The Mail-Order Bride Arrived in Tears — The Cowboy Took One Look at Her and Said, “You Don’t Have to Pretend With Me”
She had crossed an entire country to marry a man she had never met. But the moment he saw her standing on that platform in tears, Carrick knew this would not be the hopeful beginning either of them had imagined.
By the time the stagecoach finally rumbled into Willow Creek, the day itself felt too sharp, too heavy to bear with ease.
The sun was sinking over the Wyoming grasslands, gilding the edges of the clouds and turning every swirl of dust into something almost beautiful from afar.

On the weathered wooden platform outside the station, Carrick Montgomery stood waiting. One hand hovered near his pocket watch, the other rested on his belt, and he did his best not to look like a man facing the most uncertain moment of his life.
He had weathered blizzards, repaired broken fences, buried the losses of calving season, and endured the kind of loneliness that could make a man forget how to speak without sounding stiff or foolish.
Yet none of it had unsettled him quite like this.
Standing there in a freshly laundered shirt, his beard trimmed more neatly than usual, he waited for the woman who had agreed—through ink, paper, and fragile hope—to become his wife.
Before the coach had fully stopped, the driver called out and climbed down, glancing in Carrick’s direction.
“Your bride’s inside,” he said.
Then, after a pause that troubled Carrick more than the words themselves, he added, “Hasn’t said much the whole journey.”

The coach door creaked open.
A gloved hand appeared first.
Then the hem of a dusty blue dress.
Then the woman herself stepped down, moving carefully, almost hesitantly, and stood utterly still for one strange, suspended second. Something in Carrick’s chest tightened.
When she finally lifted her face, every word of welcome he had rehearsed on the ride into town vanished from his mind.
Her cheeks were wet with tears.
Not delicate tears, not the kind fit for a sentimental romance.
She had been crying hard—and for a long while.
Her blue eyes were swollen and rimmed red. Her mouth was tense, as though it had taken every ounce of strength she possessed to keep it closed. She clutched a small valise against her chest as if it were the only thing in the world still holding her together.

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Carrick had expected uncertainty. He had expected awkwardness, maybe fear.
He had not expected heartbreak to step down from the coach in a blue traveling dress.
“Miss Foster,” he said, removing his hat.
She gave a quick nod, so fleeting it looked almost ashamed.
“I’m Carrick Montgomery.”
He offered his hand.
For a brief moment, he thought she might not take it.
Then, with visible reluctance, she placed her gloved fingers in his, like someone fulfilling an obligation rather than greeting the man she had promised to marry.
Her hand was light.
And cold, despite the warmth of the day.
Carrick gently led her toward the quieter end of the platform, where an old bench sat half-hidden in shadow behind a stack of freight crates.
When she lowered herself onto it, she moved with such care that it seemed her whole body had been held tense for so long it no longer remembered how to rest.
He reached into his pocket and offered her a clean handkerchief.
“You don’t have to pretend with me,” he said softly.
“Whatever troubles you, there’s no need to force a smile for my sake.”
Her eyes widened a little.
That reaction, more than the tears, told him she had expected something very different.
Judgment, perhaps.
Impatience.
Or that familiar kind of male disappointment reserved for women who failed to play their part properly.
With trembling fingers, she accepted the handkerchief.
“You’re very kind, sir,” she whispered.
Then she drew in a shaky breath and turned her gaze toward the freight office.
“I fear I may have made a terrible mistake.”
There it was.
The sentence every man in a mail-order arrangement half feared and half expected to hear.
Carrick kept his voice calm.
“Is it me?”
She turned to him immediately, and the surprise in her face was so genuine it loosened something inside him.
“No.”
The answer came at once.
Then more quietly, “No, Mr. Montgomery. It isn’t you.”
She glanced over her shoulder toward the driver unloading trunks and the stationmaster pretending not to listen.
“May we speak somewhere private?”
Carrick nodded.
He loaded her trunk into the wagon and helped her up to the seat beside him. Once they had left town behind and the road opened into the wide, rolling prairie, Amelia finally found her voice.
“I lied to you.”
Carrick kept his gaze on the road ahead.
“About what, exactly?”
“In my letters, I was not entirely truthful about my circumstances.”
The wagon struck a rut, jolting hard enough to make her sway. Instinctively, he reached out and steadied her by the arm, then withdrew his hand the moment she regained her balance.
“I’m listening,” he said.
She twisted the handkerchief tightly in her lap until it looked nearly wrung through.
“I told you I was a schoolteacher in Boston.”
“That part is true.”
She swallowed.
“But I did not leave my position by choice.”
A pause.
Then, with visible effort, she continued.
“The headmaster’s son took an interest in me. I refused him.”
Her voice thinned, but she pressed on.
“He told his father I had behaved improperly toward him.”
“They believed him.”
“My post was ended almost at once.”

She let out a brittle laugh, one utterly empty of warmth.
“No respectable school in Boston would employ me after that. A ruined woman, after all, is not considered fit company for children.”
Then she looked at him fully, her eyes still swollen from weeping, and said the one thing she had likely feared from the moment she answered his advertisement.
“If you wish to end the arrangement,” she said, barely above a whisper, “I will understand.”