The Night She Chose Silence-thuyhien

The Night She Chose Silence

Wyoming Territory, late winter of 1879.

The mountain wind did not merely howl that night.
It struck the cabin in long, punishing bursts, rattling the latch, pressing icy breath through the gaps between the logs, making the walls sound as though they were remembering every storm they had ever survived.

Edrin Holloway stood by the stove with his gloves half-on and his rifle within reach.
The fire had burned low, and the cabin smelled of iron, woodsmoke, and the clean harsh cold of a life that had gone too long without another human voice in it.

He had built the place with his own hands three years earlier, dragging timber up the ridge, fitting every beam, sealing every crack, because if a man intended to disappear properly, he ought to do it in a place that did not ask him to depend on anyone.
Dependence, in Edrin’s experience, had always come with a price.

He lived high enough above the nearest road that most travelers never saw his smoke.
That was how he liked it.

Silence had rules.
Distance had rules.
People had none.

Before the war, before the mistake that took two men’s lives and left him with a name too heavy to carry in town, Edrin had believed in ordinary things.
Work, fairness, seasons, and a future that might one day soften at the edges.

But men had a way of ruining what weather could not.
Since then, he kept cattle, trapped fur when he had to, traded timber, and spoke only when words could do a job that silence could not.

That night he should have been asleep.
Instead he was standing half-dressed in the weak glow of the stove, listening to the mountain rage outside, because old habits did not let a man rest easily once he had learned how fast peace could disappear.

The first noise came with the wind.

A scrape.

Then a stumble.

Then the hard slam of the door flying inward so violently that the lamp flame jumped and shadows leaped across the walls.

Edrin moved before thought caught up with him.
His hand closed around the rifle, and he turned just as a figure stumbled through the doorway and collapsed inside.

The wind threw snow after her.
Then the door, freed of the force behind it, crashed shut.

Silence returned in pieces.

Edrin did not lower the gun.

The figure on the floor was a woman.

No, not just a woman.
Young, though not a girl. Apache, by dress and face, though what remained of her clothing had been torn too badly to say much beyond that.

She was on her hands and knees, trying to rise and failing.
Snow clung to the ends of her black hair, now half-loose from its braid, and her whole body shook so hard that the boards beneath her carried the tremor.

Not fear alone.

Cold.

The kind of cold that gets inside blood and begins making decisions for the body before the mind can argue.

Edrin took one slow step closer.

Then another.

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