From Enemies to Married Couple—No Mystery!
In The Cowboy’s Enemy (Sweet Water Ranch book 9), Jessie Gussman delivers another winner! This time the hero is harvest crew member Abner, who I dubbed “ex-Amish Man of Mystery” for his uncanny ability to figure out things his fellow harvesters think are secret. Now it’s Abner himself who doesn’t know what’s going on—in the heart of Cora, the girl he loved 12 years ago, who used him to make his cousin jealous, got pregnant and said he was the father, and made him go from southern Ohio to North Dakota, where he joined Clay Stryker’s harvest crew (book 7) and licked his wounds while refusing to reveal any of his pre-crew life details.
When his Gram dies, Abner gets a call from his half-brother saying his mother wants to see him. Despite his misgivings, he rides his motorcycle to Ohio and finds that Cora is living with his mother, whom she calls “Aunt Sandy”. Aunt Sandy functions best surrounded by beer cans in front of the TV. Six small children call Cora “Mom”; Abner sees no “Dad” and guesses correctly that there are actually three fathers for the six kids. Cora has made so many foolish decisions about men, she’s promised herself that from now on she’ll stand alone, not needing any man, and keep her kids safe from unstable influences and bad examples.
Abner proves to have a knack with kids; the two smallest girls, a toddler and a baby, cling to him, and he puts the oldest boys to work, giving them something productive to do rather then run wild all day. They dig a fire pit, gather sticks, and have hot dogs and s’mores for dinner. Three-year-old Kohlton dares Abner to eat a large worm to win “a fousand kisses from Mommy” and he does so, echoing his consumption of Reina”s truly awful cooking in book 7. Cora talks the kids down to two kisses and the seat next to him at dinner. She pays her debt that night, little dreaming that Abner has waited for her to be his first kiss.
Aunt Sandy moved out of state after Gram’s funeral, leaving Cora and her children homeless. Abner invites them to stay with him, on the condition that they marry before the family moves onto the ranch he bought from Boone in book 8. Cora marries him but still thinks it will be annulled and she’ll leave after she gets a job and can pay rent; Angela, the scheming Nebraskan beauty who messed with both Clay and Boone and ended up as a waitress in the Sweet Water diner, tells her that she’s not meant to stand alone, that God created man and then woman to help him, so she’d be foolish to throw away Abner for a “dumb promise” about being independent. Cora disagrees but becomes Angela’s first friend in town.
Cora has applied for several graphic design jobs to bring in enough income for her to leave Abner’s ranch, and she gets an interview for a job in Cincinnati—close to her home in Ohio, but a day’s drive from Sweet Water. In the hotel that night, Cora realizes that Angela was right—“teamwork makes the dream work”, and she and Abner can be partners in life and marriage without her depending on him for her worth. She returns to Sweet Water determined to tell Abner she’s staying.
At the airport, Abner and all six kids greet her, and she hears that they’re going to get cows and chickens and pigs and cats and a puppy—they had to talk about something, he says ruefully—and they usher her into a house with a nearly finished addition. The girls will get the new room, the boys will get the loft, and Cora can have the bedroom. Abner will sleep, as always, in the barn. But Cora has other plans for him…
The Cowboy’s Enemy has a solid hero, a damaged but changing heroine, and a few funny Amish half-siblings from Abner’s no-longer-Mysterious past. Jessie Gussman doesn’t disappoint! I loved Abner’s compassion and fighting spirit, and I was drawn to Cora although I deeply disagree with her past choices. The Scripture references were delicate but powerful. A truly winning story! I highly recommend it.