The Barmaid Saw the Child He Hid Before the Mountain Man Spoke-felicia

The pouch hit the bar hard enough to silence the piano.

It was not a clean sound.

It was a heavy, raw, ugly sound, like a stone dropped into a coffin.

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Every head inside the Brass Lantern turned toward the doorway, where Gideon Caldwell stood with snow in his beard and wolf pelts hanging from his shoulders.

Behind him, the October wind pushed into Oak Haven like it had followed him down from the high country and meant to drag him back.

The lamps along the wall shook in their brackets.

The stove popped once in the corner.

The room smelled of whiskey, wet wool, cigar smoke, and old sawdust packed into the cracks of the floor.

Gideon did not remove his hat.

He did not apologize for the cold.

He simply walked to the bar, set one gloved hand on the pouch, and said, “I need a wife by sunrise.”

At first, the saloon laughed.

Of course it laughed.

Men laughed when they were startled and wanted the room to know they were not afraid.

Women laughed softer, if they laughed at all, because they had learned that a man with money and urgency was rarely a harmless thing.

Josephine Mercer did not laugh.

She stood behind the bar with a damp rag in one hand and an ache in both shoulders from a fourteen-hour day.

Her apron was stiff with spilled beer near the hem.

Her hands were red from lye water and winter air.

A curl had fallen loose from the pins at the back of her head, but she had been too busy to fix it.

She had been wiping the same patch of bar for nearly a minute because the corner booth kept pulling her attention.

That was where Thaddeus Cole sat.

He had her father’s debt papers under his hand.

He had placed them there as if they were nothing more than a folded newspaper.

They were not nothing.

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