The Stranger Bride Held The Ledger That Saved Two Ranches At Sunset-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Stranger Bride Held The Ledger That Saved Two Ranches At Sunset-nhu9999

Three months after I buried my father, I rode west to marry a woman I had never seen.

That sounds like foolishness if you have never lived on land where a promise can outlive the man who made it.

My father had given Edmund Surency his word years before fever took him.

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He did not explain the whole matter on his deathbed.

He only gripped my wrist with the strength he had left and told me a Windermere did not make a promise soft just because keeping it became hard.

So I went.

I dressed in a black coat that still smelled faintly of cedar from his trunk.

I saddled my horse before sunrise.

I rode through grass so pale it looked washed clean by grief.

I told myself I was doing a duty.

I told myself duty was enough.

It had to be enough, because I knew almost nothing about Iola Surency except that she was Edmund’s youngest daughter.

Cord, my father’s old foreman, had given me one sentence.

“She’s not what anyone expects.”

That was all.

I made a woman in my mind after that, because men are sometimes cowards in private.

I imagined someone plain, severe, maybe timid, maybe grateful that any man had come.

By the time I reached the little white church at the edge of the Surency land, I had judged a stranger with no evidence at all.

The shame of that would come later.

The church was full enough to make the air warm.

Thirty people sat in narrow pews, and every one of them turned when I walked in.

They did not look curious.

They looked braced.

That should have warned me.

The minister stood with his book open.

Cord sat near the back, hat in his lap, eyes lowered.

I took my place and kept my face still the way my father had taught me.

Then the doors opened.

I heard the steps first.

Slow.

Measured.

No apology in them.

Iola came down the aisle in an ivory veil fine enough to catch the morning light.

She was tall, composed, and straight-backed, with the calm of someone who had stopped begging the world to be fair.

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