The Mail-Order Bride Who Stopped Running When Choice Found Her-felicia

The dust had not even settled around Lillian Hart’s boots when she decided she would run.

Dry Willow looked too small to hide in and too open to escape from.

The stagecoach behind her groaned on its springs, still ticking and creaking from the long ride west, while the morning sun spread across the single dusty street.

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Every sound seemed too loud.

Harness leather squeaked.

A loose shutter tapped against the front of the general store.

Someone’s boot scraped the boardwalk, then stopped.

Lillian stood with her travel case in one hand and her breath caught high in her chest.

Everything she owned was inside that case.

Everything she had left behind was 3,000 miles east, and still somehow it felt close enough to grab her by the back of the neck.

“End of the line, miss,” the driver called. “Dry Willow.”

The words landed like a verdict.

She stepped down because there was nowhere else to step.

The crowd outside the depot did not move much, but it watched plenty.

A woman with a broom slowed in front of the general store.

Two men near the livery turned their heads.

A boy carrying a feed sack stopped in the street and stared until his father tugged him away.

Lillian had seen that kind of looking before.

It was the look people gave a woman when they thought they already knew why she was desperate.

Then she saw Caleb Turner.

He stood beside a weathered wagon, hat held in both hands, shoulders broad from work and face browned by years under open sky.

He looked younger than she had imagined from his letters.

He also looked kinder.

That should have comforted her.

It did not.

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