A Stranger Asked To Share His Fire, But Her Voice Told The Truth-felicia

“Fire don’t belong to me,” the cowboy said — and the woman by Bitter Creek almost broke.

The wind crossed the plains that night with a low, scraping sound, dragging sand through the bunchgrass and pressing cold into every open seam of Daniel Cross’s coat.

Near the dry bed of Bitter Creek, a lonely line of cottonwoods leaned over the dark like old men listening for trouble.

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The creek itself was mostly gone.

Only pale stones, cracked mud, and a few stubborn reeds remained where water had once made a path through the land.

Daniel had made his camp on the lee side of a shallow bank, where the wind struck the cottonwoods first and the fire could live a little longer.

It was not much of a fire.

Three small sticks.

A few pieces of brush.

A low orange heart trembling in the dark.

But out there, a small fire could feel like a promise.

It gave shape to the night.

It told a man where his hands were.

It made a circle, and for as long as the wood lasted, anything inside that circle belonged to the living.

Daniel Cross sat with his back against his saddle and his hat tipped low over his brow.

He had the stillness of a man who had spent too much of his life outdoors, where wasted movement took strength and loud words traveled farther than a man intended.

His coat was rubbed pale at the cuffs.

His boots carried the same dust as the trail.

His face had been cut by sun, wind, and weather until even rest looked hard on him.

A few yards away, his horse grazed with slow patience, nosing through the sparse grass as if the land might change its mind and offer more.

Now and then the animal lifted its head, breathed steam into the cold, and went back to searching.

Daniel watched the fire and listened.

He had been alone for weeks.

The rancher who hired him had needed stray cattle pushed north, and Daniel had needed work more than company.

The pay was silver, counted out without warmth.

The terms were simple.

Bring back what could be brought back, lose as little as possible, and do not ask questions that a rancher did not care to answer.

That suited Daniel most days.

A man with enough miles behind him learned that silence had uses.

It did not lie.

It did not flatter.

It did not ask a man to explain scars he had no interest in showing.

Out on the frontier, quiet was not empty.

Quiet was full of warnings.

The wind could tell you when weather had turned in the west.

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