Jessie’s Most Faith-Filled Work
The Sweet Water Ranch series continues with a gem not even set in North Dakota! Clay Stryker, the “Preacher” in The Cowboy’s Fairy Tale, is running his harvest crew in the wheat fields of Nebraska when a girl from his past walks in and shoots a rattlesnake by his feet.
Not a formula for romance, even a “secret romance”, but in Jessie Gussman’s gifted hands the honorable cowboy and the damaged girl he rescued from her pimp at a rest stop years earlier find their way toward each other—and Reina finds her way to God, though it’s really the other way around.
Reina was fourteen and pregnant, being led from truck to truck by her drug-dealing trafficker, when 18-year-old Clay saw a child in danger and rescued her. As she poured out her hopelessness, he promised her that if she gave up her baby for adoption, finished high school, and graduated college, he’d marry her. She did all he asked, then tracked down the “Mary Poppins farm boy” to prove he was a promise breaker. Instead she found a single father whose life backs up his “peaches and roses and little blessings from God” outlook, as Reina had mocked it. How does he live with such peace and integrity? And how can such a man be unmarried with a young daughter?
Clay hires Reina to supervise Gina’s schoolwork, cook for the crew, and run errands as needed. The first duty succeeds fully—Gina loves Miss Reina—and she never runs errands, but she is hopeless in the kitchen! The crew members struggle to identify dinner, much less eat it. Gina and kind neighbor Mrs. Smithson try to help her, but Reina can’t make anything edible. The only man who takes seconds is Abner, a former Amishman with a mysterious past and an iron stomach. Clay’s two brothers won’t even try it, and Clay has to force himself to set an example for his men. One night, frustrated with other things, Clay harshly criticizes the food, then apologizes to Reina. She’s never had a man apologize to her before. Her curiosity grows.
Meanwhile, Clay has been writing letters to his pastor’s daughter Angela, a beautiful blonde who seems perfect and yet is being kept from him by her parents. One Sunday, the pastor tells Clay that he may speak with Angela for 30 minutes every evening that week—to convince her to hear the suit of a young man coming to visit the next weekend—but must keep it secret. Clay stifles his laughter and agrees to the ridiculous arrangement.
The Smithsons host a cookout, and the whole crew attends together. Clay sees a pool volleyball game and Gina gesturing frantically at the water. Diving in fully clothed, he saves Reina from drowning, then offers to teach her when she admits she can’t swim but didn’t want to show fear. The next day, after church, she goes into the graveyard and asks Clay about death and eternity. She’s scared, and Clay sends the pastor to talk with her about heaven, hell, and Jesus’s payment on the cross. Reina, who always felt unwanted, desperately tries to believe she’s loved deeply by God and His Son. This is the most forthright statement of faith in any of the nearly 20 Gussman books I’ve read!
Clay promised Mr. Davis that he’d visit Angela for 30 minutes every night, and he feels held by that promise. But Angela is strangely aggressive and much less attractive than when he wasn’t allowed to see her, and he finds himself thinking of Reina while he’s with Angela. Odd.
By now, Reina has learned to float in the river and can take Gina to the Smithsons’ pool without worry. Mrs. Smithson tells her she thinks Gina looks more like Reina than like Clay. Also odd.
When Reina thinks back on their swim lesson, she remembers Clay saying he’d never kissed a woman—and realizes Clay couldn’t have fathered Gina without kissing her mother. The “Preacher” is a liar! She’ll prove it!
When Clay returns from his nightly visit fighting off Angela’s advances, Reina jumps on him and kisses him ferociously. Clay kisses her back in self-defense, then discovers a passion he didn’t know he had. It’s “a hen of a first kiss” for him, but Reina is inexplicably bereft. Her “revenge” backfired.
The post-Angela kiss is repeated the next night, this time with Clay taking the lead. He’s battling lust but flying high and falling fast; she’s running scared and Gina’s puzzled by the weird behavior of Daddy and Miss Reina. The crew can’t figure anything out either—except Abner, who reveals that Clay has been stepping out with Angela, then making out with Reina, every night. Nobody knows how the ex-Amish Man of Mystery obtained his knowledge, but it sets the stage for a confrontation, an admission by Angela of her true motives, the revelation of Gina’s parentage, and finally a wedding during which Clay’s brother Boone sees an ad for an auction of Sweet Water Ranch—and its female owner! It’s a safe bet that the next Sweet Water book will be about Boone and his auction-bought bride.
As always, Jessie Gussman delivers relatable characters and spiritual truths, and I love her work!