Runaway Bride Faced The Cliff No Cowboy Dared To Climb Alone-felicia

The silk dress was the first lie.

It was soft blue, pretty enough to make a hungry woman believe that a new life could come folded in paper with a train ticket.

Hattie had touched that sample square back in Ohio and told herself Mr. Albright must be steady, if not kind.

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A man who could send fare west and buy a bride a dress might at least offer shelter.

By the time the stage set her down in Redemption Creek, shelter was no longer the word that came to mind.

The town baked under a hard sun, all dusty boards, hitching rails, mercantile windows, and men watching from shade.

Mr. Albright took her elbow before she had shaken the road from her skirt.

His fingers were soft and thick, but the grip had iron in it.

He did not look at her face first.

He looked her over as if checking whether a delivered item had arrived undamaged.

“This is the mercantile,” he said, and turned her through the door without asking whether she wished to go.

Inside, the air smelled of coffee beans, bolt cloth, lamp oil, and sour judgment.

Elizabeth Albright stood behind the counter with a ledger open in front of her, thin mouth set like a locked drawer.

“So this is her,” Elizabeth said.

Hattie stood in the blue silk, dust caught at the hem, road weariness sitting plainly on her face.

“She will clean up,” Mr. Albright said. “She comes from farming stock. She will be useful.”

Useful.

Not cherished.

Not welcomed.

Useful.

The word followed Hattie through the rest of that day as Mr. Albright displayed her around town, then showed her the gray house where she would live after the wedding.

It was large, but it felt airless.

He gave her a small back room and told her it would be hers until the ceremony.

The door closed, and Hattie sat on the narrow bed in the silk dress that had once seemed like rescue.

By moonrise, she understood the truth.

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