The Sixth Bride Who Would Not Run From Dead Man’s Ridge-felicia

“Every Bride Left the Mountain Man in Days… Until the Obese One Refused to Leave.”

Jacob McAllister came down from Dead Man’s Ridge with a dead wolf over his shoulder and no hope left in his face.

That was the first thing Oak Haven saw.

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Not a groom.

Not a man cleaned and waiting with flowers or polished boots.

Just Jacob, broad and weathered, standing outside Hargrove’s General Store with gray fur hanging limp against his back and a dark stain stiffening the cloth at his sleeve.

The dust had not even settled when the whispers started.

The stage from Abilene was late by 20 minutes, and in a town that had little to do but count other people’s troubles, 20 minutes was enough to gather half the street.

Men drifted from the livery and leaned where they could see without looking too eager.

Women paused behind shop windows, pretending to study cloth, flour, buttons, or canned peaches.

A boy with a flour sack hugged it to his chest and waited near the porch post, eyes too wide for any errand that simple.

They all knew why Jacob had come down.

A bride was due.

Another one.

Five had come before her.

That number sat over the town like smoke.

Five women had answered his advertisement, each one imagining something different when she read the words mountain cabin, honest work, and marriage.

Five had ridden with him up the road that twisted toward Dead Man’s Ridge.

Five had returned before the week was done, some pale with anger, some silent with humiliation, one crying so hard she could not speak until the stage driver helped her into the coach.

Jacob had not gone after any of them.

That was part of what people held against him.

A softer man might have begged.

A more talkative man might have explained.

A charming man might have promised to change whatever had frightened them.

Jacob McAllister had done none of it.

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