The Seamstress Chose the Cowboy by Mistake, But the Real Groom Came With Papers by Sundown-felicia

‘No need,’ Colt Avery said.

The hammer lay between Eleanor Price and William Hartford’s folded claim like a small iron gate. For a moment no one in the dress shop moved. Dust hung in the morning light from the broken porch boards Colt had been cutting. The muslin beneath Eleanor’s hand showed one red bead where her needle had slipped. Outside, the second train gave one last tired hiss, and Dakota Junction seemed to hold its breath behind every shop window.

William Hartford looked at the hammer first, then at Colt’s hand resting close to it. He was not a large man, but his neat coat, polished spectacles, and careful manner gave him the look of someone who had learned to let paper do what fists could not.

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‘No need for what, Mr. Avery?’ he asked pleasantly.

Colt did not raise his voice. ‘No need for her to choose by sundown.’

The lawman beside Hartford shifted his weight. He was a deputy marshal from Yankton, or so he claimed, with a silver badge and tired eyes that had seen too many men turn foolish in the presence of a gun. His hand rested near his belt, but he did not draw.

Hartford smiled. ‘You mistake yourself for a husband of consequence.’

‘Reverend signed the paper,’ Colt said. ‘Town witnessed the vows. She is Mrs. Avery in front of God, law, and every tongue wagging on Main Street.’

Eleanor should have felt relief. Instead, fear moved through her in a slow, cold line. The word wife had saved her yesterday. This morning it had become a trap set with ribbons.

Hartford opened the folded paper and placed it flat upon her sewing table. His fingers were narrow, the nails clean. ‘Miss Price entered into written correspondence with me for the purpose of matrimony and settlement. She accepted my offer, my travel, my expense, and my future household arrangements. If she now claims another man, I shall ask the territorial court for damages.’

‘How much?’ Eleanor asked.

Hartford’s eyes softened in a way that made her stomach tighten. ‘Enough to impress the seriousness of broken promises. Five hundred dollars.’

The number struck harder than any shout. Five hundred dollars was more than the mortgage left on her house, more than her shop had earned in a year, more than she could gather if she sold every bolt of cloth, every chair, and the gold ring too loose on her finger.

Colt’s jaw moved once. Nothing more.

Hartford turned to Eleanor. ‘I have no wish to ruin you. I came in good faith. I still stand willing to be merciful. Have this marriage annulled as an error, come with me before sunset, and I will put the matter away.’

Eleanor looked at Colt then. His shirt sleeves were rolled to the elbow, sawdust clung to one wrist, and the scar above his brow had gone pale. He had married her by accident, defended her by instinct, and now stood in the doorway of her little shop as if her trouble belonged to him.

But she knew so little of him.

Yesterday he had been a stranger from the train. By night he had slept on her too-short settee beneath her father’s old quilt. At dawn he had made coffee without asking where she kept the tin, repaired a porch no one else had cared was failing, and placed one silver dollar on Mr. Peterson’s ledger without making a performance of it.

A practical woman would take the legal path. A frightened woman would follow the man with papers. A lonely woman might mistake kindness for salvation.

Eleanor had been all three.

‘Deputy,’ Hartford said, still watching her, ‘you have heard my offer.’

The lawman cleared his throat. ‘Mrs. Avery, the court will expect an answer in due course. Mr. Hartford has the right to file his claim.’

‘And she has the right to refuse him,’ Colt said.

Hartford’s smile thinned. ‘For now.’

He folded the paper again, but left it on her table. Then he lifted his hat to Eleanor with a courtesy so cold it felt like frost on glass.

‘Madam, I will return at four o’clock. I trust reflection will improve your judgment.’

When the bell above the shop door stopped trembling behind him, Eleanor found she had been holding her breath so long her ribs ached.

Colt did not touch her. That was the first kindness.

He stepped back from the table and let the silence make room for her fear.

‘You can still send me away,’ he said.

Eleanor stared at the claim. ‘Can I?’

‘Aye.’

‘And if I do?’

‘Then I will tell Reverend Marsh the mistake was mine. I will leave before supper. You can say I misled you.’

She looked up sharply. ‘That would mark you as a scoundrel.’

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