The Stranger At Violet’s Door Left A Letter She Could Not Ignore-felicia

Nobody in Harding Flats would have blamed Violet Pearson for turning Nathan away.

It was past dark when the knock came.

Three slow taps.

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Not the hard knock of a man who expected to be welcomed.

Not the careless pounding of somebody drunk or angry.

It was the kind of knock a man makes when he is not sure he has the right to ask for anything at all.

The October wind had been cutting across the flats since sundown, rattling the loose edge of the back shutter and pressing cold into every crack in Violet’s little house.

The lamp on the kitchen table gave off a thin yellow light, and the wool coat in her lap scratched at her fingers where she had been mending Eli’s cuff.

She held the needle still and listened.

Eli was already in his nightshirt, sitting near the stove with a book he could not quite stop reading even after she had told him twice that it was late.

The knock came again.

Three taps, slower than before.

Violet set down the coat.

She had learned, in the years she had been managing that place alone, that a door was not just a door after dark.

It was a choice.

It was risk.

It was a line between the warmth you could protect and the world that wanted something from you.

She picked up the lamp and walked to the front room.

The man on the porch looked worse in the light than he had sounded in the dark.

Rain had worked into the brim of his hat.

His coat was worn pale at the elbows.

Dust and cold had settled into the seams of his clothes, and his face carried the kind of tiredness that did not come from one bad day.

He was tall, broad through the shoulders, and strong enough that Violet noticed it at once.

But he did not lean into his size.

He stood still, careful, almost braced against being told no.

“Ma’am,” he said, his voice rough from the weather, “I’m not looking for much. Just somewhere out of the wind.”

Violet lifted the lamp a little higher.

She looked past him.

A dark brown horse stood tied to her fence post, quiet and fine in the lamplight.

That was the first thing that did not fit.

The horse was well-fed.

The tack was good.

No man dressed like a drifter rode an animal like that unless there was a story behind him, and Violet had no room in her life for stories that ended badly.

She looked back at the man.

“There’s a barn around back,” she said. “Dry enough. I can’t offer more than that.”

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