A Branded Saloon Girl Ran, And One Drifter Finally Stood Up-Quieen - Chainityai

A Branded Saloon Girl Ran, And One Drifter Finally Stood Up-Quieen

The girl fell against the stranger’s knees like the floor had disappeared under her.

For a moment, the Golden Scorpion Saloon went so quiet that even the lamps seemed to stop hissing.

The piano player lifted both hands from the keys and held them there, fingers curled in the air.

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The miners at the card table forgot their bets.

A glass rolled from somebody’s elbow, crossed three warped boards, and tapped against a boot without anyone bending to pick it up.

Outside, wind dragged red dust along the main street and pushed it against the saloon doors in soft, dirty bursts.

Inside, the smell of whiskey, lamp oil, sweat, leather, and fried beef hung over everybody like a low ceiling.

Michael Ward sat in the darkest corner with his back against the wall.

That was where men sat when they had learned not to trust doors.

He had come in near sundown with a tired horse and a face that made people glance once, then decide not to ask questions.

His coat was the color of road dust.

His hat brim shadowed his eyes.

His revolver sat low on his hip, worn smooth where his hand knew it too well.

He had not come to the Golden Scorpion looking to be brave.

Bravery was a word people used afterward, when they wanted pain to sound clean.

Michael had come looking for a hot meal, cheap liquor, and one night without seeing his brother’s body swinging from a mesquite tree in his dreams.

He had almost gotten it.

The waitress had been moving through the saloon all evening with a tray against one hip and a careful distance between herself and every reaching hand.

Her name was Emily.

Michael learned it because the bartender said it twice, once to rush her, once to warn her.

She was young, though not soft in the way people mean when they say young.

Her honey-colored hair had been pinned up fast, and strands had already come loose around her cheek.

Her eyes were the color of storm clouds just before they break.

She wore a cream blouse that had been washed too many times and a brown skirt hemmed by someone practical, not wealthy.

Every man in the room looked at her sooner or later.

Most looked too long.

She had the kind of beauty that made cowards bold and decent men ashamed for noticing.

Michael watched her once, then looked back down at his plate.

She did not need another man’s eyes on her.

That was before the three riders came in.

It happened at 6:18 p.m., because Michael looked at the wall clock when the saloon doors swung open and the draft pushed smoke across his table.

The first rider through the door was Tyler Cardenas.

Men from Shadow Ranch did not need to announce themselves.

Their boots did it.

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