Runaway Bride Marries A Cold Rancher—Then Her Hunters Arrive-felicia

The Cowboy Married a Runaway Bride—Then Faced the Men Hunting Her

“I’m going to sell you to the highest bidder, girl, whether you like it or not.”

Evelyn Mercer heard those words every time the train wheels struck a joint in the rails.

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They beat underneath the hiss of steam, the cough of coal smoke, and the low murmur of strangers pretending not to stare at the young woman traveling alone with one carpetbag and a bruise she had tried to powder into invisibility.

Texas rolled past the dirty window in hard brown stretches.

Fence posts leaned under the sun.

Tumbleweeds dragged themselves across the flats as if they, too, were trying to outrun something.

Evelyn kept one gloved hand pressed over the pocket of her coat.

Inside it lay a newspaper clipping folded soft from handling.

Seeking wife. Rancher. Red Hollow, Texas. Must be practical, hardworking. No children. Partnership only. Do not answer if expecting romance or affection.

The words were plain enough to frighten most women away.

They had comforted Evelyn.

Romance had never saved her.

Affection had not stopped Marcus Bellamy from gripping her jaw hard enough to make her teeth ache.

Love, if it had ever existed in her stepfather’s house, had been buried with her mother.

A partnership sounded safer.

A legal name sounded safer still.

She had answered the advertisement by lamplight with shaking hands, writing that she was older than she was, stronger than she felt, and ready for work she barely understood.

She had not written that Marcus meant to marry her to Horus Drummond, a banker old enough to be her father.

She had not written that Drummond had buried two wives already, and people lowered their voices when they spoke of them.

She had not written that Marcus had looked at her like livestock and told her she would fetch a decent price.

When the conductor called Red Hollow, Evelyn stood too quickly and nearly lost her balance.

Her carpetbag was light because she owned almost nothing.

Three mended dresses.

One pair of boots.

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