The Rifle At The Station Door Saved Clara's First Kiss And Her Future-ruby - Chainityai

The Rifle At The Station Door Saved Clara’s First Kiss And Her Future-ruby

The stagecoach died in the dust long before Clara Blackwood understood that she might live.

It lay on its side a hundred yards behind the way station, one wheel still turning in slow, useless circles while the Arizona sun hammered the road flat.

The driver was gone.

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The strongbox was gone.

The two other passengers had stopped making sound before the bandits dragged Clara from the wreck and pulled her toward the empty building where old coffee burned in a pot and flies worried at the windows.

Clara was nineteen that morning.

She had left Tucson with one valise, a silver locket from her father, and a letter from her aunt Catherine telling her there would always be a bed above the dress shop in Silver Creek.

By afternoon, the valise was open on a dusty counter, her clothes lay under muddy boots, and the tall bandit with the sour breath had decided her money was not the thing he wanted most.

He held the pistol close to her face.

Not touching.

Close enough for her skin to feel the cold of it.

One kiss, he told her, like he was asking for a ribbon at a dance.

Clara shut her eyes because she could not bear to see his mouth coming toward hers.

She had grown up above a saloon and had heard men say every filthy thing men could say, but her father had kept one wall around her life as if it were the last good wall he owned.

He wanted her to read.

He wanted her to sew.

He wanted her to marry for affection if the world ever gave her the chance.

He was buried now, and the bank had taken the house, and the world had narrowed to a bandit’s hand on her arm.

Then a rifle clicked.

The sound was small.

It was also absolute.

Clara opened her eyes and saw a man in the doorway with the white heat behind him, his hat brim low, his shoulders filling the frame, his rifle steady enough to make even the flies seem to pause.

The tall bandit cursed and jerked her closer.

The stranger said the lady was not interested.

The second bandit reached for his holster.

The rifle fired once.

Then twice.

Then the room filled with smoke, splinters, shouting, and a silence so sudden Clara could hear herself breathing.

The tall man who had held her dropped the pistol first, then followed it.

Clara did not scream.

She watched him fall as if from the far side of a dream, and when her knees gave way, the stranger crossed the room and caught her before her cheek struck the floorboards.

His name was Elijah Dawson.

He said it quietly, almost apologetically, as though men who walked into death for strangers did not usually introduce themselves afterward.

He asked if she was hurt.

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