A Mail-Order Bride Bought Three Orphan Sisters No One Else Wanted-Quieen - Chainityai

A Mail-Order Bride Bought Three Orphan Sisters No One Else Wanted-Quieen

Dust lay over the courthouse square like flour shaken from a tired hand.

It clung to wagon wheels, boot leather, the hems of women’s skirts, and the ragged dresses of the children standing on the auction platform.

Josephine had never seen anything so quiet and so cruel.

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The air smelled of horse sweat, tobacco, damp wool, and the first metallic promise of snow.

She stood near the edge of the crowd with her carpetbag at her feet and a marriage certificate folded in the pocket of her coat.

Less than an hour earlier, she had stepped down from the train and into a life she had agreed to only because hunger had narrowed all other choices.

Her name was Josephine Hale then, though by the county clerk’s reckoning she would soon be Josephine Ward.

The man who had sent for her stood beside her.

Gideon Ward was taller than any man in the square, broad through the shoulders, bearded, and scarred down one cheek in a way that made strangers look twice and then look away.

He had met her at the depot at 2:41 p.m.

The time was printed on the arrival board, and Josephine remembered it because she had stared at those numbers while trying not to shake.

Gideon had taken in her plain wool suit, her thin face, her gloved hands, and the carpetbag that carried everything she owned.

Then he had said, “Thought you’d be stouter.”

Those were the first words her husband had ever spoken to her.

Not future husband, not truly.

The county marriage license already had both their names on it.

The clerk at the depot had explained the final step with a bored voice while Josephine stood there trying to keep the humiliation from reaching her face.

Gideon had paid the registry fee.

Josephine had signed the agreement back east.

The ceremony would be performed once they reached the ridge, or before the county clerk if Gideon wanted the paperwork completed sooner.

It was not romance.

It was a transaction with a Bible verse waiting to make it respectable.

Josephine had come west because the boardinghouse where she worked had closed, because her last living aunt had died in March, and because the woman who ran the registry said frontier wives were needed by decent men with homes.

She had not expected tenderness.

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