The Boston Doctor Dry Creek Tried to Break Met the One Gunslinger Who Would Not Let Her Stand Alone-felicia

Jack Calder did not sleep after the horse screamed in the dark.

He sat in Doc Hawkins’s back room with his shirt cut open, a fresh bandage strapped tight across his shoulder, and his Colt resting on the table within reach of his left hand. The oil lamp smoked above him. Outside, Dry Creek had gone quiet in the false way a town went quiet when every person behind every curtain was listening for trouble.

Clara Whitfield stood at the basin washing blood from beneath her nails.

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Not all of it was his.

Some had come from Billy Morrison’s torn leg. Some from Mary Patterson’s difficult birth. Some from the little boy whose throat she had opened with a knife fine enough to turn death aside by the width of a drinking straw. Some, perhaps, from her own wrist where Jennings’s rough friend had seized her two nights before and left blue half-moons under the skin.

Jack watched her dry her hands on a clean cloth. She did not tremble until she thought no one was looking.

“You ought to sit,” he said.

“I ought to clean your wound again by morning.”

“That was not what I said.”

“No,” she answered, folding the cloth with sharp precision. “It was not.”

Doc Hawkins had fallen asleep in the front room with his boots still on and a half-empty bottle untouched beside him. That, Clara had noticed, was new. Before she came, he reached for whiskey the way some men reached for prayer. Now he stared at it, argued with it, and sometimes won.

Jack Calder saw that too. He saw more than most men said. It was one reason men feared him. Another reason lay in the stories stitched to his name from Texas to Colorado—four men dead in Amarillo, a marshal spared in Abilene, a gambler’s hand shot clean through before it could draw. Some stories were lies. Some were worse because they were true.

Clara knew only this: the man sitting in her clinic had stepped between her and three men without asking what she was worth.

That alone made him dangerous in a way Samuel Dyer could not understand.

By dawn, the town had begun whispering.

Martha Brennan brought coffee in a blue enamel pot and biscuits wrapped in cloth. She looked from Jack’s bandage to Clara’s sleepless face, then to the Colt on the table.

“Well,” she said, setting the biscuits down, “that explains why Jennings walked past my boarding house like a man who had misplaced his courage.”

“He will find it again,” Jack said.

Martha’s mouth tightened.

“Samuel Dyer will lend him some.”

Clara poured coffee with steady hands. “Then we will be ready.”

Martha studied her. “Honey, ready is what people say before the bill comes due.”

The bill came sooner than any of them wished.

At nine that morning, Clara opened the clinic door and found a notice nailed through the wood.

By order of the Dry Creek Council, this establishment is closed pending inquiry into improper medical conduct, fraudulent practice, and moral disorder.

The ink was still damp.

Three men stood across the street pretending to discuss harness leather. Samuel Dyer leaned against the post outside the hotel, his hat tipped back, his smile small and satisfied. He had not raised his voice. Men like Samuel rarely needed to when they believed paper, property, and cousins with badges could do the striking for them.

Doc Hawkins spat into the dust.

“Moral disorder,” he said. “That is a fine phrase for a woman saving children without asking men’s permission.”

Clara read the notice twice.

Her mouth had the same stillness Jack had seen in men just before a gunfight.

“They cannot close the clinic,” she said.

“They have,” Hawkins answered.

Behind them, Jack rose from the bench where he had been resting. The bandage pulled beneath his shirt, but he did not show it. He crossed the porch, took hold of the notice, and tore it from the door in one clean motion.

The street went quiet.

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