She Married A Poor Trapper, Then The Mountain Obeyed His Voice-mdue - Chainityai

She Married A Poor Trapper, Then The Mountain Obeyed His Voice-mdue

Abigail Callahan did not speak when the rifles answered from the pines.

For three days she had sat beside Taylor on the buckboard and built a picture of him from silence.

A poor man.

Image

A hard man.

A lonely man with a scar on his cheek and a road that ended in some cold cabin above the tree line.

Now the snowy pass held its breath around him.

Cobb, the bounty hunter, sat with his fingers hovering above his revolver, and for the first time since he had appeared on the trail, he looked less like a hunter than a man who had stepped into a snare.

Taylor’s raised hand stayed steady.

Not high.

Not theatrical.

Just high enough for every hidden rifleman to see.

“Ride down,” Taylor said, “while your horse can still carry you.”

Cobb swallowed. His eyes moved from Taylor’s face to the ridges, then to Abigail. Whatever writ Harrison Caldwell had paid for in Boston suddenly seemed very thin in a place where granite walls held the law of distance and consequence.

“Caldwell won’t stop,” Cobb said.

“Caldwell has never known when a door is closed.”

“He says the woman belongs to him.”

Abigail’s hand closed around the iron ring on her finger.

Taylor’s gaze did not move.

“She belongs to herself.”

Those four words struck Abigail harder than any vow spoken in Judge Peabody’s smoky back room.

She had been called daughter.

Asset.

Bargain.

Bride.

Never, not once, had a man with power said she belonged to herself.

Cobb dragged his horse around, cursing under his breath as the animal slipped on the icy trail. No one shot. No one shouted. The miners remained half-hidden among the pines, patient and terrible, until the bounty hunter vanished down the lower switchback and the sound of his horse faded into the snow.

Only then did Taylor lower his hand.

Abigail turned on him.

“Who are you?”

He slid the Winchester back into the scabbard on the wagon.

“Your husband.”

“Do not do that.” Her voice broke, but anger held it together. “Do not hide behind the one answer I already know.”

Something like regret passed through his face.

“Hold on,” he said. “You are close enough to the truth to see it.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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