The Rancher Who Chose the Woman Trying to Leave Town-felicia

By seven that Tuesday morning, Harland’s Crossing already had the restless feel of a town pretending not to stare.

Dust hung low over the main road.

Coffee had gone bitter on the stove inside the post office.

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A wagon wheel scraped somewhere near the general store, then stopped, as if even the street had decided to listen.

Ten women stood outside the post office in their best clothing.

Nine of them looked ready to be chosen.

One of them looked ready to disappear.

Her name was Joanna Westbrook.

She stood at the far end of the line, not because anyone had placed her there by kindness, but because people like her had learned to make themselves small before anyone asked.

She was thirty-four, nearly a decade older than most of the others.

Her dress was clean, but the cloth had gone soft from years of washing, and the seams near the cuffs looked tired.

She carried one plain cloth bag.

That was all.

Not a hope chest.

Not a trunk.

Not the kind of luggage a woman brought when she believed she was stepping into a grand new life.

She had come because the placement agency had promised travel.

She had come because a stagecoach heading west could still leave a person close enough to a depot to think about another train.

She had not come for a husband.

That was the part no one in Harland’s Crossing understood when the morning began.

They thought the story belonged to Everett Cobb.

In a way, it did.

But stories about quiet men are often told wrong by loud towns.

Everett rode in from the north a little after seven, his horse lifting a thin ribbon of dust behind him.

He was forty-one years old, broad across the shoulders, with a face that looked as if wind, sun, and winter had all taken their turn and found him unwilling to complain.

He wore a dusty hat and work clothes that fit the shape of a man who did not spend much time sitting indoors.

He owned the Cobb Ranch.

Four thousand acres of good grazing land.

Within sixty miles, people knew the name.

They knew the fence lines.

They knew the cattle.

They knew that since his ranch hand Hector had left the previous spring, Everett had worked most of it alone.

He was not rich in the kind of way that made men loud.

He did not boast at the store counter.

He did not order people around just because he could pay for things.

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