The Rifle Shot That Changed Abigail Mercer’s Road West Forever-felicia

Blood soaked into the Wyoming dust before Abigail Mercer understood she was still alive.

Her cheek lay against splintered wood, and every breath dragged grit across her tongue.

The overturned stagecoach groaned in the wind like something dying slowly.

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Her shoulder burned so badly that, for a few seconds at a time, the pain seemed larger than the sky.

Somewhere beyond the broken boards, boots crunched through dirt.

Spurs scraped.

Men laughed low and rough, the way men laugh when they already believe there will be no one left to answer them.

Abigail pressed one trembling hand over her mouth.

“Don’t leave me,” she whispered, though she did not know who she was asking.

Then a rifle shot cracked across the prairie.

The laughter stopped at once.

Hoofbeats scattered away from the wreckage.

A shadow fell across the broken stagecoach, blocking the hard afternoon sun.

A man’s voice came down through the shattered boards, low and steady as iron.

“I’ll never leave you.”

Three days earlier, Abigail had been sitting upright inside that same coach, clutching the leather strap above her head as the wheels slammed through ruts in the dry road.

Wyoming Territory stretched outside the window in wide gold waves of prairie grass.

The sky seemed too large for a woman who had spent most of her life under Boston ceilings.

Mrs. Talbot dozed across from her with gloved hands folded in her lap.

A young miner had been talking for nearly an hour about silver prospects in the mountains.

Up above, the banker and the cattle buyer rode beside the driver and shotgun guard.

Everyone had a destination.

Everyone had a reason for being on that road.

Abigail’s reason was folded carefully inside her trunk: teaching certificates, letters of reference, and the advertisement that had promised a post in a settlement called Hope’s Crossing.

Six weeks before, she had stood in her aunt’s parlor while wedding invitations were addressed in fine, careful handwriting.

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