A wounded teller, a hidden ledger, and the cowboy who would not let her die before Cheyenne.-felicia

Jack Mallister did not answer Blackwell at once.

The cabin held its breath around him.

Clara lay beneath the quilt with the little derringer cold in her palm, fever shining along her brow, her torn side bound in strips of linen that had once been one of Jack’s clean Sunday shirts. The fire had burned low enough that the corners of the room were black, but she could still see the rifle in Jack’s hand and the careful way his shoulders settled before he opened the door.

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Outside, three riders waited under a moon thinned by cloud. Their horses stamped at the frozen mud. Somewhere beyond them, the creek moved in the dark with a sound like whispered warning.

Thomas Blackwell sat in the middle, his hat brim low, his gloves pale against the reins. He did not shout. Men like him never wasted breath when fear would carry their words farther than anger.

‘You have something of mine, Mr. Mallister.’

Jack stepped onto the porch and pulled the door nearly closed behind him. Not all the way. Clara noticed that. He had left himself a path back to her.

‘Ain’t anything of yours under my roof.’

‘The young woman is a thief.’

‘She does not look to be in a condition for thieving.’

Blackwell’s mouth moved in what might have been a smile. ‘You are a practical man. I have made inquiries. Widower. Horse breeder. Keeps to himself. Owes no man much and asks less. That is a respectable way to live. I would hate to see respectability end over a bank girl with a loose tongue.’

Clara’s fingers tightened around the derringer.

Jack said nothing.

‘Deliver her,’ Blackwell continued, ‘and I will leave your house standing. Deliver the papers, and I will forget you raised a rifle against my men. Refuse, and by sunrise there will not be enough of this cabin left to warm a coyote.’

The wind rubbed a pine branch against the roof.

Jack shifted his rifle by half an inch.

‘You finished?’

Blackwell’s face did not change, but his horse tossed its head as if the answer had struck the animal first.

‘You are making a grave mistake.’

‘Been making those since I was old enough to saddle a horse.’

One of the riders reached toward his coat.

Jack fired.

The shot did not strike flesh. It took the hat clean from the man’s head and pinned it to the porch post behind him. The rider froze with one hand halfway to his pistol, suddenly bare-haired and pale in the moonlight.

Jack lowered the rifle only enough to show he had chosen mercy on purpose.

‘Next one costs more.’

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