was still living here. It gets a bit crowded,” Deke complained.

“Nate did move out once his house was completed,” Amalie said as she began peeling potatoes.

“Yeah, but his house is just on the other side of the creek. I think they’ll come visiting a lot.”

“Not for a while. I’m sure they’ll want to spend a lot of time alone,” Amalie said.

Deke set his coffee cup in the sink, slipped his arms around Amalie, and nuzzled her neck.

“Let’s hope they do. I want to have this house and you all to myself. I’m tired of sharing you with others. You’re mine, all mine,” Deke whispered in her ear.

Amalie turned in his arms and looked into his eyes. “Yes, we’ll have the house all to ourselves for several months, at least.”

“What? Why? You didn’t invite more people to live in the house, did you? I know you don’t have any family, so who is it?”

Amalie shrugged. “I’m not sure, but they’re your family.”

“Mine? The only family I have is Nate.”

Amalie giggled.

Understanding slowly crossed Deke’s face, and he grinned. “Are you saying?”

Amalie nodded.

Deke picked her up and set her on a chair. “You need to rest. You can’t work here or at Nate’s. I want you to stay in bed a lot. I’ll hire a housekeeper or ask Faith to work for us.”

Amalie cupped Deke’s face in her hands. “I love you, but I’m going to be all right. I saw the doctor when Faith and I went to town last week, and he said that I’m healthy and not to worry.”

“You went to town knowing? In that wagon of ours? I’m buying a new, comfortable buggy for you to ride in tomorrow. You’ll only ride to church if the doctor allows it,” Deke insisted, pacing the kitchen.

Amalie stood, made her way back to the bowl of potatoes, and continued to peel. “Deke, please stop pacing and worrying. Women have babies all the time.”

“Yes, but Sarah…” Deke started.

Amalie took a deep breath, praying for the words to assure her husband that she and the baby would be all right. “The doctor and I discussed that. He said that Sarah was sickly from the start, and I haven’t been ill at all. She wasn’t strong enough. It wasn’t her fault or yours—it happens sometimes. I’m strong, and I’ll follow the doctor’s orders, I promise.”

Deke nodded and dropped into a chair. “I will agree to let you do whatever the doctor says you can, but nothing more.”

Amalie kissed him and said, “I agree to that.”

Their discussion was interrupted when Nate and Faith burst through the back door, talking and laughing.

“You should see what Faith has done to the house, Deke,” Nate said as he looked around the kitchen. “What’s for supper?” he added.

“Nothing unless you cook it,” Deke stated. “I’m not allowing Amalie to cook until I speak to the doctor.”

“Why? Are you ill?” Nate asked.

“No, only with child.” Amalie smiled.

Faith squealed, and Nate shook Deke’s hand until his shoulder hurt.

“Oh, my,” Faith said, “will you still be able to stand with me at my wedding on Saturday?”

“Nothing could keep me away,” Amalie promised. “Remember—I bought a new dress, and I intend to wear it and dance.”

Deke began to disagree, but Amalie’s stare quieted him. He mumbled, “We’ll see what the doc says.”

Deke kept his word and purchased a comfortable buggy for Amalie after he had spoken with the doctor to ensure that Amalie could ride in it safely. The doctor also assured Deke that Amalie could dance at Nate and Faith’s wedding, but Deke made her rest between dances and kept plying her with food and punch to keep up her energy.

Amalie felt loved and protected, even when Deke was overprotective and questioned most things she did, right up until the night she told him the baby was on the way.

Deke dragged the kindly doctor out of bed much sooner than he was needed, and he paced the parlor, getting on Nate’s nerves with his constant questions as to why things were taking so long until he heard the baby’s cry.

He bolted into the bedroom, as soon as the doctor told him he could, to find Amalie sitting up in bed and holding a small bundle in her arms.

“Come and meet your daughter,” Amalie said.

Deke embraced them both, tears of happiness and relief running down his cheeks.

Leave a Review

The End

Thank you for reading A Bride for Deke. A new book in the series will be released every two weeks by various talented authors. If you have a free moment, I would love it if you could leave me a review. If helps me know what you liked or didn’t and how to improve my stories. You can find me on My Amazon Author Page, my website at mariannespitzer.com, and my Facebook author page. Join all of the authors at The Proxy Brides Readers Group on Facebook Thanks, and God bless.

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