A McKettrick Christmas

A McKettrick Christmas Read Free Page A

Book: A McKettrick Christmas Read Free
Author: Linda Lael Miller
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heavy iron coupling once linking it to its counterpart snapped cleanly in two.
    Lizzie considered retreating, but in the end a desperate need to know the full scope of their predicament over-rode common prudence. She climbed carefully to the ground, using the ice-coated ladder affixed to one end of the car, and stooped to peer inside the overturned car.
    It was an eerie sight, with the seats jutting out sideways. She uttered a soft prayer of gratitude that no one had been riding in that part of the train and crawled inside. Clutching the edge of the open luggage rack to her left, she straightened and crossed the car by stepping from the side of one seat to the next.
    Finally, she reached the other door and steeled herself to go through the whole ordeal of climbing to the ground and reentering all over again.
    The locomotive was upright, however, and the snow was packed so tightly between the two cars that it made a solid path. Lizzie moved across, longing for her fancy new coat, and stepped inside the engine room.
    Steam huffed forlornly from the disabled boiler.
    The conductor lay on the floor, the engineer beside him.
    Dr. Shane, crouching between them, looked up at Lizzie with such a confounded expression on his face that, had things not been at such a grave pass, she would have laughed.
    “You said you might need my help,” she pointed out.
    Dr. Shane snapped his medical bag closed, stood. He looked so glum that Lizzie knew without asking that the two men on the floor of the locomotive were either dead or mortally wounded.
    Tears burned in her eyes as she imagined their families, preparing for Yuletide celebrations, unaware, as yet, that their eagerly awaited loved ones would never return.
    “It was quick,” Dr. Shane said, standing in front of her now, placing a hand on her shoulder. “Did you know them?”
    Lizzie shook her head, struggling to compose herself. Her grandfather’s deep voice echoed in her mind.
    Keep your backbone straight—
    “Were they—were they lying there, side by side like that?” It was a strange question, she knew that, even as she asked. Perhaps she was still in shock, after all. “When you found them, I mean?”
    “I moved them,” the doctor answered, “once I knew they were both gone.”
    Lizzie nodded. Just the act of standing up straight and squaring her shoulders made her feel a little better.
    A slight, grim smile lifted the corner of Dr. Shane’s finely-shaped mouth. “These rescuers you’re expecting,” he said. “If they’re anything like you, we might have some hope of surviving after all.”
    Lizzie’s heart ached. What she wouldn’t have given to be at home on the Triple M at that moment, with her family all around her. There would be a big, fragrant tree in the parlor at the main ranch house, shimmering with tinsel. Dear, familiar voices, talking, laughing, singing. “Of course we’ll survive,” she heard herself say. Then she looked at the dead men again, and a lump lodged in her throat, so she had to swallow and then ratchet her chin up another notch before she could go on. “Most of us, anyway. My papa, my uncles, even my grandfather—they’ll all come, as soon as they get word that the train didn’t arrive.”
    “All of them McKettricks, I suppose.”
    Lizzie nodded again, shivering now. The boiler wasn’t putting out any heat at all. Most likely, the smoke stack was full of snow. “They’ll get through. You wait and see. Nothing stops a McKettrick, especially when there’s trouble.”
    “I believe you, Miss McKettrick,” he said.
    “You must call me Lizzie,” she replied, without thinking. He had, though only once, and she needed the normality of her given name. Just the sound of it gave her strength.
    “Lizzie, then,” Dr. Shane answered. “If you’ll call me Morgan.”
    “Morgan,” she repeated, feeling bewildered again.
    He went back to the bodies, gently removed the conductor’s coat, then laid it over Lizzie’s shoulders. She

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