A Wyoming Widow Followed a Stranger Back Into the Store, Never Knowing What His Dollar Had Already Cost Him-felicia

Katherine Hail did not move at first.

The road home lay west, gray beneath the November sky, with Goose Creek waiting beyond the last scatter of buildings and a little boy waiting beside a fire too small for comfort. Her pride stood on that road with its chin lifted. Her hunger stood at the general store door with a stranger’s dollar held out between them.

The cowboy did not press her. That was what decided her.

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A man with wickedness in him hurried a hungry woman. A man wanting purchase smiled. This one only waited with his hat brim low and his scarred hand open, as if he understood that the choice itself was the last thing she owned.

Katherine looked once toward the west road.

Then she turned back toward Morrison’s store.

The clerk, who had leaned out to listen, straightened so quickly his shoulder struck the doorframe. Inside, the bell rang again, bright and foolish, as Katherine stepped across the threshold with the cowboy behind her. Every face in the room turned. Flour dust hung in the air. Coffee beans gave off their bitter scent from a burlap sack near the counter. The stove snapped in the corner, warm for people who had never wondered whether warmth could be borrowed.

Silas Morrison looked from Katherine to the stranger and back again.

“Forgot something, Mrs. Hail?” he asked.

The cowboy placed the folded dollar on the counter. He did it gently, without flourish, but the sound of paper against wood carried farther than any shout.

“Twenty pounds of flour,” he said. “Ten pounds beans. Salt pork. Cornmeal. Coffee. Sugar if you have it. A little lard. And those peppermint sticks in the jar.”

Morrison’s mouth opened, closed, then found the smile he reserved for men who paid in cash.

“Certainly, sir.”

“For her,” the cowboy added.

The smile stiffened.

Katherine kept her eyes on the counter. Her hands ached from gripping the basket. Shame walked close beside relief, and both of them had sharp teeth. She could feel the store listening. The women near the dry goods. Old Mr. Teague by the stove. The clerk pretending to measure beans while his ears tilted toward them.

Morrison cleared his throat. “That will run more than a dollar.”

“I know.”

The cowboy drew more bills from his coat, counted them slowly, and laid them beside the first. Katherine saw five dollars, then ten, then another two. More money than had passed through her hands in months.

“You needn’t,” she whispered.

He did not look at her when he answered. “A child needs supper.”

Nothing in the room moved for one second.

Morrison began wrapping parcels.

Katherine had forgotten the sound of abundance. Paper folding over flour. Beans rattling into a sack. Salt pork thumping onto the counter. Coffee measured with a scoop. Sugar pouring soft as sand. Each sound struck some hollow place inside her and made it tremble.

When Morrison reached for the peppermint jar, Katherine almost stopped him. Sweetness was not necessity. Yet the cowboy saw her breath catch and set one finger on the counter.

“All of them,” he said.

Morrison blinked. “All?”

“The jar.”

The peppermint sticks were wrapped and placed on top of the flour as if they were something holy.

Katherine could not speak.

The total came to twelve dollars and forty cents. The cowboy paid without bargaining, though Katherine knew a trail man who had worked for wages would feel every cent. He accepted no change until Morrison placed it in his hand. Then he turned and dropped the forty cents into Katherine’s basket.

“For salt later,” he said.

Her throat tightened until she could scarcely breathe.

They carried the parcels out together. He took the heavy sacks before she could protest and tied them to the saddle of a chestnut gelding waiting near the hitching rail. His movements were practiced and spare. No wasted effort. No glance toward the watching windows. He handled kindness the way another man might handle a rifle: carefully, because it could change a life.

“My name is Elias Boone,” he said once the last sack was secure.

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