The Wrong Woman Stepped Off the Stagecoach With a Dead Sister’s Letter-felicia

The woman stepped down from the stagecoach wearing the dress Eli Mercer had imagined for six months.

The West Texas sun sat low behind Red Willow Crossing, throwing copper light across the depot boards and turning the dust in the air bright enough to look almost holy.

Eli stood near the hitching post with his hat in his hands and his heart doing something he had not allowed it to do in years.

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It was waiting.

He had waited through spring storms, through dry heat, through nights when the lamp burned low while he read the same letter until the words felt like a voice.

He had waited through March.

April.

May.

July.

Six months of paper and ink had taught him to believe a woman named Ellanar Whitlock was coming west to begin again with him.

Then the woman on the platform looked at him with frightened eyes and whispered, “I’m not who you wrote to.”

For a moment, nothing else in the world seemed to understand what had happened.

The horses shifted.

A wheel creaked.

The stage driver cleared his throat and then fell quiet, as if even he knew this was not a moment a stranger should interrupt.

Eli looked at the trunk beside her boots.

He looked at the dress.

He looked at the woman’s hands, which were trembling so badly she had to fold them together to hide it.

“What do you mean?” he asked, though some part of him already knew the answer would take more than one sentence to survive.

“My name is Sarah,” she said.

Her voice shook once, then steadied.

“Ellanar was my sister.”

The name landed harder the second time because it no longer belonged to a future.

It belonged to a loss Eli did not know he had already been carrying.

He had come to Red Willow Crossing after the war and built a homestead with the stubbornness of a man trying to make silence useful.

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