The lost and found girl, p.1
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The Lost and Found Girl, page 1

 

The Lost and Found Girl
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The Lost and Found Girl


  Praise for the novels of Maisey Yates

  “Yates weaves surprises and vivid descriptions into this moving tale about strong and nurturing female family bonds.”

  —Booklist on Confessions from the Quilting Circle

  “Secrets from a Happy Marriage is a beautiful, emotional, tender story with a gorgeous setting and characters I adored. Maisey Yates always writes stories that stay in your heart long after you read the last page.”

  —New York Times bestselling author RaeAnne Thayne

  “Fans of Robyn Carr and RaeAnne Thayne will enjoy [Yates’s] small-town romance.”

  —Booklist on Secrets from a Happy Marriage

  “[A] surefire winner not to be missed.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Slow Burn Cowboy (starred review)

  “Multidimensional and genuine characters are the highlight of this alluring novel, and sensual love scenes complete it. Yates’s fans...will savor this delectable story.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Unbroken Cowboy (starred review)

  “Fast-paced and intensely emotional.... This is one of the most heartfelt installments in this series, and Yates’s fans will love it.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Cowboy to the Core (starred review)

  “Yates’s outstanding eighth Gold Valley contemporary...will delight newcomers and fans alike.... This charming and very sensual contemporary is a must for fans of passion.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Cowboy Christmas Redemption (starred review)

  Also by Maisey Yates

  Confessions from the Quilting Circle

  Secrets from a Happy Marriage

  Gold Valley

  Smooth-Talking Cowboy

  Untamed Cowboy

  Good Time Cowboy

  A Tall, Dark Cowboy Christmas

  Unbroken Cowboy

  Cowboy to the Core

  Lone Wolf Cowboy

  Cowboy Christmas Redemption

  The Bad Boy of Redemption Ranch

  The Hero of Hope Springs

  The Last Christmas Cowboy

  The Heartbreaker of Echo Pass

  Rodeo Christmas at Evergreen Ranch

  The True Cowboy of Sunset Ridge

  Copper Ridge

  Part Time Cowboy

  Brokedown Cowboy

  Bad News Cowboy

  The Cowboy Way

  One Night Charmer

  Tough Luck Hero

  Last Chance Rebel

  Slow Burn Cowboy

  Down Home Cowboy

  Wild Ride Cowboy

  Christmastime Cowboy

  For more books by Maisey Yates, visit www.maiseyyates.com.

  Look for Maisey Yates’s next novel

  Unbridled Cowboy

  available now from HQN.

  Maisey Yates is a New York Times bestselling author of over one hundred romance novels. Whether she’s writing strong, hardworking cowboys, dissolute princes or multigenerational family stories, she loves getting lost in fictional worlds. An avid knitter with a dangerous yarn addiction and an aversion to housework, Maisey lives with her husband and three kids in rural Oregon. Check out her website, maiseyyates.com, or find her on Facebook.

  Maisey Yates

  The Lost and Found Girl

  To Mom, wish you were here.

  Contents

  Article

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  Author Note

  The Miraculous Ruby McKee

  BY DALE WAINWRIGHT

  Pear Blossom Gazette, December 5, 2005

  It was five years ago, on a cold December night, when three young girls made a miraculous discovery that changed the town of Pear Blossom forever. While walking home from choir practice on that night, Marianne, Lydia and Dahlia McKee discovered a small baby, bundled up and abandoned upon Sentinel Bridge. Sentinel Bridge is the largest covered bridge in the area, built in 1917 to join two halves of the town, restored in the early 1990s as part of an effort to reinvigorate the community of Pear Blossom. The bridge itself crosses Willow Creek, connecting the main thoroughfare of town with many of the community ranches and orchards.

  On the night of December 23, 2000, however, the bridge served as something more than a simple connection of pieces of the community. It played host to a miracle. The infant that was found there could so easily have succumbed to the elements. The girls might not have noticed a tiny, quiet bundle in the darkness of the bridge. And yet, she was found.

  Now a thriving, happy kindergartner, Ruby was adopted by the very family who found her that night. A McKee in name, but part of the entire town of Pear Blossom. It was Ruby’s Miracle that reinvigorated interest in Pear Blossom. That revived the festivals, tourism, the historical society. The international headlines about the Miracle Christmas Child shone a spotlight on the picturesque town and landed Pear Blossom in tourism magazines and lists of the most desirable communities to visit, to buy a home in, or to start a small business in. This reinvigorated Main Street and brought new vigor to the town.

  It is easy to look at this night as a miracle, for a child’s life was saved. But it is said in the town of Pear Blossom that Ruby McKee herself is miraculous.

  1

  RUBY

  Only two truly remarkable things had ever happened in the small town of Pear Blossom, Oregon. The first occurred in 1999, when Caitlin Groves disappeared one fall evening on her way home from her boyfriend’s family orchard.

  The second was in 2000, when newborn Ruby McKee was discovered on Sentinel Bridge, the day before Christmas Eve.

  It wasn’t as if Pear Blossom hadn’t had excitement before then. There was the introduction of pear orchards—an event which ultimately determined the town’s name—in the late 1800s. Outlaws who lay in wait to rob the mail coaches, and wolves and mountain lions who made meals of the farmers’ animals. The introduction of the railroad, electricity and a particularly active society of suffragettes, when women were lobbying for the right to vote.

  But all of that blended into the broader context of history, not entirely dissimilar to the goings-on of every town in every part of the world, as men fought to tame a wild land and the land rose up and fought back.

  Caitlin’s disappearance and Ruby’s appearance felt both specific and personal, and had scarred and healed—if Ruby took the proclamations of various citizens too literally, which she really tried not to do—the community.

  Mostly, as Ruby got out of the car she’d hired at the airport and stood in front of Sentinel Bridge with a suitcase in one hand, she marveled at how idyllic and the same it all seemed.

  The bridge itself was battered from the years. The wood dark and marred, but sturdy as ever. A white circle with a white 1917, denoting the year of its construction, was stenciled in the top center of the bridge, just above the tunnel that led to the other side, a pinhole of light visible in the darkness across the way.

  It was only open to foot traffic now, with a road curving wide around it and carrying cars to the other side a different way. For years, Sentinel Bridge was closed, and it wasn’t until a community outreach and education effort in the early nineties that it was reopened for people to walk on.

  Ruby could have had the driver take her a different route.

  But she wanted to cross the bridge.

  “Are you sure you want me to leave you here?” her driver asked.

  She’d told him when she’d gotten into his car that she was from here originally, and he’d still spent the drive explaining local landmarks to her, so she wasn’t all that surprised he didn’t trust her directive to leave her in the middle of nowhere.

  He was the kind of man who just knew best.

  They’d just driven through the town proper. All brick—red and white and yellow—the sidewalks lined with trees whose leaves matched as early fall took hold. It was early, and the town had still been sleepy, most of the shops closed. There had been a runner or two out, an older man—Tom Swenson—walking his dog. But otherwise it had been empty. Still, it bore more marks of civilization than where they stood now.

  The bridge was nearly engulfed in trees, some of which were evergreen, others
beginning to show rusted hints of autumn around the edges. A golden shaft of light cut over the treetops, bathing the front of the bridge in a warm glow, illuminating the long wooden walk—where the road ended—that led to the covered portion, but shrouding the entrance in darkness.

  She could see what the man in the car saw. Something abandoned and eerie and disquieting.

  But Ruby only saw the road home.

  “It’s fine,” she said.

  She did not explain that her parents’ farm was just up the road, and she walked this way all the time.

  That it was only a quarter of a mile from where she’d been found as a baby.

  She had to cross the bridge nearly every day when she was in town, so she didn’t always think of it. But some days, days like this after she’d been away awhile, she had a strange, hushed feeling in her heart, like she was about to pay homage at a grave.

  “If you’re sure.” His tone clearly said she shouldn’t be, but he still took her easy wave as his invitation to go.

  Ruby turned away from the retreating car and smiled, wrapping both hands around the handle of her battered brown suitcase. It wasn’t weathered from her own use. She’d picked it up at a charity shop in York, England, because she’d thought it had a good aesthetic and it was just small enough to be a carry-on, but wasn’t like one of those black wheeled things that everyone else had.

  She’d cursed while she’d lugged it through Heathrow and Newark and Denver, then finally Medford. Those wheely bags that were not unique at all had seemed more attractive each time her shoulders and arms throbbed from carrying the very lovely suitcase.

  Ruby’s love of history was oftentimes not practical.

  But it didn’t matter now. The ache in her arms had faded and she was nearly home.

  Her parents would have come to pick her up from the airport but Ruby had swapped her flight in Denver to an earlier one so she didn’t have to hang around for half the day. It had just meant getting up and rushing out of the airport adjacent hotel she’d stayed in for only a couple of hours. Her Newark flight had gotten in at eleven thirty the night before and by the time she’d collected her bags, gotten to the hotel and stumbled into bed, it had been nearly one in the morning.

  Then she’d been up again at three for the five o’clock flight into Medford, which had set her back on the ground around the time she’d taken off. Which had made her feel gritty and exhausted and wholly uncertain of the time. She’d passed through so many time zones nothing felt real.

  She waved the driver off and took the first step forward. She paused at the entry to the bridge. She looked back over her shoulder at the bright sunshine around her and then took a step forward into the darkness. Light came up through the cracks between the wood on the ground and the walls. At the center of the bridge, there were two windows with no glass that looked out over the river below. It was by those windows that she’d been found.

  She walked briskly through the bridge and then stopped. In spite of herself. She often walked on this bridge and never felt a thing. She rarely felt inclined to ponder the night that she was found. If she got ridiculous about that too often, then she would never get anything done. After all, she had to cross this bridge to get home.

  But she was moving back to town, not just returning for a visit, and it felt right to mark the occasion with a stop at the place of her salvation. She paused for a moment, right at the spot between the two openings that looked out on the water.

  She had been placed just there. Down on the ground. Wrapped in a blanket, but still so desperately tiny and alone.

  She had always thought about the moment when her sisters had picked her up and brought her back to their parents. It was the moment that came before that she had a hard time with. The one where someone—it had to have been her birth mother—had set her down there, leaving her to fate. To die if she died, or live if she was found. And thankfully she’d been found, but there had been no way for the person who had set her there to know that would happen.

  It had gotten below freezing that night.

  If Marianne, Lydia and Dahlia hadn’t come walking through from the Christmas play rehearsal, then...

  She didn’t cry. But a strange sort of hollowness spread out in her chest.

  But she ignored it and decided to press on toward home. She walked through the darkness of the bridge, watching as the light, the exit, loomed larger.

  And once she was outside, she could breathe. Because it didn’t matter what had happened there. What mattered was every step she had taken thereafter. What mattered was this road back home.

  She walked up the gravel-covered road, kicking rocks out of her way as she went. It was delightfully cold, the crisp morning a reminder of exactly why she loved Pear Blossom. It was completely silent out here except for the odd braying of a donkey and chirping birds. She looked down at the view below, at the way the mist hung over the pear trees in the orchard. The way it created a ring around the mountain, the proud peak standing out above it. A blanket of green and gold, rimmed with misty rose.

  She breathed in deep and kept on walking, relishing the silence, relishing the sense of home.

  She had spent the last four years studying history. Mostly abroad. She had engaged in every exchange program she could, because what was the point of studying history if you limited yourself to a country that was as young as the United States and to a coast as new as the West Coast.

  She could remember the awe that she’d experienced walking on streets that were more than just a couple of hundred years old. The immense breadth of time that she had felt. And she had... Well, she had hoped that she would find answers somewhere. Because she had always believed that the answers to what ails you in the present could be found somewhere in the past.

  And she’d explored the past. Thoroughly. Many different facets of it. And along the way, she’d done a bit of exploring of herself.

  After all, that was half the reason she’d left. To try and figure out who she was outside of this place where everyone knew her, and her story.

  Though, when she got close to people, it didn’t take long for them to discover her story. It was, after all, in the news.

  Of course, she always found it interesting who discovered it on their own. Because that was revealing.

  Who googled their friends.

  Ruby obviously googled her friends, but that was because of her own background and experience. If those same friends had an equally salacious background, then it was forgivable. But if they were boring, then she found it deeply suspicious that they engaged in such activities.

  She came over a slight rise in the road and before her was the McKee family farm. It had been in the McKee family for generations. And Ruby felt a profound sense of connection to it. It might not be her legacy by blood, but that had never mattered to the McKees, and it didn’t matter to her either. This town was part of who she was.

  And maybe that was why no matter how she had searched elsewhere, she was drawn back here.

  Dana Groves, her old mentor, had called her six months ago to tell her an archivist position was being created in the historical society with some newly allocated funds, and had offered the job to Ruby.

  Ruby loved Pear Blossom, but she’d also felt like it was really important for her to go out in the world and see what else existed.

  It was easy for her to be in Pear Blossom. People here loved her.

  It had been a fascinating experience to go to a place where that wasn’t automatically the case. Of course, she hadn’t stayed in one place very long. After going to the University of Washington, she had gotten involved in different study abroad programs, and she had moved between them as often as she could. Studying in Italy, France, Spain, coming to the States briefly for her graduation ceremony in May, and then going back overseas to spend a few months in England, finishing up some elective study programs.

  But then, she’d found that instructive too. Being in a constant state of meeting new people. And for a while, the sheer differentness of it all had fed her in a way that had quieted that restlessness. She had been learning. Learning and experiencing and...

  Well, part of her had wondered if her first job needed to be away from home. To continue her education.

 
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