Jedediah Walker first saw the smoke just after the wind changed.
It was not much smoke.
Just one thin gray ribbon pulling itself out of Deadwood Draw, twisting sideways in the blizzard before the mountain tore it apart.

Most men would have missed it.
Most men would have been watching their own feet, or the white slope in front of them, or the dark line of pines that promised some small shelter from the wind.
Jed was not most men.
He had lived long enough in the Wind River Range to know that smoke where smoke did not belong was never a small thing.
Sometimes it meant a trapper with a broken leg.
Sometimes it meant a fool who had wandered too high after dark.
Sometimes it meant a dead fire and a dead man beside it.
That was what Jed expected.
A corpse.
The blizzard had been raging for three days by then, turning the Wyoming mountains into a white country with no mercy in it.
Down on the plains, cattle had been freezing upright where the wind caught them.
Up at 8,000 feet, men did not freeze upright.
They vanished.
A drift swallowed their tracks first.
Then their names.
Jed pulled the collar of his buffalo coat higher and watched the smoke again.
It came from the old shack in Deadwood Draw.
Nobody with sense went near that place anymore.
The roof sagged so badly it looked tired of standing.
The chimney had a crack running through it like a black vein.
The walls had gaps wide enough for wind to whistle through, and the door had hung crooked since before Jed last rode past it in the fall.
A man could light a fire inside that shack and still be dead before supper.
That was the first thing that made him move.
The second thing was the way the smoke kept coming.
Not strong.
Not steady.
But stubborn.
Somebody was feeding that fire with whatever they had left.
Jed turned his snowshoes toward the draw.
Each step scraped through the crusted snow with a tired wooden rasp.
Ice had worked into the edge of his beard.
His rifle strap pressed hard across his shoulder.
The Winchester felt heavier in weather like that, not because the gun changed, but because cold made a man aware of every ounce he had chosen to carry.
By the time he reached the cabin, the wind had already tried twice to turn him back.
He stopped outside the door and listened.
The blizzard screamed over the roof.
Something inside the cabin snapped in the fire.
No voice answered it.
Jed shifted the Winchester into his hands and lifted one snowshoe.
Then he kicked the sagging door open.
The room inside smelled of wet smoke, old rot, and pine needles burned too green.
Smoke hung low, scratching at his eyes.
The fire was hardly a fire at all.
It was a red-bellied little thing choking on damp needles and broken chair legs in a crooked stone hearth.
Jed saw an empty bean tin beside it.
He saw a canteen frozen so solid the leather strap had gone stiff.
He saw a filthy blanket in the far corner.
Then the blanket moved.
Jed raised the rifle.
For one second, he thought the shape under it was a boy.
Too small.
Too folded in on itself.
Then the face lifted.
A woman looked back at him.
She was half frozen and shaking so violently it seemed the sound should have filled the room.
It did not.
Her blue lips were parted.
Her hair was tangled with frost.
A ruined velvet riding dress clung to her body, dark where melted snow had soaked in, torn near the hem and sleeves like she had fought brush, rock, and weather before the cabin ever found her.
Her feet were wrapped in strips of cloth.
The cloth had frozen in places.
Jed took one careful step forward.
Her eyes opened fully.
Green.
Wild.
Desperate.
Then both her hands came up from under the blanket.
The silver Colt looked wrong in that room.
It looked too polished for the smoke, too fine for the broken chair legs, too clean for the starvation and cold gathered around her like a second wall.
But it was real.
And it was aimed straight at his chest.
“Stay back,” she whispered.
Jed stopped.
He did not lift his rifle higher.
He did not lower it all the way either.
A frightened person with a gun was still a person with a gun.
“Ma’am,” he said, keeping his voice flat and slow, “if you pull that trigger, you might hit me.”
Her finger twitched.
Jed held her gaze.
“But that recoil’s liable to break your frozen wrist. Then you’ll die in this shack before dark.”
For a moment, nothing moved but the smoke.
Her hands trembled so hard the barrel of the Colt drifted away from his heart, came back, drifted again.
Jed could see what it cost her to hold it.
He could also see that fear had more strength in her than her body did.
Some lies are spoken.
Some are lived.
But terror tells the truth even when a mouth refuses to.
Her eyes rolled back.
The Colt slipped from her fingers.
She folded sideways onto the floor before Jed could reach her.
He crossed the room in three long steps.
The floorboards complained beneath his boots.
He put two fingers near her mouth and felt the barest thread of breath.
Alive.
Barely.
Jed pulled off his buffalo coat and wrapped her in it.
He took the Colt from the floor and tucked it into his belt, not because he meant to keep it, but because a half-conscious woman might wake fighting before she remembered who had carried her.
He gathered the filthy blanket too.
Then he lifted her.
She weighed less than she should have.
That frightened him more than the gun had.
Outside, the storm hit them like a door slammed by God.
The world disappeared after the first ten steps.
There was no sky.
No ridge.
No draw.
Only white air, snow underfoot, and the warm weight of the woman bundled against his chest.
Jed knew the way back by things the storm could not entirely steal.
A split pine with lightning scars.
A black shelf of rock that broke the wind for maybe ten paces.
A shallow drop where the snow always packed deeper.
He counted steps between them.
Twenty.
Forty.
Sixty.
Then count again.
Men who panic in a whiteout walk in circles until they die believing home was just ahead.
Jed had no use for circles.
Once, his right snowshoe caught under buried brush and pitched him forward.
He twisted as he fell so the woman landed on him instead of the frozen ground.
Pain shot through his knee.
He lay there half buried, listening to the wind howl over both of them.
Then she breathed against his collar.
Thin.
Ragged.
Still there.
Jed got up.
The second time he fell, he cursed once under his breath.
Then he got up again.
By the time his cabin came into view, the light had begun to flatten toward evening.
The cabin was rough, but it was his.
Log walls.
A tight roof.
Iron stove.
A narrow bunk.
A table scarred by knives, cups, and winters.
A flour sack shoved against the bottom of the door to keep drafts from sliding in.
He shouldered the door open and carried her straight to the stove.
The fire inside had burned low.
He fed it until the stove began to tick with heat.
Then he knelt beside her and worked the frozen cloth away from her feet.
The blisters there were ugly.
Not fatal if cared for.
Fatal if ignored.
Jed had seen men die from smaller things because they had been too proud to stop walking.
He warmed water slowly.
Not hot.
Hot would hurt frozen flesh worse.
He wrapped her feet in clean cloth.
He hung her ruined coat near the door.
Then he placed the silver Colt on the table where she would see it when she woke, but not where she could reach it before he could speak.
At 7:10 that evening, by the pocket watch nailed near the door, her eyes opened.
She looked at the stove first.
Then the rifle near the wall.
Then the Colt on the table.
Then Jed.
“Where am I?” she asked.
“My cabin.”
Her voice was thin. “How far from the draw?”
“Far enough you lived.”
Her eyes closed.
That answer seemed to break something in her and hold something together at the same time.
Jed poured a little broth into a tin cup and held it out.
She stared at it as if kindness might have a hook hidden under it.
“It’s broth,” he said.
“I know what it is.”
“Then you know it works better if you drink it.”
For half a second, something like irritation crossed her face.
That was when Jed first thought she might survive.
She took the cup in both hands.
Her fingers shook against the tin.
Steam rose between them.
She drank once, winced, then drank again.
“What’s your name?” Jed asked.
She watched him over the rim.
“Clara.”
He waited.
No last name came.
He nodded like that was enough.
For the next two days, Clara said almost nothing.
She slept in fragments.
She woke at every sound.
When the shutter slapped in the wind, her hand searched the blanket for the Colt before her eyes had even opened.
When Jed crossed the room too quickly, she flinched and then looked furious with herself for doing it.
He pretended not to notice when pride needed him to.
He noticed everything anyway.
She kept her back to the wall.
She counted the windows.
She watched the door when the stove popped.
She asked once whether there was another way out besides the front.
Jed told her there was a small back door to the lean-to.
She remembered that.
He saw her remember it.
On the second morning, she gave him the story she had been preparing.
Stagecoach accident.
Lost passengers.
Snow.
Panic.
A wrong turn.
Jed stirred the beans in the small iron pot and let her finish.
The nearest stage road was forty miles south.
Even before the storm buried everything, no tracks had led toward that old shack except the kind made by somebody trying not to leave a trail.
Jed knew this.
Clara knew he knew it.
That was why she did not look at him when she spoke.
“A stagecoach,” he said finally.
“Yes.”
“Bad country for one.”
“The driver lost his way.”
“Must have been a very lost driver.”
Her jaw tightened.
Jed did not press harder.
There were questions that opened doors.
There were questions that blew them off the hinges.
A woman who had aimed a gun at her rescuer did not need a man proving how clever he was.
She needed time.
That afternoon, Jed cleaned the Colt.
He did it at the table where she could watch.
He checked the cylinder, wiped down the barrel, and set it back together with the kind of care a weapon deserved.
Clara followed every movement.
“You know guns,” she said.
“A man up here who doesn’t know guns becomes a warning story.”
“Are you going to give it back?”
“When I think you won’t shoot me for walking too loud.”
Her mouth moved like she almost smiled.
It did not reach her eyes.
By the third night, the blizzard had begun to wear itself out.
The silence after days of wind felt too large for the cabin.
The fire burned lower.
Jed sat at the table mending a split seam in one glove.
Clara slept in the bunk under his buffalo coat.
Her ruined velvet coat hung from a peg near the door.
It had been drying there since the first night, stiff in places, soft in others, the torn hem hanging lower on one side.
Jed had not touched it except to hang it.
Then the peg shifted.
The coat slipped.
It hit the floor with a heavy, unnatural thud.
Jed looked up.
Clara did not wake.
The fire clicked in the stove.
Jed set the glove on the table and stood slowly.
A coat like that should not have sounded like a saddlebag.
He crossed to the door.
The lining had torn near the hem.
Something wrapped in oilcloth pushed through the split.
Jed stared at it for a long breath.
In his life, hidden things had rarely meant peace.
He pulled the bundle free.
The oilcloth was damp at the edges and stiff from cold.
Inside was a leather-bound ledger.
The cover was dark and rubbed smooth by use.
The corners had been worn soft.
The binding had the tired look of an object carried too far by hands that could not afford to lose it.
Jed brought it to the table.
He opened the cover.
The first page held four words written in a firm hand.
Property of Harrison Caldwell.
Jed’s thumb stopped against the paper.
He did not know Harrison Caldwell.
He knew enough men like him to feel the name before he understood it.
Some names carried weight even on paper.
Not because of ink.
Because of what men would do to keep that ink from being read.
A floorboard creaked behind him.
Jed did not turn fast.
Fast would have been foolish.
He turned carefully, hands clear of his body.
Clara stood near the bunk.
The silver Colt was in her hands again.
Jed had left it on the shelf that evening after cleaning it, thinking she was too weak to move that quietly.
That had been his mistake.
She was pale.
Her hair hung loose around her face.
The blanket had fallen from one shoulder.
But the gun was level.
Her eyes were not feverish now.
They were terrified and awake.
“I told you no one followed me, Jedediah,” she said.
Her voice shook.
The Colt did not.
“But if you hand that book over, he’ll burn this whole mountain to ash.”
Jed looked from her to the ledger.
Then back again.
“Who is Harrison Caldwell?”
Clara’s expression changed so slightly that a man less used to tracking weather might have missed it.
Her eyes tightened.
Her mouth went still.
“A man who believes everything can be owned,” she said.
“That include you?”
The question landed hard.
Not because it was loud.
Because it was true enough to hurt.
Clara’s hands trembled for the first time since she had raised the gun.
“Don’t,” she whispered.
Jed nodded once.
He did not apologize.
An apology would have asked her to comfort him for having named the wound.
He pushed the ledger a fraction away from himself.
“I’m not handing it to anybody.”
“You don’t understand.”
“No.”
He kept his voice low.
“But I understand a woman doesn’t crawl into a broken shack in a blizzard with a hidden ledger unless every road behind her is worse than dying.”
Her eyes filled.
The tears did not fall.
She would not give them that much room.
Outside, one of the horses in the lean-to stamped hard.
Both of them froze.
The sound struck through the cabin wall like a hammer wrapped in cloth.
Jed shifted only his eyes toward the door.
Clara’s finger tightened on the trigger.
“Do you have another horse out there?” she whispered.
“No.”
The horse stamped again.
Then blew through its nose, sharp and frightened.
Jed knew that sound.
A horse might fuss at wind.
It did not make that sound for wind.
“Clara,” he said, “if somebody followed you through that storm, they’re either half dead or the kind of man who doesn’t plan to knock.”
Her face went white in a new way.
Not cold now.
Recognition.
The ledger sat open between them.
A strip of folded paper slid from beneath the back cover and dropped onto the table.
Jed had missed it before.
So had she.
The paper opened just enough for the firelight to show a line of ink across the top.
Clara saw it.
The Colt dipped an inch.
“No,” she breathed.
Jed reached toward the paper.
“Don’t read that.”
Her voice cracked on the last word.
Outside, leather scraped against frozen wood.
Not the wind.
Not snow sliding from the roof.
A slow, deliberate sound at the door.
Jed stopped with his fingers above the paper.
Clara was still aiming at him, but her eyes had gone past him now.
Past the table.
Past the ledger.
To the door.
The scrape came again.
Then silence.
Jed lifted one hand toward her, palm open.
“Lower the gun.”
“If it’s him—”
“If it’s him, you’ll need both hands steady.”
That got through.
Not trust.
Practical sense.
Practical sense had saved more people than faith ever had in country like that.
Clara lowered the Colt just enough for Jed to move.
He took the Winchester from beside the wall.
Then he pointed at the back door with two fingers.
“Lean-to,” he whispered.
She shook her head.
“The ledger.”
“I have it.”
“You don’t know what’s in it.”
“No.”
Jed closed the leather cover with one hand and tucked the folded paper inside without looking at the top line.
“But I know what you did to keep it.”
That was the first time Clara looked at him as if she might believe him.
The latch moved.
Very slowly.
Jed stepped between Clara and the door.
He did not tell her to hide.
He had the feeling she had been hiding long enough.
The latch lifted another fraction.
Then a voice came through the wood.
Not loud.
Not angry.
Polite.
That made it worse.
“Miss Clara,” the man outside called. “You made a hard journey for nothing.”
Clara’s breath stopped.
Jed watched her face and understood at once that this was no wandering stranger.
The man knew her.
Or knew enough to use her fear like a handle.
The voice continued.
“You have property that does not belong to you.”
Jed looked down at the ledger under his arm.
Then he looked at Clara.
Her hands shook again.
Not from weakness this time.
From fury trying to climb through terror.
Jed lifted the Winchester.
“Man outside,” he called, “you’re standing at the wrong door.”
There was a pause.
The storm, nearly dead a few minutes before, moved softly across the roof.
Then the stranger laughed once.
It was a small laugh.
A confident one.
“I don’t believe I am.”
Jed shifted his boots on the plank floor.
The cabin suddenly felt smaller than it had all winter.
Clara whispered, “He won’t come alone.”
Jed believed her.
He crossed to the side window and looked through the frost-scored glass without putting his face too close.
At first, he saw only snow.
Then he saw a dark shape near the woodpile.
A horse.
Then another shadow beyond it.
A man standing where the trees began.
Maybe more.
The mountain had not sent one death through the blizzard.
It had sent several.
Jed came back from the window.
He set the ledger on the table and opened it again.
“What are you doing?” Clara whispered.
“Finding out why men would freeze for this.”
“You can’t read it now.”
“I can read fast when cold men are outside my door.”
He turned the first page.
The entries were written in columns.
Names.
Dates.
Numbers.
Places described not with proper titles, but with enough detail that a man who knew them would not mistake them.
A ranch house near the creek.
A mill account.
A shipment of hides.
A debt marked paid and then marked open again in a different hand.
A widow’s note.
A cabin claim.
Jed looked up.
Clara’s face said she had hoped he would not understand so quickly.
“This is a record,” he said.
“Yes.”
“Of cheating.”
Her laugh was small and bitter.
“Cheating is what decent people call it when they still think the law might care.”
The latch jumped.
The man outside had tried it harder that time.
Jed shut the ledger.
“Back door,” he said.
“No.”
“Clara.”
“I did not crawl through that storm to run again without it.”
He looked at her feet, wrapped and raw.
He looked at the Colt in her hand.
He looked at the door.
Then he made a decision.
He handed her the ledger.
Her eyes widened.
“If I wanted to sell you,” he said, “I would have done it before I warmed your feet.”
The sentence hit her harder than he expected.
For a moment, she could not speak.
Then she clutched the ledger against her chest with one arm and held the Colt with the other.
Jed moved to the stove.
He kicked the iron door open and pulled the burning end of a split log free with the poker.
Smoke rolled low and thick.
Clara stared at him.
“What are you doing?”
“Making the front door a bad idea.”
The latch slammed.
Wood cracked.
Jed threw the burning log toward the floorboards just inside the door, not enough to burn the cabin down, enough to scatter sparks and smoke where a man entering fast would not see his footing.
Then he grabbed Clara by the elbow and pulled her toward the back.
She did not resist this time.
The front door burst inward behind them.
Cold air flooded the cabin.
A man shouted.
Then coughed as smoke hit him.
Jed shoved Clara through the small rear door into the lean-to.
The horse there rolled its eyes and pulled against its rope.
Snow blew in under the roof slats.
Clara stumbled.
Jed caught her before her wrapped feet slipped on the packed ice.
Behind them, another voice yelled from inside the cabin.
“Find the book!”
Clara flinched.
Jed tightened his grip on her arm.
“They haven’t found it.”
“Not yet.”
He untied the horse.
It was not saddled for speed.
It was saddled for survival.
That would have to do.
Jed helped Clara up first.
Pain twisted her face when her feet found the stirrup.
She swallowed it.
He swung up behind her and took the reins.
A shot cracked from inside the cabin.
Not close enough to hit.
Close enough to decide the matter.
The horse plunged into the snow.
Jed drove it toward the tree line, not the open trail.
Men who hunted other men expected panic to run downhill.
Jed went sideways across the slope where the pines broke the wind and the snow hid the rocks.
Clara clutched the ledger inside the buffalo coat.
Her body shook against his arm.
But she did not drop it.
Behind them, shouts scattered through the trees.
A second shot broke the air.
Snow jumped from a branch overhead.
Jed bent low over the horse’s neck.
“Hold on.”
“I am.”
“No,” he said. “Harder.”
The horse lunged over a fallen trunk.
For a breath, the world lifted.
Then came down hard.
Clara cried out once, quickly strangled it, and kept the ledger pinned under her arm.
That was when Jed stopped thinking of her as a woman he had rescued.
She was not behind him in this fight.
She was the reason there was a fight at all.
And she was still in it.
They rode until the cabin smoke vanished behind snow and timber.
Jed did not head for town.
There was no town close enough to save them before dawn.
He headed instead for a narrow rock cut above the draw, a place where wind scoured the ground hard and tracks broke badly.
He had used it once to lose wolves.
Men were often louder than wolves.
Less patient too.
At the cut, he dismounted and helped Clara down.
She nearly folded when her feet touched the ground.
He caught her.
This time, she let him.
“Can you walk ten paces?”
“Yes.”
“Tell the truth.”
Her mouth tightened.
“Maybe five.”
“That’ll do.”
He led the horse across bare stone, then back through shallow snow under low branches, doubling their path where the wind would erase half of it by morning.
Clara watched every move.
“You’ve done this before,” she said.
“I’ve been followed before.”
“By men?”
“By weather. By hunger. By one bear that took offense to me living.”
Despite everything, she almost smiled.
It vanished quickly.
The cold had sharpened again.
Jed found shelter beneath a rock overhang where the snow did not fall thick.
He wrapped Clara in the buffalo coat and took the ledger only long enough to open it beneath the dim blue light before dawn.
“I need to know what Caldwell wants burned,” he said.
She was silent.
Then she nodded.
Page by page, the ledger gave up enough.
Not everything.
Enough.
It held names tied to debts that should have been closed.
Land marked for seizure before the owners had been told.
Payments copied twice.
Signatures that did not match.
A pattern so plain even a mountain man with no love for paperwork could see the shape of it.
Harrison Caldwell had not been powerful because the mountain feared him.
He was powerful because people below it had signed papers they did not understand, trusted men they should not have trusted, and found out too late that ink could steal more quietly than a gun.
Jed turned another page.
The folded paper slid loose again.
This time Clara did not stop him.
He opened it.
It was not a map.
Not a confession.
A list.
Three names at the top.
Clara’s was one of them.
Jed read the line beneath it and felt his jaw tighten.
Clara watched his face.
“What does it say?”
He folded the paper once.
Then unfolded it again, because hiding it from her now would make him no better than the men outside his door.
“It says you were to be found before sunrise.”
She closed her eyes.
“And if I wasn’t?”
Jed looked at the last line.
The handwriting was the same firm hand from the first page.
“Then the ledger was to be recovered without you.”
The words sat between them colder than the snow.
For a while, neither spoke.
Far below, somewhere through the trees, a horse called out and was answered.
The men were still searching.
Clara pressed both hands over the ledger.
“I stole it from his office,” she said.
Jed did not interrupt.
“My father lost land to him. Then another family did. Then a widow who could not read the paper she signed. I worked in the house long enough to hear men laugh about names as if names were cattle brands. I thought if I could get the book to someone honest…”
Her voice thinned.
“I misjudged the distance. I misjudged the storm. I misjudged how fast fear can make men ride.”
Jed looked at the first gray light spreading behind the pines.
“You didn’t misjudge the book.”
She looked at him.
“No?”
“No.”
He closed the ledger and tied the oilcloth tight around it.
“They came through a blizzard for it. That means it can hurt him.”
By full morning, the storm had finally broken.
The world glittered white and cruel under a hard sky.
Jed waited until the voices below moved east.
Then he took Clara west.
Not fast.
Carefully.
A living witness with frozen feet was worth more than a dead hero in clean snow.
They reached the lower trail near noon.
By then, Clara could barely keep herself upright.
Jed put her on the horse again and walked beside it, leading by the bridle, Winchester ready in the crook of his arm.
Once, she said, “You should have left me.”
He did not look up.
“Would’ve been poor manners after stealing your coat lining.”
A faint laugh escaped her.
It sounded like something unused.
They did not reach safety all at once.
Stories like that never do.
They reached it in pieces.
First the lower cabin of an old prospector Jed knew would be empty for winter.
Then a wagon road packed hard by earlier traffic.
Then a settlement far enough from Caldwell’s reach that men looked at the ledger before they looked at Clara’s torn dress.
That mattered.
Clara had been looked at as trouble, bait, property, burden, and witness.
Being looked at as a person again took longer.
The ledger did not burn.
Jed made sure of that.
He watched it pass from Clara’s hands to men who understood columns, notes, debts, and the quiet violence of false paper.
He did not pretend to understand all of what followed.
There were hearings in plain rooms.
Statements copied carefully.
Names read aloud by men who no longer laughed when they read them.
There were families who came forward after seeing one familiar debt line or one stolen payment marked in that hard black ink.
Clara gave her account without raising her voice.
When someone asked why she had run into the mountains, she looked at the table for a long moment.
Then she said, “Because every road with people on it already belonged to him.”
Nobody in the room corrected her.
Jed sat in the back with his hat in his hands.
He was not comfortable indoors for that long.
But he stayed.
When Clara’s voice faltered, he shifted one boot against the floor, and she looked back just once.
That was enough.
Harrison Caldwell did not burn the mountain to ash.
Men like him always sound bigger before someone opens the book.
Afterward, they become what they were all along.
A man with ink on his hands.
A man afraid of witnesses.
A man who thought power meant nobody would survive long enough to speak.
Clara survived.
That was the part he had not planned for.
Months later, when the snow had thinned high in the passes and water ran cold down the gullies, Jed rode through Deadwood Draw again.
The old shack still stood, barely.
The roof had sunk lower.
The door hung open.
No smoke came from the chimney.
For a while, Jed sat his horse and looked at it.
He could still see the empty bean tin in his mind.
The frozen canteen.
The woman in the corner raising a silver Colt with hands too cold to hold it.
At 8,000 feet, weather did not warn a man politely.
Neither did evil.
Both simply arrived and tested what a person had left.
Jed turned his horse away from the shack and headed home.
There was a new peg by his cabin door now.
Clara had carved it herself on a morning when her hands had finally stopped shaking.
Her ruined velvet coat no longer hung there.
She had cut one clean square from the lining and kept it folded in a small box with the oilcloth that had wrapped the ledger.
The rest she burned in the stove without ceremony.
Jed had watched the fabric catch.
He had expected her to cry.
She did not.
She stood with the silver Colt at her hip, her blistered feet healed enough to hold her steady, and watched the smoke rise.
Then she said, “I thought that dress was the last thing I owned.”
Jed looked at the fire.
“Was it?”
Clara shook her head.
“No.”
Outside, the horse stamped in the lean-to, calm this time.
The stove ticked.
Snow loosened from the roof and slid down in a soft, harmless rush.
Clara looked at the door, then at the mountains beyond it, and for the first time since Jed had found her in Deadwood Draw, she did not look like something terrible was still coming.
She looked like someone who had carried proof through a blizzard and lived long enough to decide what came next.
The mountain had tried to bury her.
Harrison Caldwell had tried to erase her.
But the ledger stayed open.
And so did she.