Mail-Order Bride Found A Rancher Who Gave Her A Choice-felicia

The stagecoach door opened with a tired wooden groan, and Eleanor Halot could not make her fingers loosen from the handle of her carpetbag.

Dust moved under the wheels in low brown sheets.

The air outside was cold enough to bite, carrying the dry smell of horses, leather, and stove smoke from the little Wyoming town beyond the coach window.

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She had crossed 2,000 miles to marry a man she had never seen.

That fact had sounded almost unreal when she wrote the letter back East.

It felt brutally real now.

The driver turned in his seat and looked back at her, not cruelly, but with the plain impatience of a man whose road ended here.

“Ma’am,” he said, “this is as far as I go.”

Eleanor swallowed.

In Boston, she had once lived behind polished doors, where people spoke softly and pretended money made them safe.

Then her father’s ventures failed one after another.

The house went first in everything but name.

Then came the whispers, the creditors, her mother’s failing strength, and the terrible morning when her father decided prison would be worse than death.

After that, respectability vanished like smoke.

Women who had taken tea with her mother crossed streets to avoid her.

Men looked at her differently.

Work existed, but the factories frightened her with their locked air, their ruined hands, and their women who seemed old before their time.

So when she saw the advertisement from Caleb Turner, a rancher seeking a wife in the West, she answered it.

Not because she expected tenderness.

Not because she believed in some shining frontier dream.

She answered because hunger has a way of making dangerous doors look merciful.

Now the door was open.

The town of Dun Red Hollow waited.

Eleanor stepped down into the dirt, and every eye seemed to land on her at once.

The buildings were few and wind-worn, leaning into the prairie as if they had been arguing with weather for years.

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