The Mail-Order Bride Who Exposed Bitterroot Crossing's Cruelest Lie-Quieen - Chainityai

The Mail-Order Bride Who Exposed Bitterroot Crossing’s Cruelest Lie-Quieen

The bride they bought to humiliate Abel Harker arrived in Bitterroot Crossing with rain in her hair, mud on her hem, and a folded map that would ruin the man who had arranged the whole thing.

By noon, the town had made a holiday out of cruelty.

The storm had rolled down from the Colorado high country before sunrise, cold and mean, turning Main Street into a trench of brown mud and wheel ruts.

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Rain tapped the saloon awning, hissed against horses’ backs, and gathered in the low places where boots had churned the street into paste.

Still, nobody left.

The men of Bitterroot Crossing had waited too long for this joke.

Miners crowded beneath the Dead Lantern Saloon awning with cigars and tin cups.

Card players abandoned half-finished hands.

The blacksmith stood in his doorway with one arm folded across his soot-streaked apron.

Across the street, curtains shifted and froze whenever anyone looked that way.

People always claim they do not enjoy another person’s humiliation.

They simply arrive early, stand close, and make sure they have a good view.

Gideon Rusk had made sure the whole town knew where to stand.

He owned the Dead Lantern, held half the valley’s debts in one form or another, and smiled with the patience of a man who believed every person had a price if you found the right pressure point.

That morning, he wore a velvet waistcoat too fine for the mud and a gold watch chain that caught what little daylight the storm allowed.

He had a cigar between his teeth and a crowd waiting for his next line.

“Boys,” he called, spreading one arm toward the road, “today we prove even a mountain bear can be tamed, provided the trap is baited heavy enough.”

The laughter went up hard and easy.

It had been going up like that for three weeks.

Three weeks earlier, Rusk had nailed a copied bride advertisement to the Dead Lantern door.

It had been taken from a matrimonial paper back east, written in a plain hand by a woman named Clara Merritt.

Miss Clara Merritt, twenty-seven years of age.

Strong-bodied, plain-featured, accustomed to hard work and harsher judgments.

I do not seek poetry, flattery, or romance.

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