A Crippled Storekeeper, A Wanted Cowboy, And A Town’s Cruel Bargain-felicia

The morning William Hartwell died, the store still smelled of coffee beans, tobacco, flour dust, and the damp wool coats of miners who had come in before sunrise.

Eliza was in the back room with the ledger open across her lap, writing down small amounts her father trusted her to keep straight because she had always been better with numbers than most men in Willow Ridge.

She heard the first shot before she understood it.

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Her pen jumped, leaving a black scar across the page.

The second sound was her father’s voice, not shouting, not begging, but strained in a way she had never heard.

There were men in the store.

Eliza reached for her crutches and dragged herself upright, her damaged legs screaming at the sudden movement.

Nine years earlier, a riding accident had left those legs twisted and weak, and every morning since then had begun with pain before coffee.

She had learned to live with it.

She had learned to keep books, sort inventory, price goods, mend sacks, count credit, and smile politely while townspeople looked past her crutches as if they were the whole of her.

But she had never learned how to run.

Through the half-open door she saw two men at the counter with bandanas over their faces.

One had a revolver trained on William Hartwell’s chest.

The other had the strong box in both hands, prying at its lock with a knife.

Her father told them there was no more money.

The week’s earnings lay in that iron box, barely enough to pay for new flour, coffee, nails, and medicine, but the masked men wanted a fortune.

They called him a liar.

Eliza tried to move faster.

The revolver fired.

William staggered backward into the shelves, knocking cans onto the floor in a terrible clatter.

He saw her in the doorway and told her to run.

The order broke her worse than the gunshot, because he knew she could not obey it.

The second bullet took him down behind the counter.

The men fled with the strong box while Eliza fell, crawled, and dragged herself over the floorboards toward the only person who had ever made the world feel survivable.

Blood soaked through her skirt and into the sawdust.

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