The Scarred Mountain Recluse and the Widow Who Found His Hidden Letter-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Scarred Mountain Recluse and the Widow Who Found His Hidden Letter-nga9999

Seven winters had carved Caleb into something harder than the granite ridge he lived on.

People in the valley did not say his name unless they had to.

They called him the ghost on the ridge, the scarred man, the one who smelled of pine smoke and blood and spoke only to his mules.

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Some of that was gossip.

Some of it was true.

Caleb had not been an easy man even before the grizzly found him on the north slope seven years earlier.

He had always been quiet, broad-shouldered, more comfortable with timber and weather than with people.

But after the bear took his left eye, tore his face from temple to collarbone, and left him half-dead in the snow, quiet became silence.

Silence became habit.

Habit became a wall.

By the time folks stopped coming up the old trail, Caleb had stopped pretending he wanted them to.

His cabin sat above the washed-out creek bed, surrounded by evergreens, mule tracks, and the kind of wind that seemed to scrape the bones clean.

The porch boards were salt-stained from hides.

The window was grimy.

The hearth was usually cold until evening because Caleb saw no point wasting wood on comfort.

He hunted.

He trapped.

He mended what he had to mend.

He spoke to the mules because animals did not flinch when they saw his face.

That morning, the woods should have been quiet.

Instead, Caleb heard a wagon groan somewhere below the ridge.

The sound reached him through the trees in ugly pieces.

Wood dragging against iron.

A wheel shifting in mud.

A woman cursing under her breath in a voice exhausted enough to make the air seem heavier.

Caleb came down through the pines with a fresh deer carcass over one shoulder.

The animal was still warm against his canvas coat.

Blood dripped from the hide in slow dark drops, touching the pine needles like punctuation.

The cold air tasted like iron, dust, and old smoke.

He set the deer on the porch and reached for the Winchester by the door.

His thumb checked the action without thinking.

Then he followed the noise.

Down by the muddy creek bed, a wagon sat tilted sideways, its rear axle snapped clean through.

A thick piece of hickory jutted out like a broken bone.

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