Rejected at the Depot, She Found a Ranch Worth Fighting For-felicia

The train came into Red Willow Crossing like it had been running too long and caring too little.

Metal screamed against metal.

Steam rolled across the depot planks and mixed with the smell of coal, horse sweat, and dry dust baking under a pale afternoon sun.

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Margaret Hail stood from her seat with one hand on the back of the bench and the other pressed over the worn leather handle of her bag.

Three days on hard train seats had left her stiff from shoulder to ankle.

Three months of letters had left her carrying a hope she had tried not to believe in too deeply.

Hope, she had learned, was easier to survive when a woman held it loosely.

She smoothed the front of her faded blue dress before stepping down onto the platform.

The cloth had been brushed, mended, and pressed more times than it deserved.

Still, she held her chin high.

Mail-order brides were not rare in that territory, but they were never private.

People gathered for them the way they gathered for storms, wagon accidents, and public arguments.

Women stood in pairs near the depot office.

Men leaned against posts and pretended to watch freight.

Children were pulled back by their sleeves, then allowed to stare anyway.

Margaret looked over the faces, searching for the man whose letters had brought her west.

She found him near the edge of the platform.

Young Mr. Winfield was thinner than she expected, nervous in the shoulders, pale around the mouth.

He looked at her once, then looked away.

Before Margaret could decide what that meant, his mother stepped forward.

Mrs. Winfield wore black so clean and fitted it seemed untouched by the same dust that found everyone else.

Her silver hair was pinned perfectly.

Her eyes were pale and sharp.

She did not greet Margaret.

She inspected her.

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