A Hungry Bride Asked For Scraps, And A Rancher Changed The Room-felicia

Nora Vance arrived at the Aldridge Ranch with four dollars sewn into the hem of her petticoat.

She had counted those dollars so many times on the road from Caldwell that she could feel them through the cloth without touching them.

Two coins and two folded bills, tucked where no one could take them unless they already intended to take more than money.

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It was not enough to build a life.

It was barely enough to escape one if the new one turned cruel.

Still, it was hers.

The wagon rattled over the dry Kansas road until dust settled into the seams of her cuffs and the corners of her mouth tasted like grit.

The afternoon wind had a hard, flat edge to it, the kind that pressed through fabric instead of moving around it.

Garrett Aldridge drove without wasting words.

That suited Nora.

She had not climbed into his wagon expecting charm.

His letter had not promised any.

A rancher.

Thirty-eight.

A practical household arrangement.

Legal marriage required for deed and respectability.

No courtship intended.

Honest terms offered.

Nora had read those lines in a boarding room with a cracked ceiling and a washstand that smelled of cold soap.

She had read them again behind a bakery where the owner sometimes let her sweep the floor in exchange for yesterday’s rolls.

She had read them a third time by the window of a rented room she could not afford for another week.

No courtship intended.

The words should have frightened her.

Instead, they steadied her.

Pretty lies had never fed her.

Plain terms at least gave a woman something to stand on.

By the time the ranch house appeared beyond a line of worn fence posts, Nora had already trained her face into calm.

She saw the porch first.

It leaned slightly, not enough to fall, but enough to suggest that falling had been considered and postponed.

A wind-bent bucket sat near the steps.

The yard was swept bare except for wagon tracks and the scuffed half-moons of boot heels.

The house itself looked clean from the outside, but not cared for in the way a lived-in home is cared for.

It looked maintained.

There was a difference.

Garrett stepped down first and came around to help her from the wagon.

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