A Mail-Order Bride Met a Gunman at the Train. Then Trouble Rode In-felicia

“I Ordered a Husband, Not a Stranger With a Gun!” — She Cried as He Stepped Off the Train

The train rolled into Dustfall Creek with a scream of iron and a cough of black steam.

Anna Holloway stood on the wooden platform with marriage papers pressed so tightly to her chest that the edges bent under her fingers.

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The afternoon sun had dropped low enough to turn the rails the color of fire.

Wind pushed dust along Main Street and carried the dry smell of sage, horse sweat, and hot metal.

Her blue calico dress had been pressed that morning, though there was not much left in it to press.

The cuffs had been mended twice.

The hem had been let down once and stitched back by candlelight when her hands were already sore from chores.

She was twenty-four years old, which in Dustfall Creek was old enough for people to stop calling her a girl and start whispering about what would become of her.

She had a farm on the edge of town.

She had a roof with weak places.

She had a fence that leaned every time the wind came hard across the prairie.

She also had a final notice from the bank folded in a kitchen drawer, where she could pretend not to see it until the next time she needed flour, thread, or courage.

Her father had died the previous winter.

The cold had taken him slowly, then all at once.

One week he had been promising to fix the barn roof when spring came.

The next week Anna was standing beside a grave, listening to clods of frozen dirt strike his coffin while people told her she was strong.

People liked calling a woman strong when they had no intention of helping her.

That was the truth of Dustfall Creek.

Kind words were cheap.

Seed was not.

Repairs were not.

Taxes were not.

So Anna had done what desperate women sometimes did when every proper option had already failed her.

She placed an advertisement.

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