When Three Stolen Eggs Forced a Mountain Man to Reveal His Bargain-felicia

The Winchester clicked before Abigail could run.

It was not loud.

That made it worse.

Image

She froze in the chicken coop with her knees buried in muddy straw and three stolen eggs pressed against her chest like they were gold.

Snow clung to her torn coat.

Cold water dripped from the coop roof.

Her cracked boots had stopped protecting her feet sometime before dawn, and the last few miles had left red marks in the snow behind her.

She had walked for three days.

By the third day, hunger stops feeling like hunger and starts giving orders.

It told her to climb the fence.

It told her to lift the latch.

It told her to take what was warm because warm meant alive.

Then Caleb Lawson filled the doorway with a Winchester in his hands.

Men in Georgetown talked about Caleb the way they talked about storms.

They said he guarded his valley like a beast.

They said he lived alone because no one who valued comfort would stay that far up in the foothills.

They said trespassers on Lawson land did not get second chances.

Abigail believed all of it when she saw him standing there in buckskin and wolf pelt, with frost in his beard and eyes too sharp for excuses.

She closed her eyes.

“Please,” she whispered. “I was starving.”

The shot never came.

Instead, Caleb lowered the rifle and looked at the eggs.

“You eat those raw,” he said, “you’ll be sick.”

That was the first mercy.

The second was water.

Read More