The Stranger At Her Cabin Door Claimed The Land She Had Bought-felicia

The first thing Nora Bellamy did when the stranger kicked in her front door was reach for the rifle.

Not because she was fearless.

Because fear had already been living with her for eight months, and by January she had learned that fear could either freeze a woman in place or teach her where to keep a Winchester.

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The door came in with a crack that seemed too large for one small cabin.

Iron hinges screamed.

The wall shuddered.

Snow drove across the threshold in a hard white rush, scattering ash from the hearth and lifting the corner of the quilt off the rocking chair.

A moment earlier, the room had been warm with stew, pine smoke, and the steady comfort of an iron stove doing its work.

Now the cabin smelled of wet wool, blown snow, and danger.

Nora’s hand closed around the Winchester.

Her fingers knew the shape of it now.

They had not known it in July.

Back then, she had flinched at the weight of the rifle, at the hard line of the stock against her shoulder, at the idea that a woman could be left alone enough in the world to need one.

Wyoming had changed that.

Wyoming had changed many things.

She lifted the barrel.

The man in the doorway stood with half the storm behind him.

Snow clung to his buffalo-hide coat.

Ice hung in his beard.

A scar ran from his left cheekbone toward the edge of his jaw, pale and sharp against skin burned red by wind.

He was broad enough to fill the broken doorway, and the Sharps rifle in his hands was pointed straight at her chest.

“Don’t move,” he growled.

Nora’s palms went slick.

The barrel of her Winchester shook once.

Only once.

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