After Cedar Hollow Called Her Cursed, a Mountain Hunter Found a Kingdom Hidden in Her Golden Eyes-felicia

For a long moment after Jonas Harper spoke, no one on the back step of the old bakery moved.

The cup sat between them, dull tin catching the last copper of sundown. Isabelle Hawthorne looked at it as though it might vanish if she reached too quickly. Her throat had been dry since noon, dry from dust, from hunger, from the careful pride it took not to beg after every respectable door in Cedar Hollow closed before her.

Behind Jonas, Mrs. Adelaide Pritchard stood rigid as a fence post in her brown Sunday shawl, though it was only Thursday. A woman like her always dressed as if the Lord might arrive unannounced and inspect her seams.

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“You ought to be careful, Mr. Harper,” Mrs. Pritchard said. Her voice held no shouting. It was worse than shouting. It had been pressed flat and polished. “Kindness to unnatural things is often mistaken for invitation.”

Jonas did not look back at her.

The town had expected many things from him. It expected roughness. It expected silence. It expected him to buy ammunition once a month, flour twice in winter, and vanish north before anyone could draw him into supper talk. It did not expect him to lower himself onto the broken bakery step beside a rejected mail-order bride with gold eyes and a carpet bag.

He did exactly that.

The boards creaked under his weight. Dust rose around his boots. He took a small twist of dried venison from his coat pocket, broke it in half, and laid one piece beside the cup.

Isabelle’s fingers tightened over the handle of her bag.

“I have money,” she said.

“One dollar and seventeen cents,” he answered.

Her eyes lifted sharply.

Jonas nodded toward the reticule half open in her lap. “You counted it twice while I was crossing the street.”

Heat touched her face. She had thought no one noticed anything but the shape and color of her eyes.

He took his own piece of venison and bit into it without ceremony. “Eat it or don’t. I am not purchasing gratitude.”

That, more than the water, nearly undid her.

Every kindness since she stepped from the stagecoach had come with a hook hidden in it. Thomas Brennan’s coins had wanted her absence. Mrs. Callahan’s apology at the boarding house had wanted a clean conscience. Even the glances of pity from a few townswomen had wanted the satisfaction of watching sorrow from a safe porch.

Jonas Harper’s offering wanted nothing.

So Isabelle lifted the cup. The water was warm from his canteen, faintly metallic, and more precious than any wine she had seen poured at Philadelphia suppers. She drank with both hands wrapped around the tin, aware of the watchers beyond the alley mouth.

Mrs. Pritchard gave a small, offended breath. “You will regret encouraging her.”

Jonas wiped his hand on his buckskin coat and finally turned his head enough for the older woman to see the line of his profile.

“Ma’am,” he said, “I have regretted a great many things in my life. Giving water to a thirsty woman will not be counted among them.”

Mrs. Pritchard’s mouth folded into a white seam. She looked at Isabelle, not with fear now, but with a colder calculation.

“This town remembers who stands with what should have left by sundown.”

Then she walked away, her skirts brushing the dust as if even the street had disappointed her.

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