A Cowboy Asked For A Cook, But The Widow Carried A Secret Book-Teptep

The train came into Harland Creek on a cold Tuesday in October, dragging a ribbon of steam behind it and leaving the platform shining with damp.

Clara Merritt stepped down slowly, one hand on the rail, one hand gripping the handle of her carpet bag.

She had one folded letter in her glove and no friendly face waiting at the station.

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That did not surprise her.

The letter had not promised welcome.

It had promised work.

Gideon Holt stood near the wagon with his hat low enough to hide his eyes from the worst of the wind.

His arms were crossed, his coat was dark with rain at the shoulders, and he looked at Clara as if the bureau had sent the wrong parcel.

She knew him at once from the description.

Widower.

Rancher.

Father of seven.

A man who had lost his wife to fever and had decided, with the bluntness of a man past tenderness, that what his house needed next was usefulness.

His letter had said he needed a wife who could cook for seven children.

It had said he needed someone who could keep house.

It had said the children required steadiness.

It had said nothing about love.

Clara had read it three times before answering.

She had not mistaken it for romance.

She had been a widow long enough to understand that some offers were not soft, only necessary.

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