The Late Bride at the Chapel and the Brother Who Reached for Her-felicia

Nora McCall arrived in Sweetwater, Montana, with the hem of her green dress dark from mud and one suitcase rolling badly behind her.

The rain had stopped twenty minutes earlier, but the whole road still looked freshly wounded.

Water sat in the ruts.

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The little white chapel shone under a pale afternoon sun, too clean for what was about to happen, with rain dripping from its roof in slow silver beads.

Nora’s rideshare driver eased the car to a stop near the porch and did not put it in park right away.

He was a college kid from Bozeman, nervous enough to keep checking the mirror, and for the last hour he had watched his passenger hold a folder of printed emails against her chest like it was the only solid thing left in the world.

“Ma’am,” he said quietly, “are you sure this is the place?”

Nora did not answer him.

She was looking through the open chapel doors.

There was a bride inside.

Not a woman waiting in a side room.

Not a bridesmaid.

A bride.

She stood in ivory satin at the front of the chapel, tall and blonde and elegant, the kind of woman who looked untouched by bad flights, broken buses, airport bathrooms, and the ordinary humiliation of needing something too much.

Nora’s breath went thin.

Inside the chapel, an older pastor lifted his voice, and every word carried out through the damp Montana air.

“Austin Hawthorne, do you take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?”

Nora’s fingers tightened around the car door handle.

Her knuckles blanched.

The young driver swallowed so loudly she heard it.

“Ma’am?”

She shoved the door open before he could say anything else.

Her boots hit wet dirt and sank at once.

One heel caught in a rut, and she stumbled hard enough to grab the car roof, leaving a smear of rainwater across the metal.

Her auburn curls had come loose from their pins somewhere between the canceled flight in Denver, the broken bus outside Billings, and the mountain pass that had been blocked by a mudslide when she needed mercy most.

Her dress was wrinkled.

Her face was bare except for the mascara she had cried half off in an airport bathroom at three in the morning.

She had pictured a different arrival.

Music, maybe.

Nervous laughter.

Austin waiting on the chapel steps with that crooked smile he had sent in photographs, acting as though the distance between Pittsburgh and Montana had been nothing more than a long road they were finally done traveling.

Instead, she heard him say, “I do.”

Two words can take longer to cross a room than seventeen hundred miles.

Nora stood beside the car and felt those words reach her slowly, one after the other, as if her own mind refused to accept them at full speed.

Steady.

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