A Rejected Mail-Order Bride Found Her Place On A Montana Ranch-felicia

The whistle hit Red Bluff Station like a blade through cold air.

Lillian Harper stood in the doorway of the train with one hand on her carpetbag and the other closed around Edwin Row’s letters.

Six days from Boston had left dust in her cuffs, soot along her hem, and a stiffness in her spine she refused to show.

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The platform smelled of pine smoke, iron, horse sweat, and boards still damp from the night frost.

She had crossed two thousand miles because a man’s careful handwriting had promised her something that looked like safety.

Not romance.

Not poetry.

Safety.

At twenty-six, newly orphaned by fever and unwanted in the crowded house of an uncle who had already started using the word practical whenever he meant unpaid, Lillian had answered a marriage notice because it was the only door left open.

Edwin Row had seemed respectable.

Thirty-two.

A dry-goods merchant.

A steady man who wanted a wife who could read accounts, manage a household, and stand beside him without foolishness.

Lillian had believed him because she had needed to believe somebody.

That was the dangerous thing about desperate hope.

It could make plain ink look like shelter.

She stepped down in her dark green traveling dress, the one her mother had altered before sickness took the strength from her hands.

Cowboys moved past in dust-coated boots.

Women in calico watched over baskets and parcels.

Freight men shouted beside crates and barrels.

Children ran between grown men’s legs until the train hissed and frightened them still.

Lillian searched the crowd for the man from the photograph.

A young clerk approached instead, twisting his cap until the brim bent.

“Miss Harper?”

“Yes.”

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