The Mountain Bride Whose Rifle Uncovered A Stolen Land Claim-felicia

The first thing Mara Kellen heard after stepping down in Copper Hollow was not a welcome.

It was laughter.

It moved across the depot platform in small, mean waves, starting near the baggage cart and rolling past the hitching rail, where horses stamped at dust and coal smoke.

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Mara stood with her valise against her skirt and told herself not to look down.

A woman could survive hunger.

She could survive cold.

She could even survive a stranger deciding she was not worth wanting.

What cut deepest was being weighed and dismissed in public, while men pretended cruelty was only a joke.

There had been ten mail-order brides when the train opened its doors.

By the time the sun leaned hard against the depot roof, there was one.

Nine women had already been claimed by miners, ranch hands, widowers, storekeepers, and men who had paid for a wife because the mountains were lonely and the winters were mean.

Some of those men were gentle when they took a hand.

Some were not.

Mara noticed all of it because noticing was safer than hoping.

She had never expected to be chosen first.

She had been told too many times what men saw when they looked at her.

Too tall.

Too broad.

Too heavy through the hips and belly.

Too much woman for any man who wanted a pretty thing to tuck behind his elbow and show around town.

Her mother had once said God built Mara sturdy because life would need someone strong enough to carry what broke other people.

Mara had believed that as a girl.

By the time she reached Colorado, she knew sturdy was often just another word people used before asking you to endure more than your share.

Vernon Pike, the marriage agent, kept patting the paper in his hand as though the paper could make the crowd kinder.

He had taken her twenty dollars before she left St. Louis.

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