Rejected At The Depot, The Humiliated Bride Found A Frontier Home-felicia

The train left Eliza Mercer behind in a cloud of coal smoke, and Red Hollow watched her stand there with nothing but a carpetbag and a ruined future.

She had traveled west because Silas Grady had written letters that sounded steady, respectable, and safe.

In Philadelphia, where the textile mill ate fourteen hours of her day and left lint in her lungs, those letters had felt like a door opening.

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He had spoken of land, honest work, and a woman of character making a good life beside him.

By the time the train reached Montana Territory, Eliza had read those pages so often the folds had gone soft.

She stepped onto the platform wearing her best dark green dress, though six days of travel had wrinkled the skirt and loosened the pins in her hair.

The cold hit her like iron.

Red Hollow was raw lumber, snow-packed streets, horse breath, and strangers who did not look away when there was pain to study.

Silas was easy to spot.

Tall, fair-haired, clean-shaven, and dressed like a man who believed the town owed him room.

When Eliza said his name, he turned with two other men beside him.

For one heartbeat she waited for recognition.

It did not come.

His face reddened, then hardened.

He told her there had been a misunderstanding.

He had reconsidered the arrangement.

He was engaged now to Margaret Hail, a local woman better suited to his station.

Someone laughed.

Eliza’s carpetbag fell to the boards.

She reminded him of the letters, the fare, the promise that had brought her across the country.

Silas lifted his voice so no one would miss the insult.

The money was payment for her trouble, he said, and the arrangement was terminated.

Then he walked away with his friends while the town looked on.

Eliza did not cry.

She wanted to, but tears would have been one more thing for Red Hollow to own.

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