The Scarred Hermit Found Three Babies in the Snow and a Deadly Secret-Quieen - Chainityai

The Scarred Hermit Found Three Babies in the Snow and a Deadly Secret-Quieen

By the time Gideon Cross found the widow in the ravine, her husband was already frozen facedown ten yards away with a bullet hole in his back.

The three babies inside her coat had stopped crying one by one.

That was how death worked in the Ironjaw Mountains.

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It did not always arrive with a shout.

Sometimes it came quietly, under six feet of snow, while the wind screamed so loudly that even God seemed too far away to hear a mother begging for mercy.

The winter of 1878 had struck Idaho Territory like a hammer.

The valleys disappeared first.

Then the wagon trails.

Then the cabins along the lower creeks, swallowed so completely by white drifts that a man could walk over a neighbor’s roof and never know it.

Down in Silver Creek, people spoke of the storm with fear.

Up on Howling Ridge, Gideon Cross lived inside it.

The people in town called him a beast.

A savage.

A half-mad hermit who came down twice a year with furs on his back and silence in his mouth.

Children were warned not to stare at him.

Women stepped behind counters when he entered the mercantile.

Men who had never survived anything worse than a bad card game lowered their voices and said the scars on his face proved there was something wrong in his soul.

The scars were terrible.

Gideon knew that.

A grizzly had opened the left side of his face five winters earlier, tearing from temple to jaw and down his neck before Gideon killed it with a skinning knife and one good hand.

The right side of his face still held the remains of a handsome man, with a strong brow, a square jaw, and eyes blue enough to shame a winter sky.

The left side looked like the mountain had chewed him up and spat him back.

People saw the scars and decided they knew the man.

Gideon had stopped correcting them.

It was easier to live above the tree line with his traps, his mules, his rifle, and his old milk goat Bessie than to spend one more day watching decent folk recoil from a face he had not chosen.

Still, he knew Silver Creek better than Silver Creek knew him.

He knew which men smiled in church and cheated widows on flour.

He knew which ranch hands drank away their wages before their children had boots.

He knew which bankers and cattle buyers could shake a man’s hand at noon and take his land by supper.

He also knew one name everyone in the territory spoke carefully.

Silas Boone.

Boone owned the largest freight line between the valleys and the mining camps.

He owned store ledgers, sawmill notes, wagon credit, winter feed debt, and enough loyalty purchased through fear to make honest men forget what honesty sounded like.

Gideon had never trusted him.

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