Scarred Cowboy Made Her Brothers Answer For Selling Her Life-Quieen - Chainityai

Scarred Cowboy Made Her Brothers Answer For Selling Her Life-Quieen

The first thing Norah O’Connell noticed after the gunshot was not the smoke.

It was silence.

The old ranch house had been full of shouting a breath earlier, Joseph ordering, Edward grunting as he held her wrist, Daniel whispering that they had gone far enough while still not letting her go.

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Then the pistol cracked, the ceiling coughed dust, and every man in the room remembered that the quiet sister had hands of her own.

Norah did not aim at any of them.

She had never wanted blood on her father’s floor.

She wanted air.

She wanted the door.

She wanted one moment when the brothers who had called themselves her protectors could not reach her.

She ran before Joseph found his voice.

The front porch blurred beneath her bare feet, and the cold Wyoming night opened so wide before her that it felt like falling into the sky.

Behind her, Calvin Rudge shouted something ugly from the parlor, but she did not turn.

She crossed the yard, tore through sagebrush, and kept running until the house lamps shrank behind her.

Her feet struck frozen ruts and hidden stones.

Pain flashed up her legs, sharp enough to make the stars flicker.

The pistol dragged at her arm, heavier than fear and lighter than surrender.

One bullet was gone.

Five remained.

Norah had been raised to believe a firearm was a last answer, not a first one, but Joseph had left her no gentle language.

At the creek, she nearly fell.

The water bit her ankles and soaked the hem of her dress, and for one terrible second she imagined her brothers hearing the splash and laughing because even the land was against her.

Then came hoofbeats.

She hid behind a boulder, lifted the pistol in both hands, and tried to make her arms stop shaking.

The rider slowed before the creek.

Moonlight silvered the palomino beneath him and cut a pale line down the scar on his cheek.

“I mean no harm,” he called.

Norah almost laughed, because men who meant harm often used soft voices at first.

“Then stay where you are,” she said.

The rider did.

He swung down but left both hands visible, palms open, hat brim low against the wind.

“I heard a shot,” he said. “Trouble has a sound. That was trouble.”

“My brothers are behind me.”

“Then we should not be talking long.”

His name was Mason O’Brien, and he did not ask her to explain while terror was still catching up to her breath.

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