The Blizzard Bride Who Refused to Belong to the Man Who Bought Her-felicia

She did not knock the second time.

By the time Jacob Mercer opened his cabin door, the woman on his porch was already falling.

Snow came sideways across the Montana rise, hard enough to sting exposed skin and loud enough to make the log walls groan.

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It had buried her skirts to the knees.

It had frozen her hair to her cheeks.

One hand was still raised, as if she had tried to beg the storm for mercy before her strength gave out.

Jacob caught her before she struck the boards.

For one breath, he thought she was dead.

She was light in his arms, cold through every layer, and too still for any living person.

Then her mouth moved.

“Please.”

That single word went through him like a knife worked loose after years in the same wound.

Jacob Mercer had buried his wife seven winters earlier beneath the cottonwood behind the cabin.

Since then, he had learned to live with silence.

He worked before dawn, ate because a body required it, spoke mostly to his cattle dog, Ranger, and kept his grief folded away like a letter too painful to read.

But no man who had known that kind of loss could leave a woman to winter.

He carried her inside and kicked the door shut with his heel.

The wind hit the door behind him as if angered by the theft.

Ranger whined near the hearth but did not bark.

Jacob lowered the woman by the fire and wrapped her in blankets until only her face showed, pale as wax beneath the ice.

Her dress was city-made and thin.

Her coat was soaked through.

Her lips were blue, and her lashes glittered with frost.

“Stay with me,” Jacob said.

He put coffee on the stove, brought it hot in a tin cup, and held it between her hands until her fingers remembered how to close.

When he had to help her out of the frozen outer layers, he did it with his eyes turned away as much as decency allowed.

Necessity had its own law in a blizzard.

Dignity still mattered.

He gave her one of his shirts and wool trousers that swallowed her frame.

When he turned back, she had managed to sit upright.

Her hands trembled so badly she nearly spilled the coffee, but she lifted the cup anyway.

That told Jacob she still had fight in her.

“Thank you,” she whispered.

He nodded once.

For a while, he let the fire speak for both of them.

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