Snow, Smoke, And The Secret Beneath The Mountain Cabin Floor-felicia

The mountain man saw smoke where no smoke should have been.

It rose crookedly from a broken chimney in a place most men avoided after sundown, a thin gray ribbon fighting the January wind.

Julian Robles stopped among the pines and let the snow collect on the brim of his hat.

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Below him sat the old miner’s cabin, hunched under a white roof and black timber, its porch half-buried, its door hanging a little wrong.

The mule men around Copper Canyon had a dozen stories about that place.

They said a foreman had once died there after losing a silver vein, and that bad luck had sunk into the walls deeper than smoke.

Julian did not put much faith in ghost stories.

He believed in hunger.

He believed in weather.

He believed in men who would hunt other people through the mountains and call it business.

So when he saw that thin chimney smoke, his first thought was not a spirit.

It was trouble.

He was forty-two years old, though cold and hard seasons had carved him older.

His beard was thick, his hands split from wood and rope, and his eyes had the tired steadiness of a man who had learned not to expect goodness from the world unless he saw it proven.

He lived by himself near Creel because towns had disappointed him.

In town, men with money smiled at the judge and left poor men standing in the dust.

On the mountain, at least, a storm was honest about wanting to kill you.

Julian eased his rifle down from his shoulder and started toward the cabin.

The snow had crusted over in places, so every step cracked under him.

Pine smoke mixed with the smell of wet bark and cold stone.

He expected to find rustlers hiding meat, or a pair of fugitives who had broken into the place and built a bad fire.

He did not expect the woman.

She stood beside the cabin wall in a coat that had been made for a man twice her size.

The hem dragged at her boots.

Her copper-colored hair was loose and damp from snow, and her face had the pale, sharp look of someone living on too little food and too much fear.

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