When A Quiet Cowboy Faced Four Outlaws In A Dying Mining Town-felicia

The stable door had already closed when Martha Ellis realized the sound behind her was not the wind.

It was leather creaking.

It was boot soles shifting on packed dirt.

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It was the small, terrible quiet that comes just before men decide they are safe enough to be cruel.

The summer of 1886 had baked Dry Hollow until the streets looked brittle.

Heat rose off the boardwalks in wavering sheets.

The livery stable smelled of hay, sweat, old wood, and the sweet dust of oats.

Martha had only come out to check on the bay gelding boarding in her stable for a railroad surveyor.

She had brought a bucket of oats and a brush, because little chores were what kept the Ellis boarding house from falling into the same decay as the town around it.

Her father had left her that boarding house, and not much else.

In Dry Hollow, inheritance did not mean comfort.

It meant a roof with loose shingles, accounts written in careful pencil, and men who knew exactly when a woman had no brother or husband standing between her and trouble.

Martha was twenty-five.

Unmarried.

Alone.

And the town knew it.

Ray Garrison knew it too.

He stepped from the center aisle as his brothers moved out of the shadows around him.

Virgil had a scar down one cheek and a laugh that never sounded amused.

Caleb was the youngest, trying too hard to look dangerous.

Deacon was quiet, watchful, and harder to read than either of them.

Ray stood tall and narrow, calm as a man entering a room he already owned.

“Evening, Miss Ellis,” he said.

Martha set the oats down slowly.

“You’re trespassing,” she replied. “This is private property.”

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