The Mail-Order Bride Who Knew the Ranch’s Books Too Well-Quieen - Chainityai

The Mail-Order Bride Who Knew the Ranch’s Books Too Well-Quieen

The first thing Elias Marsh saw from the porch was not a bride.

It was a woman dragging a mud-spattered trunk up the ranch road with a rifle over one shoulder and the Wyoming wind pushing against her skirts like it had been hired to turn her back.

The late-April light was thin and cold, bright enough to show every rut in the road and every speck of dust on the hem of her dress.

Image

Behind Elias, the old porch boards creaked under his boots.

Beyond the house, four thousand seven hundred acres of dry grass, cattle, debt, pride, and trouble stretched out beneath a sky that looked too wide to care what happened to any man living under it.

Tuck Redfield, his foreman, had ridden in from the crossroads five minutes earlier with his hat low and an excuse already waiting in his mouth.

“She wasn’t there,” Tuck had said.

“Stage came through. No woman got off.”

Elias had not answered.

He had seen her then.

A small dark figure on the road.

Alone.

Walking.

Now the woman stopped at the gate, set the trunk down with a thud, and looked up at him without smiling.

“You Elias Marsh?”

Her voice was clear.

Not soft.

Not frightened.

“I am.”

“Clara Sutton.”

Elias stepped off the porch and walked toward her.

He was forty-one, broad-shouldered, sun-browned, and marked by rope burns, winter cracks, and years of not saying much because saying more never fixed the fence, paid the note, or brought back rain.

Men in Weston County called him hard.

They did not know the difference between hardness and endurance.

He had written to a matrimonial agency in St. Louis because practical men solved practical problems.

He needed a wife.

He had said so in six lines.

A woman of steady character.

Capable of household management.

Willing to relocate to Wyoming Territory.

No romantic expectations required.

Ranch life difficult.

Marriage immediate if suitable.

He had not asked what she needed.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *