The Bride Her Father Tried To Hide Was Chosen By A Cattle King-felicia

The first thing Clara Vail noticed was not the three men standing in her father’s parlor.

It was the pistol on the mantel.

Silas Vail had polished it that morning until the barrel caught the pale Montana sunlight and threw a hard silver line across the wallpaper.

Image

He did not expect violence.

He rarely expected violence, because men like Silas preferred to let objects do the threatening for them.

A pistol on a mantel.

A stack of coins on a table.

A daughter placed near a wall instead of in the light.

Outside, the morning was cold enough to make the horses steam in the yard.

Inside, the parlor smelled faintly of gun oil, old wood, and the starch Clara had used on the curtains two days before.

She had washed those curtains herself.

She had beaten dust from the rug herself.

She had laid the fire, baked the bread, polished the glass, and set the room for the men who had come to choose a wife.

That was the word everyone kept using because it sounded softer than sale.

“Stand straight,” Silas said, not even looking at her.

Clara’s spine was already straight.

“No man pays good money for a woman who looks already defeated.”

Clara folded her hands more tightly.

Her face stayed calm.

Only her pulse betrayed her.

Beside the lace-curtained window, Lily Bell stood where the sunlight made her look almost painted.

She was nineteen, golden-haired, and soft-cheeked, with a blush that rose every time one of the ranchers glanced her way.

Near the sofa, Anne Porter smoothed her blue dress again and again, though there was no wrinkle left to smooth.

Anne was barely eighteen.

They were both pretty in the way men praised aloud.

Read More