The Housekeeper Who Walked Into A Ball And Changed A Rancher’s Life-felicia

The loneliest sound on the frontier was not the wind crossing open Montana land.

Fletcher Hinton knew wind.

He knew how it pressed against window glass before dawn and slipped through the smallest cracks in old timber.

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He knew how it moved over frozen grass, rattled barn hinges, and made the cattle draw close to the fence line.

But that was not the sound that followed him.

The sound that followed him was his own boots moving from room to room inside a house built too large for one man’s heart.

At 4:30 every morning, Fletcher woke before the sun.

He had done it for twelve years.

He would sit on the edge of the bed for a moment with the cold biting through the floorboards, then dress without thinking.

Boots.

Trousers.

Shirt.

Every movement was practiced, efficient, and stripped of anything that might be called softness.

His father had taught him that.

Feelings were weaknesses.

Weakness invited loss.

So Fletcher had spent most of his life becoming the kind of man nobody could easily hurt.

He owned more land than most men in Montana territory.

He owned more cattle than he cared to count.

He had railroad investments beginning to pay off, thick ranch ledgers that made bankers straighten in their chairs, and a name that caused conversations to lower when he stepped into a room.

On paper, Fletcher Hinton had everything a man could want.

The paper lied.

His ranch house had fifteen rooms and six fireplaces.

The dining table was long enough for twenty people, though he ate at one end of it alone.

The parlor stayed polished.

The guest rooms stayed ready.

The upstairs hallways held the kind of silence that made a man aware of every breath he took.

At 5:15, Carrie brought his coffee.

She did it the same way every morning.

Quiet steps.

A cup placed near his right hand.

Steam lifting between them.

Brown hair pinned back.

Plain work dress.

Eyes the color of creek stones after rain.

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