The Drifter Accused of Massacre Had One Night to Save the Camp-Quieen - Chainityai

The Drifter Accused of Massacre Had One Night to Save the Camp-Quieen

The canyon was already freezing when Cole Thornton stopped at the rim.

Wind moved over Red Hollow Valley in long, thin breaths, scraping loose snow from the rocks and carrying it sideways through the brush.

Below him, tucked where the walls narrowed and the winter shadows gathered early, the hidden Apache camp burned with low orange fires.

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He could smell pine smoke from where he sat his horse.

He could smell the blood of the deer tied behind his saddle too, clean and cold in the evening air.

Cole had been alone long enough to know when a place was watching him.

This place was.

Every stone seemed to hold its breath.

Every dark gap between the cedar and brush felt like an eye.

He had not come to ask for friendship.

Friendship was too soft a word for that winter, and trust was too expensive.

He had come because the deer was more meat than one man could keep fresh, and because he had seen children near that canyon three mornings earlier, moving quietly enough to tell him the camp was hungry.

So he rode down.

Slowly.

No sudden turn of his shoulder.

No reaching for the rifle wrapped in oiled cloth along his saddle.

No foolish smile.

When his horse stepped onto the packed ground near the first fire, the camp went still.

A woman pulled two children behind her blanket.

An older man sitting near the flames lifted his chin but did not rise.

A young warrior stepped from behind a brush screen with his bow held low, not aimed yet, but close enough to become a warning.

Cole dismounted with both hands showing.

The horse snorted steam into the cold.

He untied the deer from behind the saddle and lowered it into the snow.

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