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Mail-Order Bride Rejected For Being “Too Shy,” Until a Rugged Settler Showed Her True Worth

The whole town watched Clayton Vale reject his bride before she had even stepped fully off the stagecoach.

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Abigail Mercer stood in the dust with one gloved hand gripping a little brown valise, her other hand pressed flat against the front of her faded traveling dress as if she could hold herself together by force. The Wyoming wind pulled loose strands of dark hair from beneath her bonnet. Her face was pale from three days of travel, and her eyes—large, gray, and tired—moved from the row of strangers gathered outside the stage station to the man who was supposed to become her husband.

Clayton Vale looked nothing like the photograph he had sent.

In the photograph, he had seemed broad-shouldered, pleasant, maybe a little serious. In person, he was narrow-eyed and polished in the way of a man who liked mirrors too much. His black coat was brushed clean despite the dust. A gold watch chain crossed his vest. His boots had not seen mud in weeks.

He stared at Abigail as though the driver had delivered a damaged parcel.

“This is her?” he said.

The stage driver shifted uncomfortably. “Name on the ticket says Miss Abigail Mercer.”

A few men near the hitching post snickered.

Abigail swallowed. She had imagined this moment a hundred times on the road west. She had imagined stepping down, seeing recognition in Clayton’s face, maybe even kindness. She had imagined him taking her valise, saying, “You must be tired, Miss Mercer. Welcome to Sweetwater Crossing.”

Instead, his mouth twisted.

“She looks like a frightened church mouse.”

Heat crawled up Abigail’s neck.

The women on the boardwalk whispered behind fans and gloved hands. A boy laughed until his mother pinched his ear.

Clayton walked closer, slowly, taking her in from bonnet to boots. “I asked the agency for a capable woman. Someone lively. Someone strong enough to help run a mercantile and speak to customers. You told me in your letters you were educated.”

“I am,” Abigail said softly.

Clayton cupped one hand behind his ear. “What was that?”

More laughter.

Abigail tried again. “I am educated, Mr. Vale.”

Her voice came out thin. Too thin. She hated herself for it.

Clayton looked back at the crowd, wearing embarrassment like a public injury. “You hear that? She whispers like a sick kitten.”

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