Mocked Mail-Order Bride Arrives To Find Her Groom Buried-rosocute

When Clara Bellamy stepped down from the westbound train in Bitter Creek, Wyoming, nobody came forward to claim her.

The steam engine heaved behind her like an animal tired of running, and coal smoke crawled under the depot roof until it mixed with the prairie dust skimming over the platform boards.

She stood there in her gray traveling dress with one hand curled around the handle of her carpetbag and the other pressed close to her ribs.

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For a moment, she did what every frightened woman does when she is trying not to look frightened.

She made herself useful to her own panic.

She checked the carpetbag.

She checked the brass button sewn to her cuff.

She checked the platform, the station door, the hitching rail, the wagon yard, and the men gathering near the depot steps.

Elias Boone was not among them.

He had promised he would be.

His last letter had said so in the same plain, steady hand she had come to trust over months of reading by borrowed lamplight.

When you arrive in Bitter Creek, I’ll be waiting on the platform.

You’ll know me by the brass button on my hatband, the same kind I sent you.

Wear yours on your sleeve, if you would.

It will be our private signal.

He had not written like a man trying to sound grand.

There had been no perfumed phrases, no poetry, no soft lies about how he had dreamed of her before he knew her name.

Elias Boone had written about work.

He had written about a hard country and a colder wind than she was used to.

He had written that he was not a man of speeches, but he believed two honest people might build a tolerable life if neither of them expected ease.

That kind of letter could make a lonely woman breathe again.

Clara had read it in St. Louis until the folds weakened.

She had read it after the dressmaker told her a bodice could only be let out so far before a woman had to accept the body God had given her.

She had read it after a boardinghouse widow said Western men were not picky if a woman could cook, scrub, and keep quiet.

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