The Poor Mail-Order Bride Who Brought Christmas Back To A Frozen Cabin-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Poor Mail-Order Bride Who Brought Christmas Back To A Frozen Cabin-nga9999

Christmas Eve 1887 came down hard over the Wyoming Territory.

Snow packed itself against the cabin walls, gathered on the fence rails, and erased the road so slowly that Eli Mercer kept looking out the window just to prove the world had not disappeared altogether.

Inside, the fire smelled of pine smoke and old ash.

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The glass was white at the edges with frost.

His six-year-old daughter, Hannah, sat at the rough table arranging pine cones like they were ornaments from a fine store instead of things she had collected by the creek in October.

She hummed under her breath.

Eli knew the tune before he wanted to know it.

Sarah had sung it every Christmas Eve while kneading bread, while hanging Hannah’s stocking, while pretending their little cabin was warmer and fuller than it really was.

Two years had passed since fever took Sarah.

Two years was a strange measure of time.

Long enough for neighbors to stop lowering their voices when they mentioned her.

Long enough for Hannah’s dresses to get too short.

Long enough for Eli to learn how to braid badly, cook plainly, wash linens, and keep a little girl alive through winter.

Not long enough for him to stop listening for Sarah’s step in the morning.

He had not remarried because he was lonely.

Loneliness was something he understood.

It had walls, chores, habits, and a name.

He had answered the mail-order bride advertisement because Hannah needed more than a father who worked until his hands split and came inside with silence stuck to him.

The paper had arrived through the stage office three months earlier.

It was still folded in the drawer beneath his homestead ledger, beside a pencil worn short from numbers he counted too often.

He had read the notice at least a dozen times.

Each time, he told himself the same thing.

Practical.

A wife could help with the cooking, mending, washing, planting, preserving, and teaching.

A wife could help Hannah remember how a woman’s voice sounded in the house.

A wife did not have to be loved.

A roof could be enough.

A name could be enough.

A bed in the spare room could be enough.

That was how men like Eli survived grief.

They turned heartbreak into work and called it responsibility.

Hannah looked up from the pine cones.

“Papa, do you think she’ll come today?”

Eli kept his eyes on the road, though there was hardly any road left to see.

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