Frozen Bride At Red Hollow Station And The Cowboy Who Found Her-felicia

Mail Order Bride Froze on the Platform — Until a Cowboy Covered Her With His Coat

By the time Evelyn Moore realized the train would not return, she could no longer feel the tips of her fingers.

They hung beside her coat like they belonged to somebody else.

Image

Snow drove sideways across Red Hollow Station, hard and white, turning the empty platform into a place that looked less like a depot and more like the edge of the world.

The train had vanished into the storm minutes earlier.

Its whistle had faded until only wind remained.

Evelyn stood with her carpetbag at her feet and tried to tell herself to move.

Step inside.

Ask again.

Find shelter.

Anything.

But her legs had gone stiff from cold and fear, and the town beyond the tracks was only a blur of dim lamps and blowing snow.

She had crossed two thousand miles for a promise.

A widower in Montana had written to her in careful, decent words.

He had said he needed a wife of good character.

He had written of ranch life, honest work, and a home steady enough to survive hard weather.

Back in Massachusetts, those letters had felt like salvation.

They had come when the last of her family was gone, when every room she entered felt borrowed, when every future she imagined had a locked door in it.

She had read them by lamplight until the paper softened at the folds.

She had packed her mother’s Bible, a few dresses, a silver hairbrush worn smooth by generations, and every scrap of courage she could gather.

Now all of it sat in a carpetbag gathering snow beside her boots.

Red Hollow was not what she had imagined.

It was not cruel in any loud way.

That would have been easier.

It simply kept moving around her, as if a woman alone on a platform in a blizzard was not enough to stop the world.

The station agent had warned her before dusk.

Storm coming in hard, he had said.

No one riding tonight.

Best find shelter.

Evelyn had thanked him because she had been raised to thank people even when their advice cost more than she owned.

She had fifteen cents in her purse.

A bed cost more than that.

A hot meal cost more than that.

Even pride, she was learning, cost more than she could spare.

So she stayed on the platform, waiting for the man who had promised to meet her.

Read More