The Frozen Bride Held Up One Receipt — And The Rancher’s Guest Stopped Smiling-thuyhien

Wyatt Thorne opened the receipt with two fingers, as if the paper itself might bite.

The kitchen fire cracked behind him. Snow hissed against the porch roof. My knees had started to shake so hard the floorboards answered. I stood inside the doorway with my coat crusted white, one hand locked around the letter I had saved from the fence, the other pressed to the wall because the room kept tilting.

Wyatt Mercer said, very softly, “She’s frozen half senseless. Get her by the stove before you go playing detective.”

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Wyatt Thorne did not move.

His eyes stayed on the receipt.

The gold piece sat in his palm, bright and obscene against his work-worn skin. Twenty dollars. More than twice what I had left in the world. Enough money to make a driver forget a woman was human.

“Rosemary,” Thorne said, and his voice changed when he used my full name. “Did he give you this?”

I shook my head once.

The room blurred at the edges. Coffee. Smoke. Wet wool. My own breath coming rough. Mercer’s boots made no sound on the braided rug, but I watched them turn toward the side door.

Thorne saw it too.

“Don’t.”

One word. Low. Final.

Mercer smiled with only half his mouth. “You’re threatening a guest now?”

“You stopped being a guest when my bride came to my door blue-lipped with your name in the storm.”

Mercer’s hand twitched toward his coat pocket.

Thorne lifted the rifle one inch.

That was all.

The silver watch chain against Mercer’s vest stopped swinging. His fingers opened slowly, empty.

At 6:04 p.m., Thorne shut the front door with his boot and barred it. Not slammed. Barred. The iron latch dropped with a sound that went through the room like a judge’s gavel.

He wrapped a quilt around my shoulders without looking away from Mercer. The wool scratched my chin. Heat struck my hands so sharply that pain ran up both arms. I made no sound. My tongue still tasted of blood where I had bitten it in the snow.

“Sit,” Thorne said to me.

I sat.

Mercer laughed once. “You’ve known her for five minutes.”

“I’ve waited three months.”

“You wrote letters to a Boston girl like a starving man writes Scripture. That doesn’t make her your wife.”

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