The Mail-Order Bride Who Needed A Locked Door More Than A Husband-felicia

The stagecoach arrived late beneath a sky the color of old pewter.

By the time it rolled into the little Montana stop, the afternoon had already started giving itself over to winter.

The horses came in steaming, their harness leather creaking in the cold, and Gideon Cole stood beside the hitching rail like a man who knew better than to hurry weather.

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He had been there nearly two hours.

He had not paced.

He had not complained.

The last winter had taught him patience, but it had taught him something uglier too.

Silence could be a kind of hunger.

It could sit across from a man at supper, breathe in the stove pipe, and press its cold face against the cabin walls until even the ticking iron sounded like company.

That was why Gideon had written to the matrimonial agency in St. Louis.

He had not asked for romance.

He had not asked for beauty.

He had asked for a partner willing to travel west, share hard work, and survive the long months when snow made every road feel like a rumor.

The agency sent one photograph and a few plain lines.

Maeve Callahan.

Widow.

Thirty-four.

Capable.

Willing to travel west.

Gideon had studied the photograph by lamplight more times than he would have admitted to anyone.

The woman in it looked steady.

Not cheerful.

Not soft.

Steady.

That mattered in Montana.

A person who could stand still under hardship was worth more than a pretty smile when the flour ran low and the wind found every crack in the wall.

So he waited, the folded agency letter in his coat pocket, while the stagecoach finally groaned to a stop.

The driver climbed down first.

Then a traveling man with a crate.

Then Maeve Callahan stepped onto the frozen ground.

She did not look for Gideon first.

She looked for exits.

Her eyes moved to the trading post door, then the alley, then the livery stable, then the road leading out of town.

One hand clutched a small carpetbag so tightly the leather handle creaked.

Gideon heard that little sound through the horse stamp and wheel rattle.

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