They Called Me Elephant Girl After I Saved Him — 21 Days Later, Eli Briggs Returned With 30 Riders-QuynhTranJP

The cold bit straight through my sleeves while Eli’s words rolled across the clearing and hit every porch, every shutter, every face peeking through frosted glass.

“Miss Hardy saved my life when the rest of you would have ridden past.”

Nobody moved at first. Harness leather creaked. Horses blew steam into the pale air. Somewhere to my left, one of the Henley boys scraped a boot against packed snow and then stopped, as if even that small sound might draw those thirty pairs of eyes onto him.

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Eli turned slightly, not enough to take his attention off the town.

“She gave me the only coat she had,” he said. “Dragged me three miles in the dark. Burned the wood she needed to keep herself alive. Fed me from an empty kitchen. Sewed me up with hands that were shaking from cold.”

The last word left his mouth and hung there. I could hear my own roof flap once in the wind.

Then he looked at me.

His face was still drained from blood loss, and the bandage under his buckskin shirt pulled at one shoulder, but his eyes were clear now. Not fever-clear. Flint-clear.

“You shouldn’t be standing out here,” he said, quieter. “Not dressed like that.”

I looked down at the ripped hem of my dress, at my bare forearms, at the patch of frost gathered inside my doorway where the cold kept sliding under the warped threshold every night.

Before I could answer, Eli lifted one hand.

The riders moved all at once.

Half of them swung down from their saddles and went straight to the packhorses. Crates thudded into snow. A barrel rolled carefully to the side of my cabin. Someone untied split cedar logs stacked higher than my woodpile had ever been. Another pair carried a black cast-iron stove between them with the kind of care men usually gave church furniture or coffins.

The rest stayed mounted, spaced wide, rifles sheathed but visible.

Redemption Falls understood visible.

Mrs. Carmichael crossed the road with both hands clenched inside her shawl. She stopped three feet from my gate and looked from Eli to me, then to the unloaded supplies.

“Mabel,” she said, breath fogging fast, “I didn’t know.”

Eli answered before I could.

“You knew enough to ask where her coat had gone.”

Mrs. Carmichael’s mouth tightened. “I knew something was wrong.”

“But not wrong enough to come back with wood.”

She lowered her eyes.

One of the cowboys, a rangy man with a scar through his eyebrow, stepped up onto my porch, tested the rotten board with his boot, then looked at Eli.

“This place needs more than patchwork.”

“It gets more than patchwork,” Eli said.

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