Sold at Nineteen, She Ran Into Snow With a Dead Man’s Secret-rosocute

Sold to a Rancher at Nineteen—Then the Mountain Man Cut Her Frozen Wedding Dress Open and Found the Secret Worth Killing For

Mara Voss became a wife with a pistol pressed against her heart.

It lay beneath the tight white bodice of her wedding dress, wrapped in a torn strip of lace so the metal would not bite her skin too sharply.

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She had hidden it there with shaking hands because she had no brother old enough to protect her, no father brave enough to undo what he had done, and no law that seemed to care what a poor girl wanted once a rich man had put money on the table.

Downstairs, Cyrus Whitlock was drinking whiskey with the men who worked his ranch.

Their boots thudded against the planks.

Cards slapped wood.

Laughter rose through the floorboards, rough and satisfied, as if a good horse had been bought and no one expected it to kick.

Mara stood in the upstairs bedroom and stared at the frost feathering the window glass.

She was nineteen.

She was eight weeks pregnant.

She was married to a man who had paid five hundred dollars for her and had already begun speaking of her in the same tone he used for cattle, fences, and winter feed.

The baby beneath her palm was not his.

That was the secret that could turn a bargain into a killing.

Mara pressed her fingers to her stomach and felt no movement, of course, not yet, but she imagined the child listening anyway.

“Hold on,” she whispered. “Mama’s thinking.”

The room smelled of lamp smoke, cedar boards, and the faint powdery starch of the dress she had never wanted.

Its whiteness seemed cruel to her.

White for a chapel.

White for a bride.

White for a lie everyone had agreed to tell at once.

The child belonged to Tobin Ward.

Tobin had been a Kansas boy with brown eyes and a crooked grin that always came a little slower on the left side of his mouth.

He had loved Mara before hunger made every conversation in her father’s house sound like a reckoning.

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