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Angry Rancher Bought 4 Sisters Sold by Their Cruel Uncle, What He Built for Them Made History

Grant pulled the wagon to a stop in front of the house, and jumped down with the ease of long practice. “Welcome to Twin Pines,” he said, his voice carrying none of the warmth the words implied. Mrs. Chen will get you settled. Tomorrow, we’ll discuss your duties. Before Sarah could respond, the front door swung open and a small Chinese woman in her 50s emerged, wiping her hands on her apron.

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Her face was round and kind, etched with laugh lines that suggested a life lived with more joy than Grant seemed to hold. When she saw the four girls in the wagon, her eyes widened with surprise, then softened with immediate understanding. Aya, Grant,” she said, her English flavored with an accent that spoke of distant shores.

“You bring home children. You tell Mrs. Chen nothing about children.” “I didn’t know until this morning,” Grant replied, already unloading supplies from the wagon. “Mrs. Chen, this is Sarah, Emma, Kate, and Lucy Henderson. They’ll be living here now. They need rooms, food, and patience. Can you manage?” Mrs. Chen’s hands flew to her hips in mock indignation. Can I manage? Mrs.

Chen raised six children in Canton before coming to America. Four skinny girls. This is nothing. Then her expression gentled as she looked at each sister in turn. But they look like ghosts, Grant. What happened to them? Later, Grant said curtly, handing her a package. Right now they need beds and dinner. We can discuss details after they’ve rested.

Always with the later, Mrs. Chen muttered. But she was already moving toward the wagon, her arms outstretched. Come, girls. You come with Mrs. Chen now. I show you proper home, not whatever terrible place you come from. Sarah climbed down first, then helped Lucy, whose legs had gone stiff from the long ride.

Emma and Kate followed, all four of them standing uncertainly in the yard, while ranch hands emerged from the barn to help Grant unload. The men cast curious glances at the girls, but said nothing, their faces carefully neutral. Mrs. Chen noticed their hesitation and clucked her tongue. “Why you stand like scared rabbits? Inside, inside. Mrs.

Chen, not bite. I promise.” She held out her hand to Lucy, who looked up at Sarah for permission. “It’s all right,” Sarah said softly, though she wasn’t sure it was. “But what choice did they have? They’d cast their lot with Grant Ashford, for better or worse.” Lucy took Mrs.

Chen’s hand, and the small woman led them into a house that smelled of wood smoke, dried herbs, and something delicious cooking in the kitchen. The entry hall was simple, but well-maintained with polished wood floors and walls decorated with landscape paintings that looked expensive. A staircase curved upward to the second floor, its banister carved with intricate detail. Upstairs, Mrs.

Chen announced, leading them up. Grant’s room at end of hall. Mrs. Chen have room near kitchen downstairs. You girls get three rooms up here. Two bedrooms and sitting room between is good. Yes, three rooms. Emma breathed for just us. You think Mrs. Chen lie? The housekeeper pushed open a door to reveal a bedroom with two beds, a dresser, a wash stand, and luxury of luxuries curtains on the windows. This room for two of you.

Next room same. Sitting room have books, sewing table, space for learning. Grant say, “You must learn, so you learn.” Sarah felt tears prickling her eyes and fought them back fiercely. After 11 months of sleeping four to a bed in Silus’s freezing attic, after today’s horror on the auction block, this was almost too much to process.

“Why is he doing this?” she whispered. Mrs. Chen’s expression turned somber. “Grant is complicated man. He lose his Mary 3 years ago, and part of him died, too. But other part remember what it like to have nothing, to need help. He born poor, you know, build all this from dirt and determination.

Maybe he see you girls and remember, she shrugged. Or maybe he just tired of seeing bad things happen and doing nothing with Grant sometimes even Mrs. Chen not know. Will he? Kate started then stopped her analytical mind struggling with something emotional and therefore harder to quantify. Will he hurt us? No. Mrs. Chen’s response was immediate and absolute. Many things Mrs.

Chen say about Grant Ashford. He’s stubborn. He cold sometimes. He worked too hard and smiled too little. But hurt children? Never. Not ever. This Mrs. Chen promise on ancestors graves. She looked at each girl with fierce protectiveness. But if you steal, if you lie, if you lazy, then yes, he send you away.

Grant demand honesty and work. You give him that, he give you home is fair trade. Yes. Yes. Sarah said, finding her voice. We’ll work. We’ll work harder than he expects. Good. Then we understand each other. Mrs. Chen clapped her hands. Now wash dinner in 30 minutes. Come down when bell rings. And you? She pointed at Lucy.

You sleep in same room as big sister tonight. New place is scary for little ones. After Mrs. Chen bustled out, the four sisters stood in the bedroom, staring at the two beds with their clean quilts and plump pillows. Emma was the first to break, dropping on to the nearest bed with a sob that seemed to come from her very soul. It’s too much, she gasped.

I can’t I don’t understand what’s happening. This morning, we were being sold, and now we’re in a beautiful house with beds and food and and we don’t know what he wants, Kate finished, her voice shaking. There’s always something people want, always. Father wanted us to be educated. Mother wanted us to be kind. Silas wanted us to be profitable.

What does Grant Ashford want? Sarah sat beside Emma and pulled her close, then gestured for Kate and Lucy to join them. The four sisters huddled together on the bed as they had so many cold nights in Silus’s attic, finding warmth and strength in proximity. “I don’t know what he wants,” Sarah admitted. “But Mrs.

Chen was right about one thing. Whatever this is, it’s better than the alternative. We were going to be separated. Dutch Henderson was going to She couldn’t finish that sentence. Not with Lucy listening. We’re together. We’re safe. We have food and shelter. Tomorrow we’ll start figuring out the rest.

What if it’s a trick? Emma whispered. Then we’ll survive it, Sarah replied with more confidence than she felt. We’ve survived worse. We survived losing Mama and Papa. We survived Silus. We’ll survive this, too. Whatever it is. A bell rang from somewhere downstairs, clear and musical. Mrs. Chen’s voice followed. Dinner.

Come eat before it get cold. They washed quickly in the basin. The water was actually warm, heated specially for them, and descended the stairs together. The dining room was smaller than Sarah expected, dominated by a long wooden table that could seat 12, but was currently set for six. Grant sat at the head, his expression unreadable. Mrs.

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