The giant rancher silenced the wedding yard, but one trembling bride would make him answer for his own name-felicia

The porch did not breathe after Rhett Boone spoke.

“Size isn’t everything, is it?”

His hat rested on the rail beside Annie’s wilted bouquet, brim down, crown dented from years of weather and work. It looked less like a hat now than a pledge laid before witnesses.

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Tom Reeves swallowed whatever joke had been climbing his throat. The whiskey shine left his face in patches. Around him, the wedding guests shifted their weight in the dust, boots scraping plank and hardpan, each person suddenly busy with cups, gloves, handkerchiefs, children, anything except the small bride standing beneath the tall rancher’s shadow.

Annie Marlow Boone kept her fingers locked in the skirt of her borrowed gown. The lace had cut a red half-moon into her palm. She did not loosen her grip. She did not know what would happen if she let go.

Rhett looked at no one but her.

There was no softness in his face fit for a church painting. No easy smile. No handsome gentleness of the kind women in Philadelphia novels sighed over by lamplight. He was all weathered angles and sun-browned severity, a man made from fence posts, leather, dust, and old silence. Yet when his hand moved, it moved slowly, giving her every chance to refuse what he had not yet offered.

He set that hand, large and scarred, palm upward between them.

Not touching her.

Waiting.

The fiddle player lowered his bow entirely. A child coughed near the cottonwood. Somewhere behind the house, a mule stamped once and jingled its harness.

Annie looked at his hand. The knuckles were cracked from rope burns. A faint white scar crossed the base of his thumb. There was nothing polished about it. Nothing ornamental. It was the hand of a man who had mended roofs in sleet, hauled posts through caliche, lifted calves from muddy ditches, and likely broken more than one jaw in his life.

It was also the first hand in many years that had waited for her answer.

So she placed her gloved fingers in his.

Rhett closed his hand carefully, as if she were not small but precious cargo that required steadiness.

“Music,” he said without turning.

The fiddler blinked. “Mr. Boone?”

“You were paid a silver dollar to play till supper,” Rhett said. “I reckon supper ain’t come yet.”

A nervous laugh ran through the yard, weak as a match struck in wind. Then the fiddle began again, thin at first, then steadier when the banjo found it. The wedding yard resumed motion by degrees, but the air had changed. The laughter no longer knew where to land.

Rhett led Annie down from the porch.

He did not hurry her. One step. Then another. He matched his stride to hers so plainly that the adjustment itself became visible. Several men saw it. So did Catherine Walsh, whose mouth tightened until it nearly disappeared.

In the patch of beaten earth that served as a dance floor, Rhett turned to face his wife.

“I am not much for dancing,” he said.

Annie looked up at him. “Neither am I.”

“Then we may ruin the tune together.”

His hand settled at her waist with the barest weight. His other held hers out to the side. She expected awkwardness and found it. He stepped too wide at first, and she nearly stumbled. He stopped at once.

“Did I hurt you?”

“No.”

“Tell me if I do.”

The words were plain. Too plain to be pretty. They struck deeper than pretty words would have.

They moved again. Dust lifted around her hem. The September sun leaned westward, turning every face in the yard copper and gold. Annie smelled sweat, lemonade, trampled grass, cigar smoke, and the beef roasting in the pit beyond the barn. Rhett smelled of leather, tobacco, sun, and soap rough enough to scrape a floor clean.

She had not imagined this when she left Philadelphia.

The room she had shared with Maggie Marlow had been narrow enough that two people could not pass at once without turning sideways. The ceiling leaked in March. The stove smoked in January. Her sister’s cough filled the night in long, tearing spells that made Annie sit awake counting breaths, because counting gave panic something to do.

When the letter came from Texas, she had read it four times before believing it.

Wife wanted. Respectable woman preferred. Room, board, lawful name, and monthly allowance of $4 for personal use. Ranch work not required, though household management necessary. Widow not objected to. Plain speech valued.

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