The Cowboy Had Carried Her Mother’s Last Letter Across Wyoming, But Clara Was Not Ready for What It Asked-felicia

Clara did not touch the second telegram at first.

It lay beside the tin cup, dark along the folds where trail dust and weather had worked into the paper, and her own name sat across the front in a hand that had belonged to the dead.

For one breath, the Greystone Station matchmaking office seemed too small to hold all the people inside it. The potbellied stove clicked. Snow scraped against the cracked window in dry little flecks. Mrs. Fletcher’s spectacles slid halfway down her nose, and Mr. Henderson’s foreman lost the careful shape of his contempt.

Image

Clara stared at the handwriting.

Eleanor Hawthorne had been buried beneath a gray Boston rain four years ago.

Yet there was no mistaking the bend of the C, the firm cross of the t, the old habit of pressing too hard at the end of every word, as though paper itself required conviction.

Luke Carver stood with one scarred hand resting flat on the table. He did not explain himself to the room. He did not offer comfort to soften the blow. His silence held steady while Clara’s world tilted around that small, weather-blackened paper.

At last she lifted it.

The broker took one step forward. “Miss Hawthorne—”

Luke’s gaze cut to her, not sharp, not rude, but final enough that Mrs. Fletcher stopped where she was.

Clara broke the seal.

Inside was not a telegram at all, but a folded letter wrapped around a thin strip of blue ribbon. Her mother’s ribbon. Clara remembered it from a winter bonnet, from a drawer scented with lavender, from the private softness her mother had hidden from the rooms where men judged women by how little space they occupied.

The letter had been written in a hand less steady than the name outside.

My dearest Clara,

If this reaches you, then I have failed to give it myself.

Clara’s throat closed so tightly that she lowered the page.

Luke looked away at once, granting her what privacy could be managed in a room full of witnesses.

The foreman gave a dry cough. “This is a family matter, perhaps, but Mr. Henderson’s instruction remains—”

“No,” Clara said.

The word was not loud. It carried.

She lifted her eyes to the foreman. “Your employer has no instruction over me.”

His mouth thinned. “He advanced funds toward your travel.”

“He advanced an offer of marriage, then withdrew it with eight words and an errand boy.” Clara folded her mother’s letter once, carefully, as if her hands had become the only civilized things left in the room. “If he wants repayment, he may send an account to Mrs. Fletcher. I will answer it when I can.”

The foreman’s polite face hardened. “A woman alone in this territory should be careful how she answers men willing to help her.”

Luke moved only one inch.

Read More