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Struggling Cowboy Paid Two Dollar for the Girl No One Wanted, Found the Hope He Needed

Then you must call me Penelope. She paused, looking around the cabin with a practical eye. Is there water nearby? Well, out back in the creeks about 50 yards down the slope. Good fishing there, too, when there’s time. I’ll prepare supper, she said, moving toward the small pantry. You must be hungry after the journey.

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Porter watched her begin to examine his supplies with efficient movements. There was something about her that didn’t fit the image of a desperate male order bride. Her speech was educated, her manner composed despite her circumstances. And those eyes they held secrets and sorrows that made him wonder what had driven her to such a desperate measure, as offering herself as a bride to unknown men in the untamed west.

As the sun set over the mountains, casting long shadows across the small ranch, Porter found himself with more questions than answers about Penelopey Foster. But one thing was certain. For $2, he’d gotten far more than he’d bargained for. The first week of their arrangement passed in a careful dance of boundaries and adjustments.

Penelope rose before dawn each morning, prepared a simple but hearty breakfast, and had Porter’s lunch packed before he headed out to work with the cattle. She spent her days scrubbing the cabin to a shine it hadn’t seen since it was built, mending clothes that Porter had thrown in a corner to deal with someday, and studying his small collection of books on animal husbandry and ranching.

Porter returned each evening to find a hot meal waiting in a transformed living space. The cabin slowly took on a more hospitable feel. Wild flowers in a tin can on the table, a quilt she’d unpacked from her spread over the back of his chair, the floors swept clean of the everpresent dust. On the eighth day, as Porter was saddling his horse, Penelope approached wearing a pair of men’s trousers she’d altered and one of his old shirts with the sleeves rolled up.

“I’d like to come with you today,” she said without preamble. “To learn the operation,” Porter paused, bridal in hand. “Miss Penelope, ranching isn’t lady’s work,” she raised an eyebrow. “Neither is starving because a ranch fails. You said yourself you’re short-handed. I’m not afraid of hard work. He studied her for a moment, taking in the determined set of her jaw and the practical way she dressed.

Can you ride? Yes. Not western style, but I can stay on a horse. Porter let out an older mare, gentle but still strong. This is Maple. She’ll treat you fair if you do the same. By midday, Porter had to admit he was impressed. Penelope had a natural way with the animals and an eye for detail. She spotted a heer hiding in the brush, clearly sick, that Porter might have missed until it was too late.

“Bloat,” she said confidently, examining the distended stomach of the animal. “My father’s cattle would get it sometimes when they found the clover patch.” Together they managed to ease the heer’s discomfort. As they worked side by side, Porter found himself watching Penelopey’s hands, strong but feminine, moving with purpose and knowledge.

There was something comforting about not being alone with the weight of the ranch anymore. That evening, as they sat at the table eating the stew Penelope had left simmering all day, Porter finally asked the question that had been nagging at him. Why’d you come out here, Penelope? A woman with your education and skills could have found work back east.

Penelope set down her spoon, her eyes fixed on some middle distance. For a moment, Porter thought she wouldn’t answer. I taught at a girl’s school in Boston, she began quietly. I was good at it. The head mistress was pleased with my work. The students respected me, and I had a small but comfortable life.

She took a deep breath. The headmaster’s son took an interest in me. At first, I was flattered he came from wealth, had connections, seemed genuinely interested in my thoughts on education. Porter remained silent, sensing the turn in her story. He asked me to marry him and I accepted. Two weeks before the wedding, I discovered he had made the same proposal to the daughter of a shipping magnate.

When I confronted him, he laughed. Said a penalous teacher should be grateful for whatever attention a man of his standing would give her. Her hands tightened around her cup. I broke the engagement publicly. He spread rumors that I had been improper with him. The school asked for my resignation. No other school would hire me. My reputation was ruined.

Porter’s jaw clenched at the injustice of it. So, you came west?” she nodded. I saw an advertisement for male order brides. It seemed my only option as I have no family left. I used the last of my savings for the train ticket. She finally looked up at him, a flash of vulnerability crossing her features. I never expected to be auctioned off like cattle.

When no one bid but those men from the saloon, I thought she stopped, unable to finish. And then I showed up with my $2, Porter said softly. Yes. A small smile touched her lips. My night in worn leather bearing silver dollars instead of armor. Porter felt heat rise to his face. Weren’t nothing noble about it. Just seemed wrong is all. Nevertheless, I am grateful.

She hesitated. Porter, I want you to know that I intend to earn my keep here. This arrangement may not be what either of us planned, but I believe we can make it work to both our advantages. He nodded, strangely moved by her determination. I believe that, too, Penelope. That night, as Porter settled into his bedroll by the fire, he found himself thinking of the strength it must have taken for Penelope to leave everything behind and travel across the country to an unknown fate.

His admiration for her grew along with something else he wasn’t quite ready to name. As spring turned fully to summer, the rhythms of ranch life settled into a partnership neither Porter nor Penelope had anticipated. They worked the land together, mended fences side by side, and gradually the small herd began to thrive under their combined care.

Porter taught Penelope to ride western style and to use a lasso. She surprised him by being a fair shot with a rifle, a skill her father had insisted every woman should have just in case. In the evenings they would sit on the small porch porter had built onto the front of the cabin, watching the sunset paint the mountains in hues of gold and purple.

Sometimes they talked Porter telling stories of his younger days riding with cattle drives, Penelope sharing memories of her teaching days. Other times they sat in comfortable silence, the kind that only comes when two people have begun to understand each other beyond words. One evening in late July, as they sat shelling peas from Penelopey’s thriving garden, Porter noticed how the setting sun caught in her hair, which she had taken to wearing in a simple braid rather than the severe bun of their first meeting.

She looked up, catching him watching her, and something passed between them, a current of awareness that had been building slowly over the weeks. Porter cleared his throat and looked away. town’s having a social next Saturday. Thought you might like to go meet some of the other women thereabouts. Penelopey’s hands stilled.

Are you sure people might talk? Let them talk, Porter said with more force than he intended. You’re my wife on paper. Ain’t nothing improper about a man taking his wife to a social. She studied him for a moment, then nodded. I would like that. Thank you. The town social was held in the newly built schoolhouse, a point of pride for the growing community.

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