The Unwanted Woman At The Lonely Ranch Changed Everything-felicia

They said Eliza Moore was ruined before she ever set foot on Ethan Cole’s land.

Bitter Creek had a way of making its judgments sound like Scripture.

A woman without family, money, or a man to speak for her could be condemned before supper and homeless before dark.

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Eliza learned that faster than she learned the town’s streets.

She had come west with a carpetbag, a bundle of letters, and the kind of hope that made a person ignore every warning.

Thomas Graves had written to her for eight months.

He had promised a home, a marriage, and a future clean enough to wash away the grief she had carried since her father died.

When she arrived, she found his wife already living above his store.

There were children, too.

There was a table set for a family that had existed long before Eliza’s train ticket was paid.

When she confronted him in front of witnesses, Thomas did not blush, apologize, or admit what he had done.

He smiled the polished smile Bitter Creek trusted and told everyone she was confused.

Then he called her desperate.

Then he called her unstable.

Then the town did the rest.

Rooms closed to her.

Work vanished.

Women crossed the street.

Men stared too long or laughed too softly.

Mayor Hutchkins called it an unfortunate situation, which was the sort of phrase powerful men used when they wanted cruelty to sound tidy.

His solution was to take Eliza out to Ethan Cole’s ranch.

Ethan lived far enough from town that gossip reached him late and friendship hardly reached him at all.

People said he had a violent reputation.

They said he had killed men over cattle and water.

They said the war had left him hollowed out, and that his cabin was no place for a woman with any sense.

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