The first thing Mara Bell did in Mercy Hollow was step off the noon train with blood on her sleeve and ask the biggest man in town whether he was afraid of women.
The whole platform went quiet.
Steam hissed around the train wheels, and the Colorado dust rose in pale sheets around her boots.

The air smelled of hot iron, coal smoke, old timber, and the sharp copper edge of blood drying into cloth.
Mr. Pike, the stationmaster, had been shouting about mail sacks a moment before.
Now his mouth hung half-open, one hand still lifted as if the words had frozen between his teeth.
Mara Bell came down the iron steps with a carpetbag in one hand and a cracked leather satchel in the other.
She was not what Mercy Hollow had expected.
For two months, the town had whispered about Abel Stone, the giant from Wolfjaw Mountain, finally ordering himself a wife.
They said he was six feet ten, unless he had his hat on, in which case some men swore he cleared seven feet.
They said his hands were the size of flour sacks.
They said his voice could shake snow loose from pine branches.
They said no sensible woman would agree to live forty miles above town with him unless life had left her with nowhere else to go.
People are cruelest when they think they are only being practical.
So Mercy Hollow expected a thin woman.
A nervous woman.
Some pale, trembling thing grateful for a roof that did not leak and a husband whose name could keep other men from bothering her.
Mara had been mistaken for desperate before.
She had learned not to correct people too early.
She let them show themselves first.
Her brown traveling dress was wrinkled from three days on the rail, tight across her soft hips and dusty at the hem.
Her cheeks were round.
Her waist was thick.
Her body had never matched the fashion plates women in city boardinghouses passed around like scripture.
She knew what people saw when they looked at her.
Twenty-eight years had taught her that lesson better than any schoolroom could have.
Too loud.
Too stubborn.
Too hungry.
Too heavy.
Too quick with her mouth.
Too slow to apologize.
Somewhere west of Kansas City, with a stranger’s blood drying on her sleeve and her last safe option shrinking behind her, Mara Bell had decided that too much was better than not enough.
Abel Stone stood near the freight office.
Even without the staring, he would have been impossible to miss.
He looked less like a man than a piece of mountain that had come down to town because it needed nails, flour, and maybe a wife.
His shoulders were broad enough to block the freight office door.
His beard was dark.
His brown coat strained over a chest built by axes, weather, and solitude.
But he did not swagger.
He did not lean into the fear people gave him.
He stood still, careful and contained, like a man who had learned that sudden movements made smaller people flinch.
Mara noticed that.
She noticed it before she noticed the size of his hands.
That mattered.
A man who knew his strength was one thing.
A man who enjoyed reminding people of it was another.
Mara walked straight toward him while half the platform took a careful step back.
“You Abel Stone?” she asked.
His eyes dropped to the blood on her sleeve.
“Yes, ma’am.”
His voice surprised her.
It was low and rough, but not loud.
Not performative.
Not the booming threat the town had dressed him in.
“Good,” Mara said. “I’m your wife, unless you plan on fainting.”
Someone gasped.
Someone else laughed once and swallowed the sound whole when Abel’s eyes moved in that direction.
Abel did not smile.
Not yet.
“Are you hurt?” he asked.
“No.”
“Whose blood is that?”
Mara looked at her sleeve as if remembering the stain only because he had mentioned it.
“A man on the train thought my seat belonged to him because I was a woman traveling alone,” she said. “His nose disagreed.”
The silence changed shape.
It had been gossiping silence before.
Now it was measuring silence.
“You broke his nose?” Abel asked.
“He tried to put his hands on me.”
The change in Abel’s face was small.
Only his eyes hardened and his jaw shifted under his beard.
But the men nearest him suddenly found urgent interest in the far end of the platform.
“Where is he?” Abel asked.
“Still on the train, reconsidering his theology.”
For one second, something flickered under his beard.
A smile, maybe.
A human thing, almost hidden before it could embarrass him.
Mara set her carpetbag down with a solid thump.
“Now answer me plain, Mr. Stone,” she said. “Your advertisement said you wanted a quiet wife. If that is true, I will save us both trouble and sleep in the depot until the next train east.”
A few faces turned toward Abel.
A few turned away because pretending not to listen is a small-town art.
Abel’s jaw tightened.
“I wrote steady.”
Mara narrowed her eyes. “The newspaper in Denver printed quiet.”
“That wasn’t my word.”
“Good,” she said. “Because I have many virtues, but quiet has never been one of them.”
A woman near the ticket window whispered, “Lord help him.”
Mara turned her head.
The smile she gave the woman was so polite it could have been embroidered on a church cushion.
“Ma’am, the Lord has had twenty-eight years to improve me and seems to have declined.”
This time Abel Stone laughed.
It was not much.
A rough sound, pulled from deep in his chest, gone almost as quickly as it came.
But it changed his face.
For a breath, the giant of Wolfjaw Mountain looked less like a rumor and more like a lonely man startled by his own laughter.
Mara saw it.
She wished she had not.
Seeing loneliness in a stranger made him harder to dismiss.
“My wagon’s this way,” Abel said.
“How far to Wolfjaw?”
“Six hours if weather holds. Longer if the trail’s bad.”
“Then we had better start.”
“We usually stay in town the first night.”
“I didn’t cross half the country to admire your depot.”
Abel studied her again.
This time he did not look at the blood.
He looked at her face, the set of her mouth, the way she stood square under every eye on that platform.
“The trail gets narrow after dark,” he said.
“I grew up in the Cumberland backwoods. Roads there were rumors, and the mules had more sense than the men. I’ll manage.”
He nodded once.
Not approval exactly.
Acceptance.
Mara picked up her bags.
Behind her, Mr. Pike muttered, “She’ll last a week.”
Mara stopped.
Abel stopped with her.
The station platform held its breath again.
Mara turned slowly and read the name off the crooked badge pinned to the stationmaster’s vest.
“Mr. Pike,” she said, “I have outlasted hunger, flood, bad men, worse women, a courthouse judge, and a corset maker from Nashville who told me my waist was a moral failing. I expect I can survive your opinion.”
Abel coughed into his fist.
That was the second time Mara suspected him of hiding a laugh.
The wagon waited beyond the freight office.
It was not fancy.
Nothing about Abel Stone seemed arranged for display.
The boards were scarred from use, the wheels mud-caked, the harness patched where a practical man had repaired it instead of paying for new leather.
There were flour sacks in the back, two crates of nails, a sack of coffee, a coil of rope, and a small wooden supply box with a faded American flag decal on its side.
The decal was peeling at one corner.
Mara noticed the repair before the symbol.
That told her more about the wagon’s owner than the flag did.
Abel took her carpetbag and satchel without a word.
He did not snatch them from her.
He waited until she let go.
That mattered too.
Men revealed themselves in little permissions as much as they did in threats.
Mara climbed onto the bench before Abel could offer his hand.
He saw that and let the offer die unspoken.
Another small point in his favor.
They left Mercy Hollow with every eye in town following them until the road bent between pines.
For the first mile, neither of them spoke.
The wagon wheels clattered over dry ruts.
A hawk moved in a slow circle over the ridge.
Behind them, the town became a smudge of roofs and smoke.
Mara kept her hands folded in her lap.
Not because she was calm.
Because she refused to give anyone, even this careful giant, the satisfaction of seeing her grip the bench.
Abel drove with one hand on the reins and one braced near his thigh.
He handled the horses with a patience that made them listen.
Mara had seen men shout at animals because the animals were the only living things they could safely bully.
Abel did not shout.
He clicked his tongue once.
The team adjusted.
“Your sleeve,” he said after a while.
“What of it?”
“You may want to wash that before the stain sets.”
Mara looked down at the brown cloth darkened near the cuff.
“I have worn worse.”
“I expect you have.”
She glanced at him.
Most men would have made that sound like an insult or an invitation.
Abel made it sound like a fact he did not intend to use against her.
“Was there another reason you asked for a wife?” Mara said.
His eyes stayed on the road.
“A house runs better with two.”
“A house runs better with a good stove too. You did not marry one.”
His mouth moved again.
This time the almost-smile stayed a fraction longer.
“I have a stove.”
“Does it talk back?”
“No.”
“Then you ordered the wrong woman.”
Abel’s laugh came easier that time.
It still startled him.
Mara could tell by how quickly he looked back to the horses, as if the road had accused him of softness.
They climbed higher as afternoon thinned into evening.
The air changed first.
Town dust gave way to pine resin, cold stone, and the faint green smell of mountain shadow.
The wagon track narrowed until it was no longer a road so much as an argument between wheels and wilderness.
Granite rose on one side.
On the other, the earth dropped into a ravine dark enough to swallow the sound of falling stones.
The horses knew the trail.
Mara told herself that more than once.
It did not make the edge look any less hungry.
“Rock on the left,” she said.
“I see it.”
“Washout ahead.”
“I see that too.”
“Low branch.”
Abel ducked before it hit him.
“Do you intend to drive from the passenger seat the whole way?”
“Only until you prove you can do it without killing your new wife before supper.”
“That your standard for a husband?”
“For the first day, yes.”
The wagon rolled over a patch of loose stone.
Mara’s shoulder bumped Abel’s arm.
He did not lean away.
He also did not lean in.
That restraint sat between them more heavily than conversation would have.
Mara looked out over the ravine.
She had been alone for so long that sitting close to another person felt less like comfort than danger.
A woman traveling alone learned to sleep with her satchel strap around her wrist.
She learned to count exits.
She learned that a friendly man could turn unfriendly the moment no witness remained.
The man on the train had smiled when he first asked for her seat.
He had called her sweetheart.
Then he had put one hand on the back of her neck like kindness was something he could turn into a handle.
She had not planned to break his nose.
Planning was a luxury people talked about afterward.
In the moment, her elbow moved, his face cracked, and blood spattered her sleeve before the conductor decided the woman might have had a point.
Abel did not ask again about the train.
She was grateful for that.
Questions could be another form of taking.
By 6:17 that evening, the trail tightened to a dangerous ledge cut through pine and rock.
The light had gone bruised blue around the peaks.
Cold slid under Mara’s collar.
The wagon wheels struck a hidden rut.
The whole thing jerked sideways.
Mara’s carpetbag slid from under the bench, hit the sideboard, and burst open at her feet.
A rolled newspaper fell out first.
Then a folded letter.
Then the small iron pistol she had wrapped in a kitchen towel.
Abel pulled the horses to a stop so sharply the leather traces snapped tight.
For one breath, nothing moved but dust in the evening light.
Mara’s hand went toward the towel.
Abel’s eyes dropped to the pistol.
Then to the letter.
Then to her face.
“Mara,” he said.
He did not raise his voice.
That made the moment feel more dangerous, not less.
“It isn’t for you,” she said.
“I didn’t ask if it was.”
The horses stamped.
Loose gravel clicked over the trail edge and vanished into the ravine below.
Mara could feel her pulse in her fingers.
She could also feel the old anger rising, the one that had kept her alive but ruined more than one chance at gentleness.
For one ugly heartbeat, she wanted to snatch up the pistol just to prove no man alive could make her flinch.
Then she looked at Abel’s hands.
One held the reins tight.
The other had not moved toward her.
He was not reaching for the gun.
He was waiting.
That was harder to fight than force.
The folded letter lay open enough for his name to show.
Abel Stone.
The ink had blurred where Mara’s thumb had pressed it too often.
She picked up the paper and held it out.
He did not take it at first.
His face changed when he saw the handwriting.
It was not the face of a suspicious husband.
It was the face of a man meeting an old ghost on a narrow road.
“You know who wrote this,” Mara said.
Abel’s hand tightened on the reins until the leather creaked.
“Where did you get that?”
Mara looked down at the newspaper, half unrolled beside her boot.
The date stared back at her.
Friday, October 14.
Three weeks before she boarded the Denver train.
Three weeks before she answered the advertisement that was supposed to have been meant for any woman steady enough to live on a mountain.
But the letter told a different story.
Someone had written Abel before her.
Someone had warned him.
Or chosen him.
Or set the whole thing moving.
The name at the bottom made no sense and too much sense at once.
Mara turned the letter over so Abel could see the signature.
His color drained.
Not fear.
Recognition.
Old hurt pulled into the open with no time to dress itself.
“You know her,” Mara said.
Abel closed his eyes for half a second.
When he opened them, the loneliness she had seen on the platform was gone.
In its place was something heavier.
Guilt, maybe.
Or grief.
“She was my sister,” he said.
Mara’s fingers tightened around the paper.
The trail seemed to narrow under the wagon.
“Was?”
Abel looked toward the darkening pines.
“She died last winter.”
The sentence landed between them like a dropped tool.
Plain.
Heavy.
Dangerous because there was no ornament on it.
Mara stared at the signature again.
If the woman was dead, then the letter should not have been tucked into the packet Mara received in Denver.
It should not have been folded between the advertisement clipping and the travel instructions.
It should not have carried a message in a dead woman’s hand telling Mara Bell that if she valued her life, she should marry Abel Stone and bring a pistol.
Mara did not say all of that at once.
Her mouth had finally learned that not every truth should be thrown like a plate.
Instead, she asked the only question that mattered.
“Then who sent it to me?”
Abel did not answer.
The horses shifted in the harness.
Wind moved through the pine tops with a long, low sound like someone whispering over a grave.
Then a rock skittered behind them.
Not below.
Behind.
Abel’s head turned.
Mara saw the change in him before she heard anything else.
The careful stillness was gone.
In its place came the mountain.
“Get down,” he said.
Mara did not ask why.
That saved her life.
She dropped from the wagon bench just as something cracked from the trees above the trail.
Not a gunshot.
Wood.
A dead branch, cut nearly through, gave way and crashed down across the trail where her head had been seconds before.
The horses screamed and lunged.
Abel held the reins with both hands, boots braced, shoulders locked against the panicking team.
Mara hit the ground hard enough to knock the breath from her chest.
Pine needles scraped her palms.
The pistol had fallen from the towel and lay under the wagon step.
She reached for it.
This time Abel did not tell her not to.
From the trees above them, a man’s voice called, “Should’ve stayed in town, Stone.”
Mara froze.
The voice was not Abel’s.
It was not Mr. Pike’s.
She did not know it.
But Abel did.
She saw that in the way his face went cold.
Not surprised.
Not confused.
Recognizing.
“Jory,” Abel said.
A figure moved between the pines, half-hidden by dusk.
No face clear enough to count as truth.
Only a hat brim, a shoulder, the shape of a rifle held low.
Mara cocked the pistol with both hands.
Her palms were scraped and shaking.
She hated that they were shaking.
Abel saw it, and still he did not mock her.
“Mara,” he said without looking away from the trees, “can you shoot?”
“I can aim.”
“That wasn’t my question.”
“It was my answer.”
Despite everything, something like approval crossed his face.
The man in the trees laughed.
“You married a mouthy one.”
Abel’s voice turned flat. “You should go.”
“I should have gone a lot of places.”
The rifle lifted.
Mara fired first.
Not at the man.
At the dead branch hanging above him, the one cracked and leaning from the storm-bent pine.
Her shot split the quiet.
The branch snapped loose and crashed between the man and the trail in a storm of needles and bark.
The hidden figure cursed and stumbled back.
Abel moved then.
For all his size, he moved fast.
He handed Mara the reins, grabbed the fallen branch across the trail, and dragged it aside with a sound that seemed impossible for one man to make.
“Hold them steady,” he said.
“I am holding them steady.”
“You are holding them angry.”
“They match me.”
The corner of his mouth moved once.
Then the man in the pines fired.
The shot went wide, cracking stone above the wagon.
The horses nearly bolted.
Mara’s arms burned.
Her wrists felt like they might tear apart.
Abel stepped between the wagon and the trees.
Not because he thought himself invincible.
Because there was no other place large enough for him to stand.
“Jory,” he called, “if you wanted me dead, you had all winter.”
The answer came ragged. “Wasn’t you I wanted dead.”
Mara’s breath caught.
Abel turned just enough for her to see his eyes.
Then the letter made sense in a way that chilled her more than the mountain air.
Bring a pistol.
Marry Abel Stone.
Do not stay in town.
Someone had not sent Mara to a husband.
Someone had sent her into the middle of an old feud with instructions written in a dead woman’s hand.
Abel knew it too.
His voice dropped.
“Mara, when I say drive, you drive.”
“I thought you said the trail gets narrow after dark.”
“It does.”
“Then you ordered the wrong woman to scare.”
He looked at her.
For the first time, he truly smiled.
Not the hidden flicker from the platform.
Not the careful almost-smile from the road.
A real one, fierce and tired and alive.
Then he slapped the side of the wagon.
“Drive.”
Mara snapped the reins.
The horses lunged forward.
The wagon jolted over stone, past the fallen branch, past the place where the ravine opened black on the right.
Abel ran beside it for three strides, grabbed the sideboard, and hauled himself up like his own weight meant nothing.
Behind them, another shot cracked through the trees.
It missed.
The sound chased them up the trail until the pines swallowed it.
Mara drove like roads were rumors and survival was muscle memory.
Abel shouted directions only when the trail gave her no mercy.
“Left.”
“I see it.”
“Not that left.”
“I see that too.”
“Duck.”
This time he put one arm across her shoulders and pulled her down before the branch could catch her face.
She should have snapped at him.
She did not.
The arm was gone as quickly as it came.
Protection, not possession.
There is a difference.
A woman who has known the wrong kind can feel it in the bones.
They reached the upper ridge after dark.
Abel’s cabin sat in a clearing under the shadow of Wolfjaw Mountain, lamplight glowing in one small window.
It was not grand.
It was sturdy.
Rough-hewn walls, stacked firewood, a porch half-buried in pine needles, and a water barrel near the steps.
A small American flag, weathered and frayed at the edge, was tucked beside the door like someone had placed it there long ago and forgotten to take it down.
The horses steamed in the cold.
Mara’s arms trembled when she climbed down.
This time, when Abel offered his hand, she looked at it for a full second before taking it.
His palm swallowed hers.
He did not squeeze.
Inside, the cabin smelled of woodsmoke, coffee, wool blankets, and something clean drying near the hearth.
Abel lit another lamp.
The room brightened into plain shapes.
Table.
Stove.
Bed in the corner behind a curtain.
Shelves with jars lined by size.
A woman’s blue shawl folded on the back of a chair.
Mara looked at the shawl.
Abel followed her eyes.
“My sister’s,” he said.
Mara set the letter on the table between them.
The pistol went beside it.
No hiding now.
No pretending.
“Tell me what I married into,” she said.
Abel stood across from her in the lamplight, too large for the room and somehow smaller than the grief inside it.
“My sister’s name was Ruth,” he said. “She was the only person in Mercy Hollow who ever called me gentle without laughing.”
Mara stayed quiet.
That surprised him.
It surprised her too.
He told her Ruth had married badly.
He told her Jory had not always been cruel in public, which was how cruel men survived in small towns.
He told her Ruth had hidden bruises under sleeves and excuses under smiles until one winter night she came to Wolfjaw with blood on her mouth and refused to go back down.
Abel had kept her there.
For three weeks.
Then Jory came with two men, papers, and a preacher willing to call ownership by another name.
Ruth ran before dawn.
They found her two days later below the north pass.
Frozen.
Alone.
Mara’s throat tightened, but she did not offer pretty words.
Pretty words were cheap in rooms where the dead still had shawls on chairs.
“The letter?” she asked.
Abel picked it up with two fingers like it might burn him.
“She wrote it before she died. Not to you. To any woman who answered my advertisement.”
Mara stared at him.
“You knew?”
“No.”
His answer came too fast to be rehearsed.
“I never saw it. I never sent it. I never asked anyone to send for you with Ruth’s hand.”
Mara believed him.
She did not want to.
Belief made things complicated.
Suspicion was simpler.
“Then who had it?”
Abel looked toward the dark window.
“Pike.”
The stationmaster.
The man who had said she would last a week.
The man with the crooked badge and the mail sacks.
The man who touched every letter coming into Mercy Hollow.
Mara sat down slowly.
The chair creaked under her.
All at once the platform made sense.
The way Pike had watched her sleeve.
The way he had muttered just loud enough to be heard.
The way Abel had stopped when she stopped.
The town had not merely been gossiping.
Some of them had been waiting to see whether the trap arrived breathing.
At 9:43 that night, Abel barred the cabin door.
At 9:51, Mara washed the blood from her sleeve in a tin basin while Abel stood outside with a lantern and listened to the trees.
At 10:06, she found the second fold in Ruth’s letter.
A smaller message had been tucked inside the seam, flattened so neatly that Mara would have missed it if the paper had not softened near the basin steam.
She opened it under the lamp.
The writing was weaker there.
Almost rushed.
If he sends a bride, do not let her sleep in town.
Mara read the line twice.
Then a third time.
Abel came in and saw her face.
“What?”
She handed it to him.
His jaw worked once.
Then he sank into the chair opposite her like his bones had finally admitted they were tired.
“Ruth knew,” Mara said.
“Yes.”
“She knew someone would try to stop the woman before she reached you.”
“Yes.”
“And Pike had the letter.”
Abel’s eyes lifted.
There was no thunder in him now.
Only the cold focus of a man who had spent too long blaming himself for a death that had more hands on it than he knew.
Morning came gray and sharp.
Mara had slept two hours, maybe less.
She woke to the scrape of Abel setting coffee on the table and the ache of every muscle that had held reins the night before.
Her sleeve was clean but stained faintly brown.
Some marks did not come out just because you washed them.
Abel had packed the wagon again.
Not for running.
For going back down.
Mara stood in the doorway, wrapped in Ruth’s old shawl because Abel had left it on the chair without a word.
“You expect me to stay here?” she asked.
“I expect you to choose.”
That was the wrong answer.
And exactly the right one.
Mara looked down the trail toward Mercy Hollow.
The town had laughed at her before it knew her.
Pike had handled a dead woman’s warning like a tool.
Jory had tried to drop a branch on her head because men like him always believed a woman alone was easier to erase.
Mara thought of the woman near the ticket window whispering Lord help him.
She thought of Mr. Pike saying she would last a week.
She thought of Abel on the platform, laughing like he had forgotten how.
Then she picked up the pistol and tucked it into her satchel.
Abel watched her.
“What are you doing?”
“What steady wives do, apparently.”
“And what is that?”
Mara stepped onto the porch, cold air biting her cheeks, sunlight catching the edges of the pines.
“They make sure the house runs better with two.”
They rode back to Mercy Hollow after breakfast.
Not fast.
Not reckless.
Steady.
By noon, the train platform was full again.
Small towns have a way of smelling trouble before it arrives.
Mr. Pike stood by the freight office with his ledger open.
His face changed when he saw Mara climb down from Abel’s wagon.
It changed again when he saw Abel behind her.
And it drained completely when Mara held up Ruth’s letter.
The platform froze just like it had the day before.
Only this time Mara was not the curiosity.
This time Pike was.
Mara walked straight to him.
No shouting.
No speech for the crowd.
Just her boots on the boards and Abel’s shadow falling beside hers.
“You handled this letter,” she said.
Pike swallowed. “I handle many letters.”
“This one was written by a dead woman warning any bride not to stay in your town.”
A woman near the ticket window crossed herself.
One of the men by the mail sacks stepped back.
Pike’s eyes darted to Abel.
That was his mistake.
Mara smiled.
“You keep looking at him like he is the one asking.”
Pike’s mouth opened.
Nothing came out.
Abel did not move.
He did not need to.
Mara laid the letter on the stationmaster’s ledger.
Then she placed the small folded insert beside it.
“Who gave you Ruth’s letter?” she asked.
Pike’s hands began to shake.
Behind him, the noon train whistled far off down the line.
The sound rolled through Mercy Hollow like a warning.
Jory had not come down from the mountain yet.
But he would.
Men like that always believed the next confrontation would go better for them.
Pike looked at the tracks.
Then at the letter.
Then at Mara.
Finally, he whispered, “You don’t understand what he’ll do.”
Mara leaned in just enough for him to hear her over the growing train whistle.
“I understand men who count on women being quiet.”
Abel’s hand rested on the wagon rail behind her.
Not touching her.
There if needed.
That was becoming a language she could understand.
The noon train screamed into town, steam pouring white around the platform.
For one wild second, everything looked like the day before.
Coal smoke.
Dust.
Staring faces.
A woman with a blood-marked sleeve standing too squarely in a place that had already decided what she was worth.
But this time Mara was not arriving.
She was choosing.
And when Jory stepped off the last car with a rifle case in his hand, Pike made a sound like a man watching his own grave open.
Abel shifted beside her.
Mara did not step back.
Jory saw the letter on the ledger.
He saw Pike’s face.
Then he saw Mara, and his mouth twisted.
“You should’ve stayed on the mountain.”
Mara lifted her chin.
“That is the trouble with ordering quiet women,” she said. “Sometimes the wrong one shows up.”
The whole platform heard her.
Nobody laughed this time.
Nobody whispered Lord help him.
Nobody guessed she would last a week.
Abel Stone, the giant of Wolfjaw Mountain, looked down at his wife and smiled like thunder learning to be human.
Mara Bell smiled back.
She had been called too loud, too stubborn, too hungry, too heavy, too much of everything.
For the first time in her life, too much felt exactly right.