Stagecoach Bride Falls Into Gunfire Before A Rancher Saves Her-heuh

“I’ve Never Shared a Bed,” She Whispered… The Cowboy’s Reply Changed Everything

The stagecoach did not so much arrive at Kettleman’s Crossing as surrender to it.

Its wheels groaned over the hard road, its horses snorted through a veil of dust, and Clara Whitlock sat inside with one gloved hand braced against the window frame, trying not to look as frightened as she felt.

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She had imagined the town differently.

Not grand, exactly.

She had not been foolish enough to expect polished streets or respectable drawing rooms at the end of such a journey.

But she had imagined stillness.

A place where no one knew her name unless she chose to give it.

A place where the worst part of her life could remain packed away with the few dresses in her carpetbag and the folded letter tucked beneath them.

Instead, Kettleman’s Crossing rose out of the dust like a place the wind had been trying to rub away for years.

There were wooden storefronts with sun-bleached signs, a crooked boardwalk, a saloon with one corner of its sign hanging loose, and a livery stable standing open to the heat.

The smell came first when the coach stopped.

Hay, horse sweat, dry manure, old timber, and dust so thick it seemed to settle inside her throat.

The driver gave the reins a final slap and looked down as if Clara were a parcel he had been paid to deliver and was now pleased to be rid of.

“End of the line, ma’am,” he said. “You’re getting off here whether you like it or not.”

Clara swallowed.

It was an unkind thing to say, though not the cruellest she had heard in recent months.

She had learnt that unkindness came in many costumes.

Sometimes it wore a gentleman’s coat.

Sometimes it came sealed inside a letter.

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