Rejected At The Depot, She Sang Down A Runaway Team Of Horses-rosocute

The train left Clara Voss standing on the Black Hollow platform with coal smoke in her mouth and nothing in her hand but a suitcase that looked as tired as she felt.

She had expected Thomas Whitmore to be waiting there with a wagon, a warm coat, and the first careful words of a promised marriage.

Instead, she found three women in fine gloves watching her like she was a crate unloaded by mistake.

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Her accent betrayed her before her face did.

When she said she was Clara Voss and had come to marry Mr. Whitmore, the blonde woman smiled as if the whole depot had been built for that exact cruelty.

Black Hollow was not kind enough to pretend.

Men came out of the station house laughing, and Thomas Whitmore walked among them in an expensive coat, ruddy from drink and confident from a life that had rarely told him no.

Clara knew him from the photograph he had mailed east.

The picture had been tucked beside his letters, beside promises of land and a house and a husband waiting in the West.

She stepped forward with relief because relief was all she had left.

Thomas looked at her without recognition.

Then recognition came, and it was worse.

He laughed.

The letters had been a joke, he said, a drunken wager made months earlier with men who believed a foreign factory girl would never be foolish enough to cross an ocean and a continent for the promise of a stranger.

The platform seemed to tilt under Clara’s boots.

She tried to remind him of the marriage he had offered.

He told her he had standards.

He told her he wanted nothing to do with her broken English and cheap clothes.

He said it slowly, as if she were dull instead of devastated.

The town listened.

Some laughed openly, some looked away, and some studied her with the quiet satisfaction of people who were glad the shame had fallen on someone else.

Clara had spent nearly every penny she owned getting there.

She had no husband, no room, no friend, and no easy road back east.

The train whistle blew behind her, sharp as judgment, and when the cars groaned away into the gray horizon, they took her last simple escape with them.

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