Abandoned Bride At A Wyoming Depot Meets The Cowboy Sent To Break Her-rosocute

The September wind came over the tracks carrying coal smoke, manure, and the sharp bite of coming cold.

Clara Whitmore stood on the Wyoming depot platform with her carpetbag cutting into her palm and her best boots rubbing blood into both heels.

She had been there six hours.

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The train that brought her from the East had emptied, sighed, and moved on, leaving her behind with one cracked book of poetry, three dresses, her mother’s cameo, fourteen dollars sewn into her lining, and six months of letters from Thomas Carpenter.

Thomas had promised to meet her.

He had promised the ranch was forty miles north in a valley with good water and shelter from the worst wind.

He had promised there was a cabin that needed a woman’s touch, a small cattle herd growing stronger, and a lonely man who wanted a wife more than anything.

Clara had believed him because belief was all she had left.

Philadelphia had given her smoke, factory bells, cramped rented rooms, stale bread, and the slow certainty that her life would get smaller every year.

When Thomas’s advertisement appeared in the matrimonial paper, she had not thought herself romantic or foolish.

She thought herself practical.

Men in the West needed wives.

Women without money needed homes.

It was not poetry.

It was survival with a ring around it.

Then the months of letters changed something.

Thomas wrote of mountains and spring grass and evenings by the fire.

He wrote that an educated woman could make something fine out of his place.

He wrote often enough, and plainly enough, that Clara began to imagine being seen again.

She did not expect a fairy tale.

She expected a door to open.

But no door opened at the depot.

Two mining wives who had traveled on the same train were taken into laughing arms before Clara even got her bag from the porter.

Ranch hands loaded freight.

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