The Silent Mail-Order Husband Who Made A Dakota Depot Go Still-felicia

The train gave one last groan as it stopped, and Ellaner Hart felt the sound move through the planks beneath her boots.

Coal smoke drifted low across the depot platform, bitter and black, while prairie wind pulled at the cuffs of her worn traveling dress.

She had crossed half a country for a man whose handwriting she knew better than his face.

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The folded letter in her glove had been read so many times the creases were turning soft.

It had promised a working farm, a clean house, a lawful marriage, and honest partnership.

It had not promised love.

Ellaner had not asked for love when she answered it.

Love had seemed like a luxury for women with families to fall back on, women who still had silver tucked in a drawer, women whose future did not depend on whether one stranger in the Dakota Plains kept his word.

Her parents were buried.

The boarding house that had once fed her and sheltered travelers had failed under debt.

The relatives who took her in at first had done so with tight mouths and counting eyes.

Every meal reminded her that kindness could sour when there were too many plates at the table.

So when Thomas Reed’s letter came, plain as a ledger entry and just as serious, she treated it like a rope thrown into deep water.

She came west with a valise, a green dress folded carefully under her night things, and enough courage to keep her hands from shaking.

The station agent watched her from beside the freight room, chewing on straw like her life was something to pass the time.

“Meeting your mail-order husband?” he asked.

“Yes,” Ellaner said.

Her voice sounded firmer than she felt.

“Risky business,” he said. “A man can write anything he pleases.”

She looked down at the letter.

Sincerely, Thomas Reed.

Nothing in the words had been sweet.

That had comforted her.

A romantic man could lie beautifully.

A practical man, she had hoped, might lie less.

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