Seven Rejections, One Mountain Man, And The Storm That Changed Her-felicia

Seven men had rejected Lydia Whitmore before she ever set foot in Cedar Ridge.

They had not done it with mercy.

Their letters arrived folded cleanly, written in steady hands, and each one cut in a different place.

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One said she was too educated.

Another said she sounded too opinionated.

A third suggested a woman of twenty-four ought to be grateful for any offer and careful not to appear superior.

By the seventh refusal, Lydia no longer wept.

She packed the letters in her father’s battered trunk because she could not yet bear to burn them.

Then she sold what remained of her old life and boarded the train west.

The stagecoach left her in Montana dust with thirty-two dollars, three dresses, a silver brush that had belonged to her mother, and a pride she had carried like a wounded thing.

Cedar Ridge was smaller than she expected and harsher than she hoped.

The post office leaned toward the street.

The saloon doors swung in the wind.

Men in worn coats watched from the boardwalk as though a rejected woman were a public entertainment.

The driver asked if she truly meant to get down there.

Lydia said yes.

Want had very little to do with it.

Mrs. Keller from the boarding house met her near the road and offered a room for two dollars a week, meals included, payment in advance.

Lydia counted the cost in her head and understood exactly how long she could survive before desperation came looking for her again.

Sixteen weeks.

Maybe less.

She lifted her trunk herself and followed Mrs. Keller through whispers sharp enough to leave marks.

By supper, the men at the boarding house table had already found the story.

Seven men turned her down.

Must be something wrong with her.

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