The Dying Trapper’s Bargain That Left Eliza With No Safe Answer-felicia

The back room of the trading post smelled of lye soap, damp wool, and coffee that had sat too long on the stove.

Eliza stood with both hands in the dish basin, sleeves pushed above her wrists, staring at the man who had just spoken to her as though he were naming the weather.

“I am a dying man,” Caleb Rowan said. “Give me a child, and I leave you everything I own.”

Image

The words did not land all at once.

They seemed to hang there between the rough table and the wash basin, hard and plain, while the rest of Pine Hollow kept moving on the other side of the wall.

Men laughed in the front room.

A boot scraped.

Coins clicked against the counter.

Somebody asked for tobacco, and somebody else cursed mildly because a crate would not open.

Life had a rude way of continuing even when one sentence had just split your own life in two.

Eliza did not answer.

Not yet.

Her hands were still wet from scrubbing tin plates, and cold dishwater slid down to her elbows.

She could feel the damp edge of her apron pressing against her waist.

She could hear her own heartbeat louder than the room.

Caleb Rowan watched her without flinching.

He was not a handsome man, at least not in the way young women at church suppers whispered about handsome men.

His face had been cut by weather until every line looked permanent.

His coat smelled faintly of smoke, animal hide, and mountain snow.

His eyes held a yellowed tiredness that made him look older than his years and closer to the grave than any living man should look while standing upright.

He had not spoken with romance.

He had not spoken with cruelty, either.

That was what made it worse.

Cruel men often enjoyed the pain they caused.

Caleb sounded as if pain had become just another item on a list.

Behind the thin wall, Eliza’s aunt coughed.

The sound was dry and low, the kind of cough that had been returning more often no matter how Eliza warmed broth, changed blankets, or sat awake listening for the next breath.

Eliza turned her head before she could stop herself.

The cough faded.

Then came the small, uneven breathing that told her the old woman was still alive.

Still here.

Still slipping.

Caleb noticed the movement.

“You’re caring for someone,” he said.

“My aunt,” Eliza replied.

Read More