The Pregnant Stranger at His Gate Had One Secret He Couldn’t Ignore-Quieen - Chainityai

The Pregnant Stranger at His Gate Had One Secret He Couldn’t Ignore-Quieen

The woman at my gate looked one bad decision away from collapsing in my driveway, and I still reached for the shotgun first.

That probably tells you more about me than any introduction ever could.

The March wind came off the Montana hills with teeth in it, pushing loose dust across the gravel and making the old fence wire hum under my hands.

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I was halfway through resetting a crooked pasture post when Axel stopped moving.

Axel never stopped moving unless there was a reason.

Seven-year-old German Shepherd.

Retired military working dog.

Bad attitude, excellent teeth, and better instincts than most men I had served with.

He stood beside the broken fence line, ears up, shoulders locked, every inch of him aimed toward the front gate.

No bark.

No growl.

Just silence.

That kind of silence gets under your skin when you have heard it before.

I looked toward the road.

A woman stood at my gate with one hand around the handle of a cracked brown suitcase and the other resting against her stomach.

Pregnant.

Not early pregnant.

Very pregnant.

The kind of pregnant that makes a man with any sense wonder why she is standing on a dirt road at sunset instead of sitting somewhere warm with a glass of water and a nurse nearby.

Her dress was gray, thin, and wrong for a Montana March evening.

Mud marked her calves.

Her dark hair was tied back badly, like she had done it in a hurry or in pain.

Near the cuff of her left sleeve, I saw the dark smear.

Blood.

Could have been hers.

Could have been someone else’s.

I picked up the shotgun from where it leaned against the fence rail.

“Far enough,” I called.

She stopped at once.

Axel moved half a step in front of me.

Most people looked away from that dog.

She did not.

She looked at him, then at me, and somehow that steady stare bothered me more than begging would have.

“If you let me stay,” she said, her voice flat with exhaustion, “I’ll work on your farm.”

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