When A Cowboy Shielded A Runaway Bride, Medicine Bow Chose Sides-rosocute

The glass broke behind Zelda Atwood somewhere in the canyon, but she did not turn to see what had fallen.

Turning back was how a person lost ground.

Turning back was how Marcus Dennison found you.

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She kept moving over stone and sage, one hand pressed to her ribs, the other gripping the torn skirt of the wedding dress she had once thought would mark the start of a new life.

By the third day, the dress had become a ragged flag of everything she had survived.

Dust had stiffened the hem.

Her shoulders burned where the Wyoming sun had found her through thin cotton.

Her feet were wrapped in strips she had torn from a petticoat, and every step pressed grit deeper into the cloth.

The marks around her wrists hurt less than the memory of how they got there.

Marcus had kept her at the mining camp for eight months, calling it marriage whenever anyone asked and captivity whenever the door shut.

He had gone away for a week to sell gold dust, and Zelda had known it might be the only chance God was going to give her.

She left at night with nothing.

No money.

No food.

No valise.

Not even the courage to take bread from the shelf, because terror had taught her to fear the sound of missing things.

For three days she walked.

When the roofs of Medicine Bow finally showed through the heat, she thought she had started seeing visions.

The town sat along the railroad tracks in a huddle of weathered boards, smoke, dust, horses, and noise.

Wagon wheels creaked.

A train whistle cried somewhere beyond the depot.

A sign over the general store swung in the wind.

Zelda made it as far as the hitching rail before her knees weakened.

Her fingers caught the rough post, but her body was past bargaining.

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