Abandoned Bride Waited 3 Days Until A Child Made A Proposal-felicia

Lydia Monroe stood on the platform in her wedding dress for 3 days, waiting for a husband who didn’t exist.

The dress had been cream when she boarded the train.

By the third afternoon in Cold Water, Wyoming, it had turned the color of old flour and station dust.

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Coal smoke clung to the lace at her throat.

Wind worried the hem against the planks until the cloth grew brown and stiff.

Lydia no longer smoothed it.

There comes a point when a woman stops trying to look unharmed.

Her trunk sat beside the bench near the station house.

It held two dresses, her mother’s Bible, a silver hairbrush wrapped in cloth, and the letter she had once pressed to her chest as if it were proof that her life had not ended in a rented room back east.

Now she could not bear to look at it.

She knew the words by heart anyway.

William Sterling, the letter had said.

A rancher in Cold Water.

A man with 300 acres, cattle, a plain home, and a need for a wife who understood work.

Respectfully written.

Carefully folded.

False from the first line.

Lydia had not answered that letter like a foolish girl.

She was 26, alone, and tired of counting coins under a candle while the landlady reminded her that pity did not pay rent.

She had known what a mail-order arrangement meant.

It was not a fairy tale.

It was a bargain made by people with more need than choices.

So she had written back plainly.

She said she had no dowry.

She said she was not beautiful in any grand way.

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