Courting Miss Hattie: A Novel

Courting Miss Hattie: A Novel

by Pamela Morsi
Courting Miss Hattie: A Novel

Courting Miss Hattie: A Novel

by Pamela Morsi

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Overview

The news spread like brush fire through the whole county when widower Ancil Drayton announced his intention to start courting Miss Hattie Colfax. She was certainly spirited and delightfully sweet natured, and she'd managed to run her family farm almost single-handedly. But wasn't a twenty-nine-year-old lady farmer too old to catch a husband?

An Irresistable Suitor.

All his life handsome, black-haired Reed Tyler had worked Miss Hattie's farm--and dreamed of one day settling down on his own piece of land with the pretty young woman he'd sworn to marry. Hattie was someone he could tell his hopes and troubles to--someone he looked on as a sister. So he thought, until the idea of Ancil Drayton calling on her made him seethe. Until the night a brotherly peck became a scorching kiss... and Reed knew nothing would bank the blaze--and that his best friend was the only woman he would ever love.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307419651
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 08/26/2009
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 407,679
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Pamela Morsi is a native of Oklahoma. Winner of numerous awards, including two RITA Awards, she is the author of Heaven Sent, Courting Miss Hattie, Garters, Wild Oats, Runabout, Marrying Stone, Something Shady, Simple Jess, The Love Charm, No Ordinary Princess, and Sealed with a Kiss. A former medical librarian, Pamela Morsi has been praised as “the Garrison Keillor of romance” (Publishers Weekly) for the down-to-earth flavor of her delightfully romantic novels.

Read an Excerpt

THE stillness of the gray morning was abruptly shattered as the barn door flew open, slamming back on its hinges. Peering out as if to see if the coast was clear was a handsome, well-groomed nanny goat. Her barley-colored coat was accented by white markings on her face, and her intelligent eyes and twitching pointed ears were evidence that this was no typical barnyard dweller.
 
Daintily seeking her way across the yard, she headed directly to the sturdy white clapboard farmhouse. She ignored the twisting honeysuckle vines and the crape-myrtle bushes, and climbed up the two small steps of the back porch. Lowering her chin, she butted the screen door in a rhythmic fashion, not unlike any caller knocking when paying a visit.
 
“’Morning, Myrene,” a voice called from inside. “I’m up before you are today.” Hattie appeared at the door, pail in hand, and paused to pat the goat on the top of the head before assessing the new morning.
 
It was still quite cool, but spring was just around the corner. It was her favorite season, all green and new. It was the renewal of life, the promise of another chance.
 
She walked across the barnyard to the milking platform, and the goat followed in her wake. The area, swept only the day before with a yardbroom, was as clean and orderly as the woman who cared for it. Even at this early hour, her faded cotton work-dress was neatly pressed, and her mass of dark blond hair was pulled circumspectly into a coiled plait at the nape of her neck.
 
With an ease born of habit, she led Myrene onto the platform, guided her head through the round slot, and lowered the crossbar to secure the goat in place. Adjusting the stool, she seated herself for milking.
 
Hattie Colfax was a strong farm-muscled woman of twenty and nine. Her figure was unremarkable, but she did have the requisite number of feminine curves. Her eyes were an in-between color—not green, not quite blue. And her hair, she joked to the ladies at the church, was the exact color of possum fur.
 
Hattie was blessed, or cursed, with a quick and easy smile. She was faster than most to see the humor in things, and the sound of her laughter was familiar to all who knew her. Her friendly open smile, though, displayed her very straight, very white teeth. Unfortunately, they were also large and numerous, and they gave her a rather equine appearance. She had been born on the Colfax farm, the only child of Henry and Sarah Colfax. Since her mother’s death two years earlier, she’d lived there alone. But at least she wasn’t lonely.
 
Gazing down the road into the fleeting darkness, she saw Reed Tyler striding toward the house, and a smile automatically curved her lips.
 
Unhitching Myrene from the milking platform, she patted the nanny on the rump. “Have a good day, Myrene, and stay out of my canna bulbs.”
 
Hattie carried her pail of milk back to the house and poured it through a towel to strain it. Setting the quart of fresh milk on the counter, she checked the fire in the stove, stoked it a couple of times with the poker, then began mixing up the morning biscuits.
 
A knock on the back screen signaled Reed’s arrival. “’Morning, Miss Hattie.”
 
She heard him opening the door and glanced up with a welcoming smile. “’Morning, Reed. Looks like a good day for plowing.”
 
“Yes, ma’am,” he answered, seating himself at the table.
 
“I saw your garden on the way in. For shame, Miss Hattie,” he scolded in mock horror, “You’ve been plowing on Sunday.”
 
Hattie dismissed the teasing with a shrug. “I had some things on my mind yesterday,” she said. “It’s always best to get yourself to work when you start ruminating about something. The good Lord understands that I’m thinking.”
 
As Hattie put the bacon on to fry, she glanced over at the young man she knew so well. At twenty-four, Reed Tyler was one fine specimen of male humanity. He was right at six feet in height, and every inch was covered with the rangy muscles of a hardworking farmer. His hair was as black as good Arkansas dirt, and his eyes were the warm color of cinnamon. In the morning light of the kitchen she could see the faint pale lines that forked out from his eyes. They were a sure sign of a farmer who plowed with a smile on his face.
 
“You want coffee or buttermilk this morning, Plowboy?” she asked.
 
A smile spread across his face, livening his features. “I believe I’ll have buttermilk this morning,” he said. Hattie immediately set a cup of coffee down in front of him.
 
It was an old joke between them, one that continued to bring smiles to their mornings. One breakfast years ago when Reed was little more than a cockerel of sixteen or seventeen and going through that time of learning to fit into the world of men, he’d suddenly raged at her. “Damnation, woman! Why are you always serving me up this buttermilk like I’m some pap-fed baby? I’m a man, and I want coffee!”
 
Hattie had walked over to the table, picked up his glass of buttermilk, and threw it in his face. “You want coffee, Plow-boy? Then you ask for it, but don’t you ever curse at me again.”
 
Since that day, Hattie had served him coffee every morning, and Reed kept his more expressive language for the menfolk on Saturday night.
 
Setting their plates on the table, Hattie reminded herself that Reed Tyler was no longer the plowboy. He was a man now. A well-respected man, which was not a typical circumstance for a sharecropper. In this sparsely populated farm country, a man without his own land was often a source of ridicule. But Reed was strong, hardworking, and ambitious, and he was going to be somebody someday. Not a soul in the county doubted it for a minute.
 
Joining him at the table, Hattie watched with pleasure as he devoured the bacon, eggs, grits, and biscuits she’d made for him. “So, what you planning today?” she asked.
 
Reed took care to swallow before answering. “I’m going to walk the west field by the spring. I suspect that’s where I’ll be plowing first. I’m going to put the corn and wheat over there this year. Heard they’ve had a real mild winter down south. Their cotton won’t make much. That’s good news for us.”
 
Hattie nodded in agreement, then said, “I’m going to spread some manure on my garden today. We got any fresh, or should I get some from the heap?”
 
“There’s plenty of fresh,” he said, then added with a look of good-natured censure, “But I’ll be doing the spreading, Miss Hattie. There’s no call for ladies to be out spreading manure.”
 
“Ladies, Plowboy, can do anything that is necessary,” she said emphatically.
 
Reed couldn’t help but grin. He loved it when Hattie got up on her high horse. “I agree completely,” he said. “But in this case it’s just not necessary. I’ll spread the manure before I head out to the fields.”
 
She thanked him and got up to the take their plates. As she poured him another cup of coffee, she urged him to sit and drink it while she did the dishes.
 
Reed took a sip of his coffee, then leaned back in his chair and watched Hattie work. Her movements were smooth and efficient. Remembering Bessie Jane’s piece of gossip, he began studying Hattie in a way he never had before. Facing toward the sink, she offered a view that might be considered her best. Her hair was parted in the middle and carefully wound into a neat little bun at the nape of her neck. Although not petite and curvaceous like Bessie Jane, Hattie was definitely built like a woman. She was tall, maybe standing as high as his chin, and her shoulders were broad for a woman. But her waist was nicely differentiated, and he suspected it was no larger than Bessie Jane’s. Allowing his gaze to drift downward, he didn’t fail to appreciate her behind. It wasn’t lush and tempting like Bessie Jane’s, but even decently covered by her shapeless calico dress, he could tell it was high and well rounded. Had Ancil Drayton noticed that too? he wondered.
 
“The idea didn’t sit well with Reed. Shaking the thought away and transferring his gaze to the fields outside the window, he reminded himself that Miss Hattie would have nothing to do with old Drayton, and it was none of Reed’s business anyway.
 
“Suspect I’d better get out there, Miss Hattie,” he said. “Those fields aren’t going to plow themselves.”
 
Hattie heard the scrape of his chair and turned to him as he rose. With his arms high over his head, he stretched languidly, a yawn escaping his lips. Her gaze was drawn irresistibly to his broad, hard chest.
 

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