A Boston Bride Was Sent West as a Joke, But the Rancher Saw the Truth-felicia

The letter arrived on a gray Tuesday morning, while rain tapped the Beacon Street windows and coal smoke sat low in the parlor.

Eleanor Whitmore heard the seal break before anyone called her name.

In that house, paper usually meant someone had already decided something, and Eleanor would be expected to accept it quietly.

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Adelaide Whitmore read the first lines with a smile that held no kindness.

Across the room, Florence sat by the window with a paintbrush in hand, her golden curls arranged as carefully as the flowers on the table.

‘A rancher?’ Florence asked.

‘Colorado Territory,’ Adelaide said. ‘Caleb Mercer. Thousands of acres. Cattle. Money enough to believe he can ask for a refined eastern bride.’

Florence laughed.

It was a small sound, but Eleanor felt it like a slap.

Then Adelaide looked toward the corner where Eleanor had learned to sit without drawing attention.

Plain dress.

No ribbon.

No jewelry.

No color bright enough to invite comment.

‘Eleanor, come here, dear.’

The word dear was where the knife always began.

Eleanor crossed the carpet and took the letter.

The request was formal, careful, and cruelly simple.

Caleb Mercer wanted a Whitmore daughter.

Not Florence.

Not Eleanor.

A Whitmore daughter.

Florence saw it at once.

‘Mother, be serious,’ she said. ‘He asked for grace and refinement. He will send her back the moment he sees her.’

Adelaide’s smile widened.

‘Of course. And he will pay for the inconvenience.’

The room went quiet.

Rain ticked against the glass.

Eleanor looked at the page until the ink blurred.

‘You are sending me as a joke,’ she said.

Adelaide tilted her head. ‘Think of it as an adventure.’

Cruelty rarely calls itself cruelty.

It calls itself opportunity, duty, family, or common sense.

Then it waits for the wounded person to sound ungrateful.

When Eleanor asked what would happen if she refused, Adelaide’s eyes hardened.

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