The Rancher’s Daughter Who Said No And The Stranger Who Knew Why-felicia

The summer of 1887 came down on Dry Fork like a punishment.

By midmorning, the dust already hung above the street in a pale, bitter haze, and the heat pressed against every wall until even the clapboard buildings seemed tired of standing.

Horses stood at the hitching rails with their heads lowered.

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Men crossed the street slowly because no one wanted to spend any more strength than he had to.

Anna Crow felt the heat as soon as she stepped off the porch of the ranch house her father had built with his own hands.

It struck her face like a slap.

She closed her eyes, breathed in dry soil, brittle grass, and the faint sour smell of an empty barn, and told herself to move.

That was what her father had done.

He had moved forward through bad seasons, bad prices, broken fences, sick cattle, and men who smiled too politely when they asked whether he had finally come around to selling.

On the last night of his fever, his hand had burned in Anna’s, and his voice had sounded rougher than the wind in the eaves.

Don’t let them take it, Anna.

This land is home.

She had promised him.

Some promises sound noble when they are spoken beside a deathbed.

They feel heavier when the bank notes come due, when the well thins, when the barn roof bows, and when every neighbor who once came for coffee starts looking away because trouble has a way of spreading.

Anna was twenty-three, alone, and nearly out of options.

But the Crow Ranch was still hers.

That morning, she saddled June, the last good bay mare left in the corral, and rode toward town because she needed flour, salt, and time.

She needed mercy too, but mercy was not usually sold across a counter.

Dry Fork was no grand settlement.

It was one street, a church at one end, a saloon at the other, a telegraph office, a livery, and Carter’s General Store sitting in the middle like it had seen every kind of begging a person could do without calling it begging.

The bell above Carter’s door rang when Anna stepped inside.

Cooler air touched her face.

The store smelled of leather, tobacco, coffee, sugar candy, and dust trapped in dry wood.

Ezra Carter looked up from behind the counter, and the worry in his eyes told Anna before he spoke that she was not alone.

A voice came from behind her.

‘Well, now. Look what the sun dragged in.’

Anna turned slowly.

Three men stood between her and the door.

Black Mesa men.

They wore the dust of Elias Granger’s land on their boots and the certainty of his money in their posture.

At their center stood Wade Kincaid, Granger’s enforcer, a man who enjoyed speaking softly because he had learned fear filled in the rest.

‘I’m here to buy supplies,’ Anna said.

Her voice stayed even.

Her hands did not.

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