A Mountain Man Found Her Tied In A Wagon, Then Chose The Law-felicia

The hot Arizona sun had already burned the color out of the morning when Caleb Thorne saw the wagon by his fence.

It did not belong there.

Nothing about it belonged there.

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The mule stood with its head low, ears twitching against flies, the leather traces hanging slack as if whoever had driven it had stepped away in a hurry and never meant to come back.

A white blanket covered the wagon bed.

Caleb sat still in the saddle, one hand resting on the horn, dust drying at the corners of his mouth.

For two years, he had trained himself not to expect surprises.

A fever had taken his wife, and after that the world had become a short list of chores.

Fence before sunrise.

Water troughs before the heat.

Cattle counted by noon.

Coffee too bitter, bread too plain, evenings too quiet.

That was the life he had chosen because it asked nothing from the broken place inside him.

The wagon asked something.

His horse shifted beneath him.

Caleb swung down and walked toward it, boots pushing red dust into soft little clouds.

The air smelled of hot iron, mule sweat, and old wood baked dry by the sun.

He looked once toward the empty road, then toward the low roof of his cabin in the distance.

No driver.

No voice.

No movement beneath the blanket.

He drew closer and saw the edge of rope hanging from the wagon bed.

His stomach tightened.

With one careful pull, he lifted the blanket away.

The girl inside was curled on her side like she had tried to make herself smaller than pain.

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