She Pinned the Widower’s Boot With a Skillet, Then Came the Knock-hothiyenvy_5

Emily Carter slammed the cast-iron skillet onto the widowed rancher’s boot and looked at him as if she feared neither him nor God.

The sound rolled across the porch like a warning.

Not loud enough to wake the county.

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Loud enough to wake the house.

Dust jumped between the boards, and Michael Davis sucked in one sharp breath through his teeth.

The morning was already hot, the kind of dry heat that made the grass smell brittle and the porch rail feel rough beneath your hand.

Inside the house, somebody had burned coffee so badly the bitter smell seemed to hang in the doorway.

Emily kept both hands around the skillet handle.

She could feel the old iron grinding against her palms.

She could also feel the tremor in her own arms, but she refused to let him see it.

“You hired a cook, Mr. Davis,” she said. “Not a beggar.”

Michael stared at her as though no woman had spoken to him that way in years.

Maybe none had.

“Pay me what you promised,” Emily said, “or I take those 7 hungry children back down the same road I came from.”

His hand drifted toward the pistol at his belt.

It was not fast.

That made it worse.

A fast move could be panic.

A slow one was a decision.

From behind the screen door, a child whispered, “Daddy… no.”

Emily did not look away.

She had arrived that morning in the back of an old pickup that smelled of hay, motor oil, and sun-baked vinyl.

Her whole life was inside one suitcase.

Two dresses.

One comb.

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