The Montana Bride Who Carried A Lockbox Into A Mountain Cabin-felicia

Sadie Rowan reached Copper Creek with cold dust on her dress and a black lockbox at her feet.

The town noticed the box before it noticed her hunger.

It was the sort of box that made people wonder what a woman was protecting, because it did not match the rest of her belongings.

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Her trunk had a cracked leather strap and one corner rubbed bald from travel.

Her hat sat crooked, the brim bent by too many hands and too many miles.

Her blue dress had once been proper enough for a parlor, but by that September afternoon it belonged to the road.

The lockbox did not.

It was square, polished, iron-banded, and held close as if the life inside it mattered more than the life carrying it.

Men along the boardwalk watched her the way towns watched strangers, with open faces and closed hearts.

A horse stamped beside the hitching rail.

Coal smoke dragged low from a stovepipe.

The air smelled of feed grain, leather, old whiskey, and the first hard edge of mountain weather.

Sadie had not eaten since the previous morning, but no one could see that unless they knew how hunger made a person move carefully.

She was moving carefully.

The drunk was not.

He came out from near the feed store with a red nose, a loose grin, and the courage cheap whiskey lends to a small man in front of a crowd.

He looked at the trunk.

Then at the lockbox.

Then at Sadie.

His voice dropped, but not low enough to keep the bystanders from hearing the insult he made about women who answered marriage notices.

The words were meant to stain her before she had even met the man who sent for her.

They were meant to tell her that Copper Creek had already decided what she was worth.

Sadie did not answer at first.

She only stood there in the cold boardwalk light with her hand hanging at her side, fingers curled inside a worn glove.

For a breath, it looked as if she might swallow it.

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