The Mail-Order Bride Bitter Creek Mocked, Then Needed To Live-mdue - Chainityai

The Mail-Order Bride Bitter Creek Mocked, Then Needed To Live-mdue

A ragged bride stepped off the stagecoach in Bitter Creek, and the whole town treated her like a joke.

Caleb Thorne saw it happen before the dust had even settled.

He stood beside his wagon with a silver watch clenched in his hand, feeling the Montana heat burn through the metal and into his palm. The air was thick with sweat, horse breath, and the sharp pleasure people took in someone else’s shame.

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They had come to watch.

Of course they had.

Entertainment was rare in Bitter Creek. A mail-order bride arriving by stagecoach gave the town something to chew on, so the women came out of the dry goods store, the men drifted from the saloon, and Mrs. Gable took her judging place on the boardwalk.

Caleb wished he had left Abigail at home.

His daughter sat on the wagon bench in a blue cotton dress, her hands folded, her face still. Six years old, and she already looked as if she had learned not to expect much from the world. She had Sarah’s eyes, and every glance reminded Caleb of the wife he could not bring back.

Sarah had died four years earlier.

Fever took her in three days.

Abigail had stood beside the grave while the first dirt hit the pine box. After that, the words in her disappeared. Meals passed in silence. Christmas passed in silence. Storms passed in silence. Caleb tried stories, hymns, candy from town, and the little rag doll Sarah had sewn before she took sick.

Nothing brought his child’s voice home.

So Caleb had done something desperate.

He answered a marriage notice.

Not for romance.

Not for comfort.

He wrote to an agency because his house had turned into a museum of dust and grief, and he feared Abigail would grow up without ever saying the word mother again.

The stagecoach lurched into view with four exhausted horses and Shorty hauling back on the brake. The wheels screamed. Dust rolled over the street. A businessman climbed down first, then a woman in a flowered bonnet who hurried away as if the town might bite her.

Then the doorway stayed empty.

A hand appeared on the frame.

Dark-skinned.

Steady.

Ayana stepped down.

She was not the pale bride some of the women had imagined. She wore a deep red dress patched at the shoulder and mended until the seams looked tired. Dust had browned the hem. A silver necklace set with turquoise lay against her collarbone, and worn gray feathers were tied near her braids.

She carried one battered leather suitcase.

That was all.

The silence that met her was worse than laughter.

Then Miller from the livery stable spat into the dirt. He leaned against the post with the look of a man who had never paid full price for cruelty because the town always helped him spend it.

‘I did not know you were buying salvage,’ he said.

A few people laughed.

Not loudly.

That made it uglier.

Mrs. Gable pulled her skirts away from the edge of the boardwalk. Another man near the saloon muttered something about Caleb sleeping with one eye open. No one said anything brave enough to be confronted. They only let the words float, small and poisonous, trusting the crowd to carry them.

Ayana did not flinch.

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