The Bride Who Stepped Off The Stagecoach Holding A Broken Parasol-felicia

The first thing Elias Rourke heard when the stagecoach rolled into Briar Hollow was not the snap of the driver’s whip.

It was not the groan of wooden wheels settling into the ruts outside Pritchard’s Feed & General.

It was a woman’s voice.

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“Touch that child again,” she said from inside the coach, “and I will break your other hand.”

The words cut through the heat like a knife drawn clean from a sheath.

For a moment, even the dust seemed to stop moving.

A mule snorted beside the hitching rail.

Two boys who had been rolling a hoop near the water trough forgot the game and stared toward the stagecoach.

Mrs. Lottie Pritchard leaned halfway out of her store doorway with a flour sack hugged against her apron, her eyes narrowing in the way they did whenever Briar Hollow was about to give her something worth repeating.

Elias stood ten feet from the coach with his hat pulled low and one hand resting on the rail.

Inside his coat pocket was the telegram that had brought him into town before noon.

ARRIVING AUGUST 9. M. WHITCOMB.

That was all it said.

No careful hand beyond the agency clerk’s.

No description.

No soft promise.

No line telling him whether M. Whitcomb was nervous, cheerful, young, plain, pretty, sensible, educated, or any of the other words men used when they wanted to pretend they were not shopping for a person.

Elias had read the telegram three times that morning at the Hollow Star Ranch.

Once at the kitchen table while the coffee went bitter in the pot.

Once at the barn while the roof leaked light through a split shingle over the tack wall.

Once beside the corral, where fifteen horses watched him with the blank patience of creatures who did not care how much money a man owed.

The ranch was three months behind on payments.

One back room roof leaked.

Four bad stretches of fence had to be fixed before winter.

Silas Kincaid, his neighbor, had been asking around in town about land boundaries with the same innocent tone a fox might use asking about a henhouse latch.

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