The Cowboy Who Heard Mercy Gap’s Most Dangerous Scream-felicia

Caleb Harrow came to Mercy Gap to buy horses.

That was all.

Not to start a feud.

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Not to challenge a man who owned water rights, bank notes, and half the fear in town.

Not to stand in a dusty alley with his shoulder braced against another man’s door while a pregnant woman tried not to cry loud enough to be punished for it.

He had come for horses.

The Starfall Ranch outside Laramie needed six strong geldings before winter, and Caleb had heard that the stock running through Mercy Gap was hard-boned, sure-footed, and cheap if a man paid cash.

Cash was one thing Caleb Harrow had learned to carry without apology.

At forty-one, he owned twelve thousand acres of good grazing land and three thousand head of cattle.

He had a house with a wide porch, hands who answered when he spoke, and a reputation that made most men measure their words before they offered him a bargain.

None of that had come easy.

Caleb had been born poor enough to understand the sound of an empty flour tin.

He had slept in barns as a boy, worked fences with cracked hands, and eaten more cold beans from a dented cup than he cared to remember.

By the time he bought his first ten acres, he knew the names of every man who had laughed at him.

By the time he buried his wife Clara, none of those names mattered anymore.

Grief had a way of making even victory feel like something left too long in the sun.

Clara had been the one person who could look at Caleb Harrow without seeing land, cattle, money, or threat.

She saw the boy who still counted coins twice before handing them over.

She saw the man who checked the hinges on the bunkhouse door before every snowstorm because he remembered what cold could do.

She saw the tiredness he hid behind silence.

When fever took her, Caleb stopped explaining himself to the world.

He worked.

He paid wages on time.

He kept his fences clean and his promises cleaner.

He did not go looking for trouble.

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