A Widow, A Drifter, And The Letter That Saved A Colorado Ranch-mdue - Chainityai

A Widow, A Drifter, And The Letter That Saved A Colorado Ranch-mdue

I had been riding north from Texas for forty-three days when I saw Catherine Morrison trying to lift a fence post alone, my boots full of holes, my horse thirsty, and no place left where I knew how to explain myself.

The post was taller than she was, slick with old rain and new blood, and she had both hands wrapped around it like stubbornness could do the work of another body.

Then Catherine slipped, caught herself, and made a sound I had heard on cattle drives when a horse went down and still tried to stand.

Image

“Ma’am,” I said, dismounting slowly, “that post will take two backs.”

She turned on me so fast I almost smiled.

Her hair had come loose from its pins, her blue dress was torn near the hem, and blood ran down her palm where the rough wood had opened the skin.

“I don’t need charity.”

“Good,” I said. “I don’t have any.”

She looked at my horse, then my hands, then the empty road behind me.

“What do you want?”

“Water for him. Maybe a shed roof tonight. In trade, I help you set this fence.”

She watched me long enough to make sure I understood she was not helpless.

“Tools are in the barn,” she said. “If you steal, I shoot.”

“Fair terms.”

That was how we began, with two tired people lifting something neither one could lift alone.

Her husband Richard had been dead two years, gone from a barbed-wire cut that turned feverish before a doctor could reach them.

Catherine had nursed him for three weeks, buried him on the rise behind the barn, then got up the next morning and fed the horses.

The ranch showed every mark of being fought for by one person: a sagging barn roof, a leaning gate, thin horses, cattle slipping through broken wire, and a cabin kept almost painfully clean by a woman who lived outnumbered.

She fed me beans, salt pork, bread, and coffee so strong it stood me up better than sleep.

I had just wrapped both hands around the cup when three riders came through the gate.

Catherine heard them before I did.

Her shoulders changed.

The woman who had lifted fence posts with split palms was suddenly still.

“Elias,” she said.

Richard’s brother came in without removing his hat.

He had a polished coat, clean gloves, and the face of a man who had practiced pity until it looked like ownership.

Behind him came two men, one with a deputy’s star pinned crooked to his vest.

Elias looked at me first.

“Widow hired a stray.”

Catherine stood.

“Get out of my house.”

He smiled and laid a folded deed on the table.

“Morrison land belongs with Morrison blood.”

The room seemed to shrink around those words.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *