The Mountain Man Brought Elk Meat, Then a Child Asked Him to Stay-felicia

Cole never meant to stay.

He told himself that all the way down the ridge, through snow that came hard enough to sting his eyes beneath the brim of his hat.

The elk quarter lay across his shoulder, wrapped in oilcloth and tied with cord, cold now where it had once been warm.

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Every step drove pain into his knees.

Every gust shoved him sideways.

The mountain did not care whether a man had good intentions.

It punished motion all the same.

Cole moved anyway.

He knew the trail mostly by memory.

He knew where the pines closed in thick enough to block the wind for three breaths.

He knew where the creek ran shallow under a skin of ice.

He knew where the stones waited slick beneath early snow, just mean enough to break a tired man if he forgot them.

He did not forget much.

For four years, forgetting had been the one thing he could not do.

Mary’s face lived in the corner of his mind where firelight used to be.

Thomas’s laugh came back at the worst times, thin and bright and impossible to hold.

Fever had taken Mary first.

Three days later, it had taken the boy.

After that, Cole went up into the mountains and built a cabin far enough from the valley that people eventually stopped asking after him.

That suited him.

Trees did not ask him how he was managing.

Snow did not tell him Mary was in a better place.

Stone did not expect him to stand in church and nod while people spoke gently around a wound they could not see.

He trapped.

He hunted.

He mended his own clothes poorly.

He traded when he had to and left before anyone could pull him into talk.

Over time, loneliness became less like an ache and more like weather.

Cold.

Predictable.

Survivable.

Then he heard Cora Bell’s name at the trading post.

He had been standing near the stove with his gloves in his hands, saying nothing, while two men talked as though silence meant absence.

Widow.

Two children.

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