Caleb Hart’s voice was not loud. That was what frightened Rose Anders most. - Quieen - Chainityai

Caleb Hart’s voice was not loud. That was what frightened Rose Anders most. – Quieen

May be an image of hearth

Caleb’s eyes hardened.

“She have a say in this?”

Warren laughed before he realized Caleb was not joking.

“She’s got no say in anything.”

Silence fell.

The wind moved between them, lifting powdery snow from the clearing. Rose waited for Caleb to wave them away. Or accept her. Or bargain lower, as if she were damaged goods.

Instead, he stepped toward the wagon and held out a hand—not to grab her, but to help.

Rose stared at it.

“You can come inside and warm up,” he said. “Or you can stay in that wagon. But I won’t decide for you.”

No one had spoken to her like that before. The choice was small, almost meaningless, but it was a choice. Her fingers tightened around the quilt.

Behind her, Warren muttered, “For God’s sake, get down.”

Rose climbed down without taking Caleb’s hand.

The moment her boots hit the snow, Warren tossed her bundle after her. It split open. Two dresses, a comb with missing teeth, and her mother’s quilt spilled into the slush.

Something moved in Caleb’s face.

Warren saw it and took a step back.

“She’s yours now,” he said quickly. “Good luck.”

The wagon turned before Caleb could answer. Rose watched it vanish between the trees, carrying away the last proof that Mercy Creek had ever claimed her.

Caleb bent, gathered her clothes, shook snow from the quilt, and handed it to her.

“They shouldn’t have done that,” he said.

Rose did not know whether he meant the bundle, the bargain, or her whole life.

Inside the cabin, warmth struck her so suddenly she almost cried. A fire burned low in the hearth. A pot of stew hung from an iron hook. Tools lined one wall with careful order. A single bed stood in the corner beneath a bearskin. Everything smelled of smoke, pine, leather, and loneliness.

Caleb pointed to the chair nearest the fire.

“Sit.”

Rose remained standing.

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