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A Rich Cowboy Watched a Widow Beaten Daily — Until He Made Her His Bride

The smart move was obviously to say no. You didn’t marry strange men. You didn’t agree to live in isolation with someone you didn’t know. You didn’t trust that kind of offer, especially from a man powerful enough that the whole town stepped aside when he walked through. But rational thinking had gotten her here, sleeping in a moldy cellar, waiting for the next time someone decided to use her as a punching bag.

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What did she actually know about Hale? He was rich, obviously, influential. People feared him or respected him or both. He’d intervened when he didn’t have to. He’d offered help without asking for anything immediate in return. Or maybe that was the trap. Maybe he was just more sophisticated about it than Porter, knew how to play the long game.

Get her isolated on his ranch where nobody could hear her scream, then show his true colors. But if he wanted that, there were easier targets. Women without the kind of notoriety Elena had. Women who wouldn’t be missed. The thought made Elena’s stomach turn. Is that what she’d become? Someone who wouldn’t be missed? Someone so beaten down that disappearing seemed like a lateral move instead of a tragedy? She rolled over staring at the moldy wall.

Thought about her husband, about the life they’d built that the flood had washed away. She’d loved him. He’d been kind. He died anyway, and kindness  hadn’t saved him, hadn’t saved her, hadn’t done a damn thing except leave her alone in a world that ate people like her for breakfast. Maybe that was the problem.

Maybe she’d been trying to survive on kindness when what she really needed was something harder, something sharp enough to cut back. Or maybe she was just exhausted and desperate and looking for reasons to justify a terrible decision. The next day crawled past. Elena worked in a daze, scrubbing floors and hauling water while her mind spun in circles.

Mrs. Garrett watched her with narrow eyes, like she could sense something was coming. “You thinking about leaving?” the older woman finally asked around noon. Elena was elbow-deep in wash water. She didn’t look up. “Why would you think that?” “Because Dorian Hale talked to you yesterday, and now you’ve got that look.

The one people get when they’re thinking about doing something stupid. Would you care if I left?” Mrs. Garrett snorted. “Not particularly. You’ve been nothing but trouble since you showed up. But I’ll give you one piece of advice anyway, free of charge. Elena waited. Dorian Hale is a hard man, killed seven men that I know of, probably more he didn’t talk about.

His first wife died under circumstances nobody likes to discuss. His ranch is 3 hours from anything civilized, and the men who work for him are loyal because they’re paid well and they’re scared of him. Mrs. Garrett paused. If you’re thinking about taking up with him, you better be sure you know what you’re signing up for.

And if I stay here, then you’ll probably be dead in a year. Porter’s not the only one who’d like to see you gone permanent. The older woman shrugged. Your choice, quick death or slow one. It wasn’t much of a recommendation for either option. As the sun started to sink toward the horizon, Elena made her decision.

Not because it was smart, not because she was sure, but because staying in Black Hollow guaranteed more of the same, and she’d reached the point where even uncertainty looked better than certain suffering. She found Hale at the hotel where the visiting ranchers were staying in a private room where he was conducting business.

The man at the door tried to stop her, but Hale looked up and waved him aside. “Mrs. Voss,” he said, standing, “I wasn’t sure you’d come.” “I have questions.” “Fair enough. Ask them.” Elena stepped inside, very aware of the door closing behind her, of being alone with him for the first time. Up close, she could see the details she’d missed before.

The scar along his jawline, the gray threading through his dark hair, the way his eyes looked simultaneously weary and watchful. “Why me?” she asked. “You could marry anyone. Someone from a good family, someone without my reputation.” “I could,” Hale agreed. “But good families come with expectations, politics, social obligations. I don’t want any of that.

I want someone practical, someone who understands that life is hard and doesn’t need to be protected from reality. What happened to your first wife? His expression didn’t change, but something shifted behind his eyes. Childbirth. The baby didn’t make it either. We were too far from a doctor, and by the time I realized how bad it was he stopped.

I loved her. I wasn’t a good husband, but I loved her. Her death is my fault for bringing her out there. The honesty of it caught Elena off guard. She’d expected excuses or deflection, not this raw admission. And you want to do it again? Bring another woman out there? No. I want to be honest about what that life is.

I want someone who chooses it with eyes open instead of romantic notions about ranch life. He met her gaze. You’ve been ground down by this town. I’ve been ground down by guilt. Maybe we’re both broken enough to be practical with each other. It wasn’t a love story. It wasn’t even particularly hopeful, but it was honest.

And honesty was something Elena had precious little of lately. If I say yes, she said slowly, and it turns out you’re lying, that you want something I’m not willing to give, then you kill me. Hale said simply. I’ll teach you how to shoot, teach you the land. If I cross a line, put a bullet in me. There’s a sheriff three counties over.

You ride there, tell him I attacked you, he’ll believe it. Half the territory would throw a party. Elena stared at him. You’re serious. Completely. I’m not a good man, Mrs. Voss, but I keep my word. If I say I won’t touch you, I won’t. And if I’m lying, he shrugged, then you do what you have to do to survive.

That’s all any of us can do. It was the most pragmatic, least romantic proposal imaginable, and somehow that made it more believable than any flowery promise would have been. All right, Elena said, “I’ll do it.” Hale nodded once, like they’d just concluded a business deal, which in a way they had.

“We’ll marry tomorrow morning before I leave. I’ll have papers drawn up tonight. You bring whatever you want to keep from the boarding house.” “I don’t have much.” “Then it won’t take long to pack.” And just like that, it was decided. Elena Voss, the cursed widow of Black Hollow, was going to marry the most feared rancher in the territory and disappear into the canyon country.

She should have been terrified. Instead, for the first time in months, she felt something almost like relief. But they were married at dawn by a traveling preacher who asked no questions and cared even less. The ceremony took 10 minutes. Elena wore the same dress she’d been wearing for weeks, torn and stained despite her best efforts.

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