The Men Who Came for Jeremiah Stone’s Gold Never Expected Four Sisters Behind Stone Walls-QuynhTranJP

The first blow from beneath the floorboards sounded like a shovel striking a coffin lid.

The cabin jumped under my boots. Ash sifted from the fireplace. Daisy jerked against Beatrice, and Dutch lifted his head from the stool by the oak door with broth still wet in his beard. Another scrape came from under the rear planks, fast and hungry, followed by the wet grind of dirt being clawed away with metal.

“They found the spring trench,” I shouted.

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Jeremiah turned from the front loophole. Fog pressed against the slit windows like damp wool, and each time a rifle cracked outside, sparks snapped off the granite shell and flashed across his scarred cheek. He took one step toward me, then a second volley slammed the stone by his shoulder and pinned him back to the wall.

“Abby, down.”

There was no room to be afraid slowly. I dropped over the trapdoor, shotgun hard against my collarbone, the wood cold through my skirt. Dirt sprayed through the seam and peppered my hands. Beneath the floor, a man coughed, spat, and drove something iron into the hatch with a crack that split the room in half.

Clara skidded beside me with a box of shells. “Tell me where.”

“By Daisy,” Jeremiah said. “If one gets through, you pull her behind the hearth.”

Another shot outside. Another spark. Dutch shoved an old pepperbox pistol into Beatrice’s hands.

“You don’t point that unless you mean it.”

She nodded once and tucked Daisy behind the bed.

The third strike burst the latch.

The trapdoor flew up between my knees in a shower of frozen dirt, and Blackeyed Gentry came out of the floor like something dug up, revolver in one hand, hunting knife in his teeth. One eye was swollen from the cold. The other fixed on me with a starving sort of pleasure that made my stomach fold tight against my ribs.

Jeremiah shouted my name.

I pulled both triggers.

The blast inside that one-room cabin felt like a mule kick to the chest. Fire leaped from the barrels. Buckshot caught Blackeyed across the sternum and throat and threw him backward into the mouth of the tunnel. His revolver clattered against the wall. Blood spattered the underside of the hatch and hissed where it struck a coal near the hearth.

For one heartbeat no one moved.

Then Daisy screamed.

Beatrice gathered her before her feet touched the floor. Jeremiah crossed the room in two strides, snapped the shotgun open, reloaded it, and pressed it back into my hands. My shoulder had gone numb. Dirt drifted through the air and settled on Clara’s lashes like gray flour.

“You all right?”

I nodded because the room was still standing.

Outside, Priscilla Gentry heard the blast and his cousin’s silence.

“Eli?” he shouted from the fog. “Eli!”

Nothing answered but wind in the pines and thaw dripping off the eaves.

Then his voice changed.

“Burn them out.”

Dutch spat on the floorboards. “That fool finally said something honest.”

Jeremiah dropped to one knee at the front loophole. Clara took the second rifle slit without being told. Beatrice dragged a grain sack over the tunnel mouth and sat on it with Daisy behind her, the little pepperbox still in her hand. Smoke thickened under the rafters. The cabin smelled of black powder, wet wool, pine pitch, and the copper edge of fresh blood.

The next man came fast through the fog carrying a smoking bundle in both hands.

Jeremiah swung toward him, but the mist swallowed his shape. Then Clara’s trap found him.

A buried tripwire snapped. One of the spiked deadfalls we had rigged above the trail came down in a roaring arc and drove the runner face-first into the snow. The bundle of blasting powder flew from his hands, landed in meltwater, and went dark with a hiss.

For the first time that morning, Clara smiled.

It wasn’t a warm look.

They fired from the tree line for nearly an hour after that. Time inside a siege stops wearing numbers. It goes by hot barrels, empty brass, and the taste of sulfur on your tongue. My shoulder purpled beneath the blouse. Each time Jeremiah worked the Winchester lever, the motion stayed smooth and quiet, as if he were splitting kindling instead of deciding who left that mountain alive.

Between volleys, Dutch pressed one ear to the grain sack over the tunnel mouth.

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