The Montana Bride Who Found The Stolen Creek Before Winter Fell-Quieen - Chainityai

The Montana Bride Who Found The Stolen Creek Before Winter Fell-Quieen

Ethan Walker had spent five years teaching his house not to expect anyone.

He had one chair that did not wobble, one cup without a crack, and one bed made with military neatness because softness felt like an invitation to lose something.

When he wrote to the matrimonial agency, he did not write like a man looking for love.

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He wrote like a man ordering supplies before winter.

Practical woman needed.

Able to cook, mend, preserve, clean, keep accounts, and endure isolation.

No expectation of sentiment.

That last line shamed him later, but not when he mailed it.

At the time, Ethan thought sentiment was how a person got careless.

Carelessness had already taken his mother in a fever year, his father under a collapsed timber rig, and the last woman who had ever called his ranch a home.

So when Savannah Hayes stepped down from the stagecoach in Millhaven wearing a deep blue traveling gown and a calm face that made people forget to whisper, Ethan panicked.

Not because she was weak.

Because she was not.

Beauty had choices, and he did not trust anyone with choices to stay once Montana showed its teeth.

He crossed the street before kindness could catch up to him.

“There’s been a mistake,” he said in front of the mercantile, the freight office, the blacksmith, and every bored soul who needed a story before supper.

Savannah looked at him as if she had expected weather and received a man instead.

“A woman like you cannot be my wife,” he said.

The town went still.

Savannah did not lower her eyes.

She did not look around to measure the damage.

She extended her gloved hand.

“You’re not what I expected either, Mr. Walker.”

That was how their marriage began before it was even real, with his fear dressed as cruelty and her dignity standing straighter than the whole street.

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