A False Ranch Job Turned A Chicago Woman Into Frontier Bait-rosocute

Evelyn Hart had never thought ruin would come at dawn, but that was when the men arrived.

They crossed the threshold of her family’s Chicago townhouse with legal papers, stiff hats, and expressions that said grief was not their concern.

By noon, her mother’s china was gone, her father’s books were gone, and the upright piano that had held every polite dream of her childhood had been carried out by strangers who did not even look ashamed.

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Her father’s debts had outlived him by six months.

Her mother had not survived the heartbreak.

That left Evelyn with seventeen dollars, one carpet bag, and a letter that had waited too long in the bottom of a drawer.

The letter offered respectable work in Wyoming Territory at Black Hollow Ranch, where a housekeeper and bookkeeper were supposedly needed.

It promised wages, room, board, and a place far enough from Chicago that no one would know the Hart name had ended in debt.

Evelyn had written for confirmation and received none.

Still, hunger was a more convincing answer than silence.

She packed three dresses, undergarments, her mother’s silver hairbrush, and a small framed photograph of her parents on their wedding day.

Everything else had been taken.

The westbound train smelled of coal smoke, damp wool, old food, and people who were trying to carry disappointment without dropping it in public.

Evelyn sat with her carpet bag between her boots and watched the city fall behind her.

For three days, the country outside the window widened until it became something that made her feel small.

Farmland thinned into prairie.

Prairie hardened into open distances where a person could vanish without leaving much proof.

At Cheyenne, she changed to a stagecoach heading north.

The driver was a leathery man who talked too much until she gave him her destination.

Black Hollow Ranch made him laugh.

He told her Coulter Hayes did not hire women, and certainly not city women with polished shoes and soft hands.

Evelyn said she had a letter.

He shrugged in a way that made the paper in her pocket feel suddenly fragile.

The coach climbed into colder country by midday, passing through pines and broken rock.

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