Sold to a Mountain Man, She Found the Door Men Would Kill For-rosocute

Abigail Reed learned the sound of bad news before she learned much else.

It was in the way a room went quiet when she entered.

It was in the scrape of a chair pushed back too slowly, in the cough a man gave before saying something cruel, in the careful softness women used when they had already decided pity was kinder than honesty.

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So when her father sat at the kitchen table with both hands around a cup of cold coffee and would not meet her eyes, she knew something had come for her.

The little house in Mercy Crossing smelled of old woodsmoke, damp wool, and coffee boiled too long.

Outside the window, November held the street in a hard gray fist.

Wagon wheels cracked through frozen mud.

Smoke crawled out of narrow chimneys and flattened beneath the low sky.

Across the way, two boys stopped near the fence and pointed when they saw Abigail’s shadow pass behind the curtain.

One of them laughed.

She did not flinch.

A woman could grow used to stones if they were thrown every day.

Thomas Reed had once filled that kitchen with noise.

He had been a cabinetmaker with sawdust in his cuffs, varnish under his nails, and a laugh that made even the stove seem warmer.

After the war, his laughter had thinned.

Debt papers replaced wood shavings.

His shoulders bent as if every unpaid line had weight.

That morning, a stack of papers sat near his elbow, squared too neatly.

Abigail looked at them, then at him.

“What is it?” she asked.

He swallowed.

“There’s a man up on Blackpine Ridge,” he said. “Name of Gideon Vale.”

The name meant little to her, but the way he said it meant everything.

A name spoken like a door being shut.

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