Rejected Seven Times, The Widow Was Chosen By The Richest Cowboy-rosocute

HE WAS REJECTED SEVEN TIMES — UNTIL THE RICHEST COWBOY WALKED PAST THEM ALL AND CHOSE HER

The winter wind in Hawthorne Creek did not blow so much as cut.

It came sliding along the depot platform in hard white gusts, lifting powdery snow from the boards and driving it into the hems of Martha Callaway’s dress.

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She stood with one hand on a battered valise and the other near the smallest child who kept drifting toward her skirts for warmth.

Around her, nine children pressed close.

Not one of them complained.

That was what hurt Martha most.

Children who still believed rescue was certain would have cried, stamped their feet, or begged to go inside where the stove smoke curled from the depot chimney.

Her children had learned the harder habit of waiting silently to see what the world would take next.

Samuel, the eldest, stood at her right shoulder as if he were already a grown man with a rifle across his lap and a ranch to guard.

He was only a boy, but grief had put iron in his spine.

Rebecca held baby Lily beneath the shelter of her shawl, turning her own body against the wind so the child’s face would not catch the worst of it.

The younger ones clustered between them, all red noses and narrow shoulders and patched sleeves pulled down over stiff fingers.

Martha looked at them and felt the terrible weight of counting.

Nine mouths.

Nine beds that needed blankets.

Nine sets of feet that needed boots before the snow deepened.

Nine hearts watching to see whether their mother’s last gamble would save them or shame them.

She was thirty-eight years old, twice widowed, and four hundred miles from the place where she had finally admitted there was nothing left to stretch.

Not flour.

Not credit.

Not kindness.

The journey had been made in stages of bitter coffee, cold bread, and small sacrifices no one on that platform would ever see.

She had mended hems by weak lamplight.

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