Bounty Hunter Found a Blue Bead in My Cabin—He Never Expected What Was Hidden Under the Rug-QuynhTranJP

Cleary’s hand settled on the butt of his Colt, and I knew the room had narrowed to one beat of the heart.

He had the blue bead lifted between two grimy fingers, smiling at it like it was a church key and he had finally found the lock. Deputy Miller shifted his weight behind him. The other deputy, older and rawboned, had already let his revolver hang loose by his thigh. Outside, the hounds threw themselves against the porch so hard the oak boards shuddered.

I could not let Miller touch that rug.

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So I moved first.

The cast-iron skillet was still sitting on the stove from supper, half a strip of bacon stuck to the bottom in a skin of grease. I kicked the stove leg hard enough to send the skillet skidding up, then caught the handle with my left hand and flung the whole thing into Miller’s face.

Grease hit him with a wet hiss.

He screamed and dropped his revolver, both hands flying to his eyes. In the same breath I brought the Winchester to my shoulder and fired through the doorway. The older deputy jerked backward as if an invisible mule had kicked him square in the chest. He went out into the snow, hit the porch rail, and disappeared over it.

Cleary was quicker than ugly men usually are. He dove sideways, firing once from the hip. The shot took a groove out of the log wall above my bed and buried splinters in my cheek. The blue bead flashed from his hand and vanished under the table.

Then the dogs came.

Two of them slammed through the half-open door in a frenzy of froth and muscle. One hit the table, claws scrabbling, knocking a tin plate spinning across the floor. The other came straight for my rifle arm.

I fired again. The cabin burst with noise. Smoke hit the rafters and rolled back down. One dog yelped and crashed into the bench. The second locked its jaws onto my buffalo coat, teeth tearing hide and wool but not flesh. I dropped the rifle, drove my elbow into its skull, then grabbed the hunting knife from the table and shoved the blade under its ribs.

It thrashed once. Twice. Then its weight sagged against me.

Cleary had used the chaos the way snakes use tall grass. By the time I looked up, he was already belly-down behind the overturned table, dragging himself toward the door with his Colt still in hand.

“You just buried yourself, mountain man,” he coughed.

I snatched up the Winchester and fired through the oak. He screamed. The bullet had not killed him, but from the way he dragged his left arm, I knew I had shattered the shoulder.

He rolled through the doorway into the snow. I lunged after him, boots slipping on blood and grease, but Miller—half blind and shrieking—latched onto my ankle from the floorboards. That one second was all Cleary needed. I saw him outside, stumbling toward the nearest horse, his wolfskin coat darkening under the arm. He hauled himself into the saddle one-handed and kicked the animal so brutally it nearly went down on its front knees.

“I’ll bring Sterling!” he shouted into the storm. “I’ll bring all of Fort Garland!”

Then he vanished into the blowing white.

I kicked Miller in the jaw hard enough to loosen his grip. When he went slack, I bound his wrists with a rawhide trap cord, bolted the door, and dropped to my knees at the rug.

“Nasha.”

The floorboards lifted from below before I even got my fingers under them. She rose out of the root cellar with her hair full of dirt and the skinning knife in her good hand. Her eyes went first to the dead hound, then to the blood running down my cheek.

“You are hit.”

“Not worth naming.”

The deputy outside was already gone quiet in the snow. Miller was gagging and trying to spit through swelling lips. Nasha stepped around him and picked up the blue bead from under the table. She held it in her palm for half a second, then closed her fist over it like a prayer.

“Cleary will not stop,” she said.

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