by Natalie Dean
“Please, come in,” Bernadette said quietly. Though, she knew her mother would have been proud to hear that her voice was no longer thick with tears.
Despite this, Lizzie looked at Bernadette critically, as though she was trying to see through the polite façade the other woman had so recently adopted. Finally, Lizzie heaved a sigh and nodded down to the cup and saucer in her hands.
“I brought you a cup of tea,” Lizzie said. “I thought it might do you some good after…”
“Thank you,” Bernadette said quickly, closing the door behind her sister-in-law. “Set it on the desk if you would, please.”
She moved across the room and placed the tea just above the letter Bernadette had received and next to the one she would now never send. Bernadette realized too late that both pieces of parchment held evidence of her tears.
Lizzie’s eyes glanced from these towards the now closed Bible.
“I feel I must apologize for making such a scene downstairs,” she said quickly, hoping to tear Lizzie’s attention away from the desk. Luckily, her sister in law did turn. The critical look Lizzie wore at the door had softened, and she now gave Bernadette a sympathetic smile.
“There’s no need,” Lizzie said. She grasped the chair from the desk and pulled it over towards the bed where Bernadette was now standing. As her sister-in-law lowered her large frame into the small chair, Bernadette also allowed herself to sink down onto the bed.
“I remember when I received the letter telling me about David,” Lizzie said. “I made much more of a scene than you did. In fact, I locked myself in my room for days and refused to venture out. Frank…” Lizzie’s voice stopped at the sound of her brother-in-law’s name. Her voice catching in her throat. “…Frank…minded the guests until I was ready. He was only seventeen at the time but, he wanted to take charge. Said he didn’t want to push me until I was ready to work again.”
Bernadette glanced up at Lizzie who was now looking down at the ground. Her chubby cheeks had gone redder than Bernadette had ever seen them, and she saw a hint of water forming in the older woman’s eyes.
“He…he was kind that way,” Bernadette said. “Always eager to do what he could for others.”
Now it was her turn to glance at the ground. Half ashamed that she had been afraid to show her true feelings to Lizzie. After all, if anyone could understand what Bernadette felt, it was her.
David, Frank’s brother, and Lizzie’s husband, had been killed in one of the war’s earliest battles. Before Frank had joined up, before he and Bernadette had met at all.
Perhaps that was why Bernadette had never truly thought of Lizzie as a wife. When she thought of her sister-in-law, the word ‘widow’ always followed any other title. Now, when she looked at this woman, making very little attempt to hide the sorrow in her face, Bernadette realized that Lizzie had once been as she is now.
A happy wife, devastated by the sudden loss of a husband.
“Did the letter say how he passed?” Lizzie asked once she had dabbed a bit of the water from her eyes.
Bernadette nodded.
“A bullet to the side,” she said. “The letter was sent by one of the men in his unit. Before he died, Frank asked him to write to me and give me his last words.”
Bernadette regretted revealing this last secret. Now that the words were out, Lizzie might ask to hear her brother-in-laws last sentiment. After all, she and Frank had grown close since David’s death. Frank had become something of a brother to her.
But, Bernadette knew his parting words had been meant for her and her alone.
Luckily, Lizzie did not ask to hear her brother-in-law's parting remarks. She simply nodded at the news and took another breath.
“I suppose you did not have a chance to tell anyone but me of your…condition,” Lizzie said delicately. Bernadette shook her head.
“Only you and Dr. Wells know about the baby,” she said. “I wrote to Frank last night but…”
When she thought of the second letter in her own handwriting, sitting on the desk next to the first, she could not bear to finish the sentence. Water filled her eyes once more but, this time, she had no desire to wipe the tears away.
Several fell down her cheeks as Lizzie reached across the space between them and covered Bernadette’s small hand with her larger one.
Bernadette looked up at her sister-in-law and attempted a smile of gratitude, but the still falling tears stopped it from forming. Soon, going against all her mother’s advice about how proper ladies should handle tragedy, she found herself heaving great gasping sobs on the bed as tears rolled freely down her pale cheeks.
In a moment, Lizzie stood, crossed the room, and sank down onto the bed next to her. The larger woman wrapped her arms around Bernadette and, still sobbing uncontrollably, Bernadette laid her head against Lizzie’s ample chest.
She closed her eyes as the sobs continued. Lizzie stroked her hair and hummed a soothing song, the way a mother might comfort a child who has just awoken from a nightmare.
They stayed like that a long while. When Bernadette’s sobs finally subsided, she opened her eyes and raised her head.
“I fear I must apologize again,” Bernadette said. The manners she was raised with returning out of habit.
“Once again, there is no need,” Lizzie said firmly. She removed her arms from Bernadette’s shoulders and gave her back a last comforting pat. “After all, I understand what it is to lose a husband to war.”
Bernadette nodded and wiped her eyes with the handkerchief once more.
“And, though I do understand that you cannot consider anything now,” Lizzie said hesitantly. “I did wish to ask you if you’ve thought about what you will do, with Frank gone.”
Bernadette shook her head ‘no.' As hard as she’d tried, staring at that letter, she could not force herself to picture a life outside of Frank. No matter what his last words to her said.
“I know you are not on the best terms with your parents,” Lizzie said gently. “But, considering this, perhaps…”
“No,” Bernadette said firmly. She had burned the bridge between herself and her family too thoroughly for it to ever be rebuilt.
Lizzie nodded, though Bernadette noticed that her face fell just slightly.
She could not pretend she had not imagined this the moment she read the letter.
Lizzie had been allowing Bernadette to stay in a room at the boarding house rent free. With the understanding that, when Frank returned, the couple would move out and slowly begin to pay off the debt they had accrued.
Now, when there was no promise of the money being repaid. Not to mention a child, another mouth to feed on the way, the deal they had imagined was null and void.
“You know you are welcome to remain here until you are ready to make other arrangements,” Lizzie said as gently as she could. However, Bernadette knew that as kind as her sister-in-law was, this was meant to be a temporary solution.
“With regards to those other arrangements…” Lizzie trailed off, and she bit her lip as though unsure what she should say next. Finally, as though making a firm decision, she moved back to the chair she had been sitting in when she first arrived in the room.
Bernadette now realized that, on it, sat a black and white newspaper which had been turned to one of the back pages.
“I thought these might be of some use to you,” Lizzie said. She moved back to the bed and handed Bernadette the page. Bernadette took it slowly, curious, despite herself.
When she looked down, she saw what looked to be several advertisements of a very personal nature. They bore headlines like…Man, 35, slender build, seeking to make the acquaintance of a woman, 22 or older, with an eye towards matrimony.
There were four or five of these in a row, some bearing grainy photographs, most with physical descriptions. All of them were from men living in Texas or further west.
“I thought, with the child, it will be difficult to make do without a husband,” Lizzie said as gently as she could.
“And, I do realize it is…soon…but, you might consider it when you are ready.”
Bernadette was silent for a good long while, staring at the advertisements, unable to fully take in their meaning. The idea of taking another husband was as foreign to her as the idea of Frank’s death. It seemed unfathomable, impossible.
None the less, here it was. One option out of the very few Bernadette had available to her.
Finally, realizing that Lizzie was standing, clearly expecting permission to leave the room, Bernadette looked up and cleared her throat before speaking.
“Thank you, Lizzie,” she said as kindly as she could. “I will consider it.”
Lizzie nodded before giving Bernadette another sympathetic smile and leaving the room.
When the door closed, Bernadette’s first thought was to crumple the advertisements and throw them across the room in disgust. She could not possibly consider marriage to any man while her husband was still warm in his grave.
But, when she took another deep breath, she realized just how foolish and sentimental that thinking was.
Those feelings might have been well and good were she not carrying her husband’s child. Lizzie was right. It would be impossible for Bernadette to raise a child on her own. With no family, no husband and very few skills that would lend themselves to a trade.
The longer she considered it, the more she realized that these advertisements were not just one option of a few. They were, perhaps, the only option she had available to her.
Carefully, she stood from the bed and, taking the newspaper page with her, moved back to the desk. She moved her two letters aside to make room for the new, thin parchment. As she did, she glanced back at the letter she had received that morning.
Looking down, she found her husband’s last words to her.
“Live on, my darling. For me. Pray to God. He will always help you.”
Frank expected her to live on. To, perhaps, realize their dream of a farm and a family. These advertisements presented one way in which to do that.
Pray to God.
Bernadette had never been as faithful in her Christianity as her husband had. She attended church with Frank. But, other than that, she was loath to admit that she gave God little thought.
But, now, she realized that Frank was right. God seemed one of the few friends she had left in the world.
So, closing her eyes, she prayed.
“God,” she said quietly. “Please help me to do what Frank asked of me. Help me to live on.”
She waited, with her eyes closed for a long while. It was as though she was hoping for a sign. Some lightning bolt or at least a warm feeling. Something to tell her that her prayer had been heard.
No such sign came.
But, she had to admit that, after sitting, still and silent with her eyes closed, she felt a small sense of peace. When she opened her eyes again, she felt a good deal calmer than she had one moment before.
So, with another deep breath to quiet her still grief-stricken heart, she began to read through the list of men searching for a wife.
Chapter 2
‘Nearly there,’ Bernadette thought as she was bumped and tossed about in the carriage on her way towards Fort Johnson in Wyoming Territory. ‘Not long now.’
As they hit another bump, she gasped and held her stomach. She had felt a sharp kick from the child within as though in protest at the rough ride.
“Are you sure you are well enough to continue Mrs. Dixon?” Doctor Parson, an elderly man with balding gray hair and small spectacles, asked squinting at her in concern. “I can ask the driver to stop for a bit if you need to rest.”
Bernadette shook her head fiercely and attempted to give him a smile.
“Thank you for your concern, Doctor,” she said. “But, it’s not long now. I am sure I will be able to ride the rest of the way.”
The doctor looked at Bernadette through narrowed eyes as though trying to see through her. Instinctively, she put her hands over her dress as though folding them in her lap, determined to hide the bump which was growing there.
His wife, a tall, stately woman seated beside her husband now turned to Bernadette as well. She attempted to give the woman a smile even as her face burned with shame.
She was determined that no one should know of her condition.
Though she was certain the doctor and his wife would be sympathetic to her plight; she was a war widow, after all, not a wayward schoolgirl; she did not feel right about revealing her state to others. She supposed she had spent so long hiding the fact that she was with child, it would seem silly to admit to it now.
A feeling of relief filled her when the doctor sat back in his seat.
“Very well, Mrs. Dixon,” he said. “If you are certain.”
Now that she was six months along with her pregnancy, it was becoming more and more difficult to hide.
But, hide it she must. After all, it would be strange for these mere acquaintances to know of her condition before her soon to be husband discovered it.
When, after a full night’s search, she had found Mattathias’ advertisement seeking the acquaintance of a young woman, no older than thirty, with an eye towards matrimony, she knew that this was the best offer she could have hoped for.
Mr. Jacobs owned a small ranch in Wyoming territory. He described the place as remote and cold with a difficult terrain. He claimed it was nearly unbearable in winter but very lovely in the late spring and summer. Sparsely populated with a, none the less, close, loyal and hardworking community.
After years spent in the city amid stifling, swarming crowds, noise and congestion, she could not help but be drawn to a life away from all of that. Mr. Jacob’s description reminded her of the life she had imagined with her husband after the war.
She was drawn back to their dreams of a small farm in the country.
And, though she was sure that ranching in Wyoming would be very different from farming in Pennsylvania, the similarities were great enough that she was compelled to write this young man.
She told him of her husband’s death in battle and that she now found herself nearly penniless and living on the charity of her sister-in-law. Bernadette had intended to also tell him of her condition but, upon hearing this plan, Lizzie had advised against it.
“A man out West is not likely to propose to a woman carrying another man’s child,” Lizzie had told her. “Even if she came to be in that condition honorably as you have. A child is too much responsibility to take on. Best to wait until you have a promise of marriage. Even better to wait until you arrive for the wedding. That way, a man of honor would be duty-bound not to turn you away.”
Though Bernadette had felt that this was bordering on deception, she had taken her sister-in-law’s advice.
When Mattathias proposed in his very next letter to her also sending money for her travel expenses, she readily accepted and set out within the next two days.
At the time, she had been so eager to find a place for her and her child, to be settled, that she had not anticipated the struggles of traveling alone in her condition. Now, those struggles were very clearly making themselves known.
Her fingers tapped on the wooden door of the carriage, the sound of her wedding ring, now moved to her right hand, made a clinking sound as she tapped. Each clink reminded her that it was still there. The ring and her bond to Frank were still with her.
That was another thing that seemed duplicitous.
It was strange, almost unseemly, to marry another man while the memory of her husband was still so fresh in Bernadette’s mind. To marry another man even though she knew she would not, could not love him as she had loved Frank.
She had left her parents to avoid a marriage for the sake of convenience, money, and comfort. She had chosen instead to marry a man she loved.
Now, with the death of that man, she had fallen back into the view prized by the wealthy.
To her parent’s set, marriages were arrangements. More business dealings than ex
pressions of true affection.
And, she could not help but feel that was what this marriage, marriage to Mr. Mattathias Jacobs would be. A marriage for comfort, for convenience, for safety.
His letters, while perfectly nice, had not indicated a hint of sincere affection.
They had been short and to the point with description only when necessary. Nothing stirred in her chest when she thought of Mr. Jacob’s written proposal.
‘Mrs. Dixon,’ he’d written. ‘I have become convinced that you are the most suitable woman I could hope to find. If you will have me, I would be honored to become your husband.’
Bernadette had nearly laughed at that. She was certain that none of the poets of old had ever described their loves as ‘suitable.' Still, she had accepted because, in truth, she thought the same of him.
While he was not a poet or a man to make women swoon, his letters indicated that he was hard working, loyal and very…suitable.
And, she told herself, that was all she needed.
Finally, Bernadette set Frank’s Bible which she had been determinedly reading, down in her lap. As she closed the book, she looked out the window and saw the first sign of civilization she had seen in miles.
It was certainly sparse. The town they were arriving in looked to be composed of four or five relatively small buildings.
The largest they passed was a bank. Beside that was a hotel, a general store, a saloon and a small, white church complete with a steeple. As they passed the Church building, a man who looked to be in his mid-thirties with light brown hair mixed with gray stepped out of the church.
Spying the wagon, he looked straight through the window at Bernadette and gave a welcoming smile that caused his green eyes to crinkle at the sides. As the wagon continued, he lifted his hand in greeting.
Bernadette, unable to resist, smiled back at the old man and lifted her hand as well.
“This must be Laramie,” Doctor Paulson said, shifting to crane out the window as well. As he did, Bernadette saw the man from the church follow behind the wagon as though he meant to join them at their destination. “Not much to look at, is it?”