The Cowboy Who Bought Silence And Found His Soul In Her Eyes-felicia

The rifle barrel rested against Caleb Hartley’s temple like a piece of winter nailed to his skin.

He had known cold before.

He had slept under Wyoming stars with frost stiffening his blanket and hunger twisting in his belly.

Image

He had buried men in ground so hard the shovel rang against it like iron.

But this cold was different.

It carried a choice.

The dusty street of Silver Ridge had gone still around him, the kind of still that comes right before a horse bolts or a gun goes off.

Three men stood close enough to kill him before he could reach the Colt lying in the mud near his knee.

One of them kept the rifle pressed to Caleb’s head.

Another watched the sheriff’s office.

The third watched Eleanor Whitman through the mercantile window.

That was the part that made Caleb’s blood turn colder than the gun.

Eleanor was behind glass, framed by flour sacks, ledgers, and the yellow glow of an oil lamp.

Her face should have shown terror.

Instead, her eyes held his with a steadiness that reached into him and found every locked door.

Caleb had built his life around not being seen.

She saw him anyway.

She had seen him from the first morning he rode into town with dust on his coat and a land deed waiting to become his escape.

Silver Ridge was not supposed to matter.

It was a stop.

A place with a land office, a general store, and enough supplies to get him gone before sundown.

The clerk had pushed papers across a desk, Caleb had signed, and the deed to three hundred acres northwest of town had folded neatly into his vest.

Water, timber, grazing land, and no neighbors close enough to borrow trouble.

That was all he wanted.

Not comfort.

Read More