Widowed Rancher Asked For A Wife, And The Mercantile Girl Said Yes-rosocute

Widowed Rancher Needed A Wife, The Plain Girl At The Mercantile Said I Will Go With You – YouTube

Mason Trenton rode into town with red dust on his boots and failure sitting heavy between his shoulders.

The summer heat had baked the road hard, and by the time he reached the mercantile, his horse was lathered, his shirt stuck to his back, and his mouth tasted of grit.

Image

He had told himself he was coming for salt, flour, coffee, and nails.

That was only half the truth.

The other half had kept him awake for two nights, staring at the rafters of a house that no longer knew how to be a home.

Eighteen months earlier, fever had taken Margaret.

Since then, the ranch had survived in the same way a wounded animal survived, stubbornly, painfully, and not because anyone knew what to do next.

There were cattle to mend fences around, a barn roof sagging on one side, laundry no man could ever seem to finish, dishes that multiplied in the basin, and three children who needed more than bacon, beans, and a father too tired to speak gently every evening.

Daniel was nine, and he had begun carrying himself with a stiff little seriousness that broke Mason’s heart.

Sarah was seven, and her silence had become a room nobody knew how to enter.

Emma was four, still small enough to ask for her mother every morning and expect the world to repair itself by supper.

Mason could handle cattle.

He could handle blizzards, broken wagons, sick horses, and a long ride in hostile weather.

He could not be mother and father, rancher and cook, bookkeeper and nurse, comfort and discipline, all in the same day, every day, without something giving way.

The bell above the mercantile door rang when he stepped inside.

The sound was ordinary, but it caught in his chest.

The place smelled of coffee beans, saddle leather, soap, molasses, and flour dust.

Margaret had loved that smell.

She used to stand beside him with a list in her hand, laughing under her breath about the price of sugar or the neighbor who had pretended not to gossip while doing nothing else.

For one dangerous second, Mason could almost feel her hand tucked into his elbow.

Then the memory passed, and he was alone in a store full of shelves.

Behind the counter stood Catherine Edwards.

He knew her name the way everyone in town knew it, because she had worked there for years, always polite, always busy, always in the same faded manner of dress that made folks forget she was still young.

Read More

Leave a Reply

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