1883
Sweetwater Crossings, TX
Main characters
The Vaughn Sisters:
Joanna Richter: Widowed concert pianist returned home
Louisa Porter: Town midwife, married to Josh, owner of the mercantile
Emily Furguson: Eldest sister, cook for their boardinghouse, married to Craig, town teacher
Guests at the Finley House:
Burke Finley: Physician trying to heal from a tragedy
Della Samuels: Waited over 20 years to see the house her deceased fiancé, Clive, had built for her
Mrs. Carmichael: Takes care of Noah, the teacher's son while he’s at school
Townfolk:
Gertrude Albright: Had a crush on Clive
Miss Heppel: Piano teacher, church pianist, also had a crush on Clive 20 years before
Harold Lindstrom, current town pastor
Twenty+ years before, Clive Finley met a beautiful young lady in Alabama he wanted to marry and take with him to Sweetwater Crossings. Her father wouldn’t allow it until Clive built her a house bigger and better than the one she grew up in. So Clive went back to Sweetwater Crossings to begin the house, which took a while and caught the attention of everyone in town.
Sometime after it was finished, Clive disappeared. Nobody really seemed to know where, only speculate that he went to war and died. The Vaughn family took over the house and the three sisters were raised there. Twenty years later with both mother and father gone, the family mansion had become a boarding house named after Clive Finley called The Finley House.
One day, two visitors from Alabama came to see the Finley House. One was Burke Finley, the nephew of Clive Finley, the other was Della Samuels, who Burke called Aunt Della, though there was no relation. Della was the fiancé for whom Clive Finley built the house. She had no designs on it, she just wanted to finally see it, go on with her life, and maybe find out information about what happened to Clive.
Many townsfolk were shocked at the resemblance between Burke and his uncle Clive. Two women in particular who had crushes on Clive 20 years before were shocked when they saw Burke thinking he was Clive returned.
What was fun about this book were the friendships between nearly everyone in town, but primarily the new visitors and the Vaughn sisters. There was no apparent romance between the new widow, Joanna, and Burke, however, they were together every day becoming closer friends. Their friendship began around meal times at the boardinghouse, but deepened as they were both trying to find answers to the mystery of Clive’s disappearance/death.
I really like this story much more than the first book of the series. Much more realistic. True to life emotions, gentle friendships, and mild faith storyline made this a book I enjoyed reading.