Mocked Cowboy Rode Into A Flood And Changed Red Hollow Forever-felicia

The first time Evelyn Hart heard the town speak of Cade Mercer, she was standing inside Hutchinson’s General Store with a bolt of cotton in her hands and dust on the window glass.

Outside, Cade stood on the boardwalk with his hat low and a small sack of supplies tucked beneath one arm.

He looked like a man trying to take up less room than God had given him.

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The women at the counter did not lower their voices much.

Red Hollow had a habit of dressing cruelty as concern, and that afternoon it wore the habit proudly.

They said Cade had wasted three years on dry land east of the ridge.

They said he lived in a shack, took day work where he could find it, and spent every spare hour hammering boards into some foolish shape nobody understood.

They said his father had left him land fit for nothing.

They said he should have sold it and moved on.

Evelyn watched him count out coins with the care of a man who knew the exact weight of hunger.

He bought flour, coffee, and nails.

Not enough of any of them.

When he turned to leave, his hand paused on the door frame as if he had heard the judgment through wood and glass.

He did not look back.

He simply stepped into the dust and walked away.

That was the first thing Evelyn remembered about Cade Mercer.

Not his poverty.

Not the patched elbows of his shirt.

The way he refused to give the town the satisfaction of seeing the wound.

Evelyn had come west because the life waiting back east had grown too narrow.

She was twenty-eight, unmarried, plain by the measures people used when they wanted to be unkind, and smarter than most men appreciated.

Red Hollow needed a teacher.

The pay was poor, the room above the schoolhouse was cold at night, and the town could fit inside a Philadelphia block.

But it was different.

Different had seemed enough.

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