A Pregnant Bride, a Dead Groom, and the Cowboy Who Chose Her-ruby - Chainityai

A Pregnant Bride, a Dead Groom, and the Cowboy Who Chose Her-ruby

The train left Los Lunas in a cloud of steam, and Sofia Daniels stood on the platform with no plan left.

That was the first truth.

The second was harder.

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The man she had crossed half a continent to marry was dead.

The third was impossible to hide.

Under her shawl, beneath the dust of three days’ travel, a child moved inside her.

She had imagined this moment a hundred times on the way west. Thomas Abbott would be tall or short, gentle or awkward, handsome or plain. He would know her from the letters, from the careful little hopes she had folded into every page. He would help her into his wagon. He would take her to a house where no one knew the name Charles, and no one knew how fast a respectable woman could become a scandal.

But Thomas was not there.

His younger brother was.

Marcus Abbott had come because he found the letters among Thomas’s things after the accident. He had expected grief, maybe a difficult errand, maybe a woman who would cry when told the truth and then buy a ticket back east.

He did not expect Sofia.

She stood in the raw heat with copper hair slipping loose, one glove missing, her carpet bag nearly empty, and fear sitting so plainly on her face that Marcus felt ashamed for noticing the rest. He saw the hand over her middle. He saw the way she tried to turn her body so the curve would disappear. He saw the hunger of someone who had been refused shelter too many times.

He also saw the town watching.

Not a crowd.

Worse than a crowd.

Marcus had never been a man of long speeches. His father had raised him under a hard sun, with few compliments and no patience for wasted words. But some decisions do not need poetry. Some decisions only need a man to recognize what is standing in front of him.

Sofia needed help.

The child needed a name.

And Marcus had both to give.

He told her the stage would not leave for five days. He asked if she had people back east. When she said no, he believed her. There was a particular sound to that word when it came from someone who had already checked every door.

So he offered what he could.

His roof.

His name.

His protection from the little town’s sharp teeth.

Sofia tried to stop him from being noble at her expense. She told him the child was not his. She told him the father had vanished. She told him she had nothing to bring but scandal.

Marcus listened.

Then he held out his hand.

He did not make love out of it. Not then. That would have been too easy and too false. He made a bargain instead, plain as a fence post and twice as sturdy. If she wanted, they would marry. The child would be Abbott in every way that mattered. No one in Los Lunas needed to know more than that.

Sofia placed her hand in his because there was nowhere else for it to go.

The ride to the Abbott place was quiet. The land spread around them in browns and golds, hard country with mountains sitting far off like witnesses. Sofia had come from streets and boarding rooms and closed curtains. This place had too much sky. It made every secret feel exposed.

Marcus pointed out the dry creek, the boundary fence, the mission ruins where travelers sometimes camped. His voice was low and practical, almost careful. He did not ask about St. Louis. He did not ask the name of the man who left her. He let silence be merciful.

The ranch was not grand.

It was solid.

An adobe house. A tired barn. Chickens scratching near the step. A few cattle beyond the fence. To Sofia, who had expected a bench, a stare, and a return ticket she could not afford, it looked like salvation.

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