’t always a good thing.

Minutes later, she stepped into the business office, abuzz with so many typewriters clattering and telephones ringing. Most folks in the plant wanted an office job, but not Bertie. Give her a machine over a typewriter any day. Machine work made more sense to her, and she loved operating a lathe, forming the parts that would be used to build the airplanes that would help win the war. She felt she was doing something useful. Of course, the people working in the office were useful, too.

If she couldn’t work with machines in the shop, give her a barn full of milking cows rather than a typewriter in a stifling office. In fact, she’d pretty much prefer anything over being cooped up in an office all day.

A woman with dark hair tied severely away from her face was the first person Bertie encountered when she walked through the door. The woman didn’t stop typing, didn’t even look up, when Bertie approached her desk.

“Help you?” the woman asked.

Bertie paused, waiting for eye contact.

When the woman finally looked up, her fingers continued their clattering across the typewriter keys. “What do you need?” she snapped.

“I’m Roberta Moennig, and I was told to report to Charlotte. You care to point her out to me?”

The woman’s eyes widened, and she stopped typing. The sharpness vanished. “I’m Charlotte,” she said in a voice suddenly gone soft. She paused, eyeing Bertie. “Why don’t you have a seat, Roberta.” She pointed toward the chair in front of her desk, then picked up a telephone receiver from the desktop and handed it to her.

“I’m so sorry,” she whispered, placing a hand on Bertie’s shoulder before rising from her chair and walking away.

Bertie stared after her in confusion, aware that others in the office had stopped their work and shot glances toward her. Something wasn’t right.

She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. “Hello?” she said into the telephone receiver. “Who is this?”

“Bertie? It’s me. It’s Red.”

Her mouth dropped open, and she gasped. It was him! Here she’d been thinking about him and…“Red! Where are you? I’ve not heard from you in so long I was beginning to wonder if you were okay. What’s…why are you…” She frowned. “Are you okay? Why are you calling me in the middle of the—”

“I’m…home.” His voice was gentle, uncommonly soft. “I’m back home in Hideaway.”

“For good? You’ve been released?”

“I’ve been discharged.”

“I wondered if they’d send you home after Germany’s surrender, but since I never heard a word from you in six full weeks, I couldn’t help wonderin’—”

“Bertie, we’ll have a long talk about that later, but I didn’t call to talk about me right now.” He paused. “Ma picked me up at the train station, and we stopped by your Pa’s place to check on him.” Another pause.

Bertie leaned forward. She hated the solemn sound of Red’s voice. “What is it? Is Dad all right? Is he sick?”

“Bertie, I’m sorry. I…” He cleared his throat. “I found him…he’s gone.”

Chapter Eight

For a moment, Bertie didn’t grasp what Red meant. She was dreaming—or this wasn’t really Red. It was some kind of practical joke.

“I don’t understand,” she said, hearing the tremor in her own voice. “H-how can you find him if he’s gone?”

“I found his body.”

She shook her head, unable to let the words sink in. It couldn’t be…She’d been worried about him last night when he didn’t answer her call, but this?

“Bertie? You there? You okay?”

She closed her eyes and swallowed hard. “I’m sorry, Red, I didn’t—”

“Your father’s—he’s dead,” Red said. “I found him myself, out in the cattle lot behind the barn.”

She gasped, and her vision went dark for a moment. She became aware of someone standing beside her with a hand on her shoulder, placing a glass of water on the desk in front of her. She looked up to see her friend and roommate, Edith Frost, looking down at her, dark hair mussed, dark eyes narrowed in concern.

“What’s the water for? And what’re you doing here?” Edith should be home asleep. Her shift wouldn’t begin for a few more hours.

“Charlotte called me,” Edith whispered. “She wanted me to be here for you.”

“Bertie?” Red said, his voice growing gruffer. “You okay?”

“Yes, I’m…I’ll…”

“What’s happening out there?” he asked.

“Would you just…give me a minute?” She closed her eyes. “Oh, Dad,” she whispered.

It was true. It must be. But reality clashed hard against denial. “No, this can’t be,” she whispered. “Not Dad. He wasn’t fighting in the war.”

“He’s been fighting a war, all right,” Red said.

“How?” she asked. “What happened to him?”

“I wish I knew for sure.”

“What do you mean? Was he sick? What happened?”

“There looks to be a…an injury to the side of his head.”

She frowned. “And he was in the cattle lot? Could be the bull got him, but ol’ Fester’s never been a mean—”

“Not Fester. Not an animal…not a four-legged one, anyway. It looks like…like something small hit him in the side of the head, Bertie.”

Bertie nearly dropped the phone. “Something like what?”

“I’m not sure yet. The sheriff’s out there now, along with the mayor.”

She heard something in his voice, some thread of doubt, as if he was hiding something from her, unwilling to say what was on his mind.

“You’re saying somebody killed my father?” she heard her own voice, loud with shock, saw the surprised faces of the people standing around her, and felt as if the floor was buckling beneath her.

“I’m not saying anything yet.”

“Oh, yes you are. That’s what you’re thinking, I can tell.”

“Now, don’t go putting words in my mouth. I’m gonna find out what happened,” Red promised. “You hang on out there, you hear?”

Bertie took a few deep breaths and managed to keep her hands from trembling. “What are you thinking, Red? Talk to me!”

Edith slid a handkerchief into Bertie’s hands and placed an arm around her shoulders, but Bertie wouldn’t let tears fall.

“Don’t you worry, Bertie,” Red said. “We’ll see to it your father has a good, Christian funeral.”

She took a few more breaths. “Red Meyer, what aren’t you telling me?”

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