A Warning Telegram Met His Bride Before the Blizzard Did-felicia

The telegram arrived before the bride did.

Caleb Mercer read it under the cracked yellow lamp of Bitter Creek station while the wind pushed snow sideways through the seams in the boards.

The station smelled of coal smoke, wet wool, and cold iron.

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The telegraph clerk pretended not to watch Caleb’s face, but he watched all the same.

BRIDE MAY NOT BE WHO SHE CLAIMS.

DO NOT COMPLETE MARRIAGE UNTIL VERIFIED.

AGENCY RECORDS UNCERTAIN.

USE CAUTION.

There was no signature at the bottom.

Only the name of the matrimonial office in Chicago, stamped in purple ink and blurred by a wet thumb.

Caleb stared at the words until the letters turned flat and strange.

Outside, the storm came in hard from the northwest.

He could feel it through the floorboards.

He could hear it rattling the glass panes.

The horses tied out front kept stamping, throwing their heads, and breathing steam into the white air.

Bad weather had a smell in Wyoming.

Iron.

Ice.

Old grass.

And that heavy silence that came right before the sky decided to bury everything.

The train was already forty minutes late.

The woman he had agreed to marry was somewhere on it.

Or maybe the woman he had agreed to marry was not on it at all.

“Trouble?” the clerk asked.

His tone was casual, but his eyes had the bright look of a man hoping someone else’s misfortune might warm the room.

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