Forced To Wed A Mountain Man, She Never Expected His Mercy-rosocute

The wind came down from the Rocky Mountains with teeth in it.

After the war, folks in Harrow’s Creek had learned to measure life by what could be endured: hunger, cold, debt, silence, and the kind of talk that followed a person from one end of town to the other.

Clara Whitmore had endured all of it.

Image

At twenty-six, she had already learned that people could make a cage out of a name.

They called her “Big Clara.”

They said it with laughs at the general store, with whispers outside doorways, with looks that traveled over her body and stopped there, as if nothing else about her had ever existed.

They did not speak of her careful hands.

They did not speak of the way she could take a torn shirt and make it hold another winter.

They did not speak of how she remembered every debt her father tried to forget, or how she could stretch flour, beans, and coffee into meals when the shelves looked nearly bare.

They saw only what amused them.

Clara let them look.

There was dignity in not giving cruel people the satisfaction of seeing where they had struck.

But dignity did not pay a debt.

Her father’s troubles had been growing for years, though he dressed them in excuses until there was no cloth left to cover the truth.

When the loans finally closed around him, he did not ask Clara for forgiveness.

He did not ask what she wanted.

He handed her future across a table like a settlement.

The man who took it was Elijah Boone.

He was thirty-four, a mountain man with a soldier’s scars and a face that gave little away.

In town, people lowered their voices when they spoke of him, though Clara noticed they still found plenty to say.

He was too quiet.

He was too hard.

He had come back from war with pieces of himself missing, even if no one could name which ones.

And he needed a wife.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *