The French Tutor Who Saved A Ranch From A Brother's Cruel Lie-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The French Tutor Who Saved A Ranch From A Brother’s Cruel Lie-nhu9999

When Harold Mercer threw my trunk off the porch, he did it with the confidence of a man who believed every person watching already belonged to him.

The trunk hit the bottom step first, bounced once, and landed sideways in the dirt.

My gray dress slid out like a flag of surrender.

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My brush followed.

Then came the small brown dictionary I had carried from Lyon, its spine repaired twice with paste and paper, now face down in Colorado dust.

Eli cried out and ran for it.

Harold caught him by the collar.

“Don’t touch her rubbish,” he said.

Thomas did not move, but his face went very pale.

Thomas was nine and had already learned the terrible skill of standing still when adults became dangerous.

Eli was seven and had not learned it yet.

For that, I was grateful.

A child who still reaches for what he loves has not been fully trained by fear.

The sheriff stood near the porch rail with his hat in both hands.

Mrs. Bell, the housekeeper, stood in the kitchen doorway.

Two hired men had stopped near the water trough and were pretending not to watch, which meant they were watching every breath.

Ezra Whitcomb was not there.

Harold had made sure of it.

He had sent word that the north pasture fence was down, and Ezra, being the kind of man who mended what was broken before asking who broke it, had ridden out before noon.

Harold waited until the dust of his horse was gone.

Then he came to take the house.

He wore a black coat too fine for ranch work and gloves too clean for grief.

He carried a packet of papers under his arm and a smile that had no warmth in it.

He was Margaret’s brother.

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